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Human rights article

In this activity, we will talk about “AI and human rights.”
using smartphone
© Filippo A. Raso, Hannah Hilligoss, Vivek Krishnamurthy, Christopher Bavitz, Levin Kim

In this activity, we will be talking about “AI and human rights.”

Please download and read this article below, and we will discuss this topic via the audio lecture in the following steps.

Abstract

Artificial intelligence (“AI”) is changing the world before our eyes. The promise of AI to improve our lives is enormous. AI-based systems are already outperforming medical specialists in diagnosing certain diseases, while the use of AI in the financial system is expanding access to credit to borrowers that were once passed by. Yet AI also has downsides that dampen its considerable promise. AI-based systems impact the right to privacy since they depend on the collection and use of vast quantities of data to make predictions which, in numerous cases, have served to perpetuate existing social patterns of bias and discrimination.

These disturbing possibilities have given rise to a movement seeking to embed ethical considerations into the development and deployment of AI. This project, on the other hand, demonstrates the considerable value in using human rights law to evaluate and address the complex impacts of AI on society. Human rights law provides an agreed set of norms and a shared language and institutional infrastructure for helping to ensure that the promises of AI are met and its greatest perils are avoided.

Our project seeks to advance the emerging conversation on AI and human rights by evaluating the human rights impacts of six current uses of AI. Our framework recognizes that AI systems are not being deployed against a blank slate, but rather against the backdrop of social conditions that have complex pre-existing human rights impacts of their own.

By digging deep into current AI implementations, we see how they impact the full range of human rights guaranteed by international law, privacy chief among them. We also gain insight into the unequal distribution of the positive and negative impacts of AI on human rights throughout society, and begin to explore the power of the human rights framework to address these disparate impacts.

Full article

Filippo Raso et al.,, Artificial Intelligence & Human Rights: Opportunities & Risks (September 25, 2018). Berkman Klein Center Research Publication No. 2018-6, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3259344 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3259344

Must be read:

5.2 (Access to the Financial System: Credit Scores);

5.3 (Healthcare: Diagnostics);

5.4 (Online Content Moderation: Standards Enforcement);

5.6 (Education: Essay Scoring);

6 (Addressing the Human Rights Impacts of AI).

Page 29, 34, 40, 49 are helpful to answer the quiz, and Page 53 ~ 56 are conductive to the final test.

© Filippo A. Raso, Hannah Hilligoss, Vivek Krishnamurthy, Christopher Bavitz, Levin Kim
This article is from the free online

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