It’s not too early to think about how machines and AI will make tough but ethical decisions paid intel
Interview with Aimee van Wynsberghe, assistant professor of ethics and robotics at the Technical University of Delft, Netherlandst’s not too early to think about how machines and artificial intelligence will make tough but ethical decisions.
Yet the need to chart some way forward is clear. Giant tech companies already face scrutiny and fines for their actions on user privacy and rights. The potential fallout is far greater for autonomous machines that can do real emotional or physical damage. To find out where machine ethics is headed—and what it can accomplish—we sat down with an expert at the center of the debate:, assistant professor of ethics and robotics at the Technical University of Delft in the Netherlands, where she is currently focused on the potential of AI-enabled robots in healthcare. She is also cofounder of the Foundation for Responsible Robotics and a member of the European Commission High-Level Expert Group on Artificial Intelligence.
Which ethical theory and what ethics should we choose? We have one theory that says the consequences determine whether or not an action is right. Then we have another theory that talks about duty, that you don’t lie and don’t kill. We’ve been debating for hundreds of years, and still nobody agrees what would be the right ethical theory for humans.
You could just as easily call that accuracy, or a safety feature that comes from the robot having data that the human doesn’t. So I’d still push back and say, is that really ethics or is this just an accuracy and efficiency check? In order for it to be really about ethics, the robot would have to be counseling the human about whether he’s a good person if he pulls the trigger.
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