“In the last year, the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) released new ethical standards for professional conduct [1] and the IEEE released guidelines for the ethical design of autonomous and intelligent systems [2] demonstrating a shift among professional technology organizations toward prioritizing ethical impact. In parallel, thousands of technology professionals and social scientists have formed multidisciplinary committees to devise ethical principles for the design, development, and use of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies [3]. Moreover, many governments and international organizations have released sets of ethical principles, including the OECD Principles in 2019 [4], the Montreal Declaration in 2017 [5], the U.K. House of Lords report “AI in the U.K.: ready willing and able?” in 2018 [6], the European Commission High-Level Expert Group (HLEG) on AI in 2018 [7], and the Beijing AI Principles in 2019 [8]. Indeed, recent reports indicate that there are currently more than 70 publicly available sets of ethical principles or frameworks for AI, most of which have been released within the last five years [3], [9], [10].”
I am just wondering if your review would not be more complete by mentioning that kind of work. The IEEE for instance has this page: https://ethicsinaction.ieee.org/
You have this reference: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9001063/authors#authors where the first paragraph reads:
“In the last year, the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) released new ethical standards for professional conduct [1] and the IEEE released guidelines for the ethical design of autonomous and intelligent systems [2] demonstrating a shift among professional technology organizations toward prioritizing ethical impact. In parallel, thousands of technology professionals and social scientists have formed multidisciplinary committees to devise ethical principles for the design, development, and use of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies [3]. Moreover, many governments and international organizations have released sets of ethical principles, including the OECD Principles in 2019 [4], the Montreal Declaration in 2017 [5], the U.K. House of Lords report “AI in the U.K.: ready willing and able?” in 2018 [6], the European Commission High-Level Expert Group (HLEG) on AI in 2018 [7], and the Beijing AI Principles in 2019 [8]. Indeed, recent reports indicate that there are currently more than 70 publicly available sets of ethical principles or frameworks for AI, most of which have been released within the last five years [3], [9], [10].”
I am just wondering if your review would not be more complete by mentioning that kind of work. The IEEE for instance has this page: https://ethicsinaction.ieee.org/