Thank you for this post. The short description of AI Ethics is interesting. I spent time thinking about this issue when researching private law and AI—I ended up effectively stumbling into a definition centred around safe design on one hand and fair output on the other, but that did not feel quite right. I prefer your broader takeaway of fairness and inclusivity.
I really like the diagram! I found myself wondering where we would fit AI Law / AI Policy into that model. I think it is a very useful tool as an explainer.
I found myself wondering where we would fit AI Law / AI Policy into that model.
I would think policy work might be spread out over the landscape? As an example, if we think of policy work aiming to establishing the use of certain evaluations of systems, such evaluations could target different kinds of risk/qualities that would map to different parts of the diagram?
Thank you for this post. The short description of AI Ethics is interesting. I spent time thinking about this issue when researching private law and AI—I ended up effectively stumbling into a definition centred around safe design on one hand and fair output on the other, but that did not feel quite right. I prefer your broader takeaway of fairness and inclusivity.
I really like the diagram! I found myself wondering where we would fit AI Law / AI Policy into that model. I think it is a very useful tool as an explainer.
Thank you Shaun!
I would think policy work might be spread out over the landscape? As an example, if we think of policy work aiming to establishing the use of certain evaluations of systems, such evaluations could target different kinds of risk/qualities that would map to different parts of the diagram?