Smart Technologies and Fundamental Rights: Value Inquiry Book Series / Philosophy and Human Rights, cartea 350
Editat de John-Stewart Gordonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 9 dec 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004436732
ISBN-10: 9004436731
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Value Inquiry Book Series / Philosophy and Human Rights
ISBN-10: 9004436731
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Value Inquiry Book Series / Philosophy and Human Rights
Cuprins
List of Figures and Tablesvii
Acknowledgementsviii
Biographial Notesix
Introduction
Kestutis Mosakas and John-Stewart Gordon
1 What Do We Owe to Intelligent Robots?
John-Stewart Gordon
2 Robot Rights – Thinking the Unthinkable
David J. Gunkel
3 Machine Moral Standing: in Defence of the Standard Properties-based View
Kestutis Mosakas
4 Ascribing Rights to Robots as Potential Moral Patients
Janina Loh
5 Fundamental Rights and Smart Health Technologies
Adam Poulsen and Anwaar Ulhaq
6 Rules for Regulators
Jonathan Wolff
7 Free Speech, Public Shaming, and the Role of Social Media
Carl Fox
8 Smart Technologies and Fundamental Rights: global Governance of AI: pressure on Political Legitimacy
Stephen Rainey and Aníbal Monasterio Astobiza
9 The Rule of Law and the Protection of Fundamental Human Rights in an Era of Automation
Tanel Kerikmäe and Katrin Nyman Metcalf
10 AI in the Context of Prevailing Privacy Concepts: in Search of a New Approach
Julija Kiršienė and Vygantas Malinauskas
11 Artificial Intelligence as a Subject of Criminal Law: a Corporate Liability Model Perspective
Edita Gruodytė and Paulius Čerka
12 Responsibility by Design?! – On the Standardisation of “Smart” Systems
Kai Jakobs
13 The Shift from Traditional Computing Systems to Artificial intelligence and the Implications for Bias
Vladislav V. Fomin
14 Machine Bias and Fundamental Rights
Darius Amilevičius
Index
Acknowledgementsviii
Biographial Notesix
Introduction
Kestutis Mosakas and John-Stewart Gordon
Part 1: Ethical Challenges of Smart Technologies
1 What Do We Owe to Intelligent Robots?
John-Stewart Gordon
2 Robot Rights – Thinking the Unthinkable
David J. Gunkel
3 Machine Moral Standing: in Defence of the Standard Properties-based View
Kestutis Mosakas
4 Ascribing Rights to Robots as Potential Moral Patients
Janina Loh
5 Fundamental Rights and Smart Health Technologies
Adam Poulsen and Anwaar Ulhaq
Part 2: Socio-political Challenges of Smart Technologies
6 Rules for Regulators
Jonathan Wolff
7 Free Speech, Public Shaming, and the Role of Social Media
Carl Fox
8 Smart Technologies and Fundamental Rights: global Governance of AI: pressure on Political Legitimacy
Stephen Rainey and Aníbal Monasterio Astobiza
Part 3: AI and Law
9 The Rule of Law and the Protection of Fundamental Human Rights in an Era of Automation
Tanel Kerikmäe and Katrin Nyman Metcalf
10 AI in the Context of Prevailing Privacy Concepts: in Search of a New Approach
Julija Kiršienė and Vygantas Malinauskas
11 Artificial Intelligence as a Subject of Criminal Law: a Corporate Liability Model Perspective
Edita Gruodytė and Paulius Čerka
Part 4: AI and Information Technologies
12 Responsibility by Design?! – On the Standardisation of “Smart” Systems
Kai Jakobs
13 The Shift from Traditional Computing Systems to Artificial intelligence and the Implications for Bias
Vladislav V. Fomin
14 Machine Bias and Fundamental Rights
Darius Amilevičius
Index
Notă biografică
John-Stewart Gordon, Ph.D. (2005), Vytautas Magnus University (Lithuania), is Professor of Philosophy at that university. He has published numerous books and articles at leading publishing houses and journals in the context of practical philosophy.