We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Legal dispositionism and artificially-intelligent attributions.
- Authors
Soh, Jerrold
- Abstract
It is conventionally argued that because an artificially-intelligent (AI) system acts autonomously, its makers cannot easily be held liable should the system's actions harm. Since the system cannot be liable on its own account either, existing laws expose victims to accountability gaps and need to be reformed. Recent legal instruments have nonetheless established obligations against AI developers and providers. Drawing on attribution theory, this paper examines how these seemingly opposing positions are shaped by the ways in which AI systems are conceptualised. Specifically, folk dispositionism underpins conventional legal discourse on AI liability, personality, publications, and inventions and leads us towards problematic legal outcomes. Examining the technology and terminology driving contemporary AI systems, the paper contends that AI systems are better conceptualised instead as situational characters whose actions remain constrained by their programming. Properly viewing AI systems as such illuminates how existing legal doctrines could be sensibly applied to AI and reinforces emerging calls for placing greater scrutiny on the broader AI ecosystem.
- Subjects
ARTIFICIAL intelligence; LEGAL instruments; OBLIGATIONS (Law); LEGAL liability; ATTRIBUTION (Social psychology); LEGAL psychology
- Publication
Legal Studies, 2023, Vol 43, Issue 4, p583
- ISSN
0261-3875
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1017/lst.2022.52