Resumen del libro
The aim of this book is to make accessible to both a general audience and policymakers the intricacies involved in the concept of trustworthy AI. In this book, we address the issue from philosophical, technical, social, and practical points of view. To do so, we start with a summary definition of Trustworthy AI and its components, according to the HLEG for AI report. From there, we focus in detail on trustworthy AI in large language models, anthropomorphic robots (such as sex robots), and in the use of autonomous drones in warfare, which all pose specific challenges because of their close interaction with humans. To tie these ideas together, we include a brief presentation of the ethical validation scheme for proposals submitted under the Horizon Europe programme as a possible way to address the operationalisation of ethical regulation beyond rigid rules and partial ethical analyses. We conclude our work by advocating for the virtue ethics approach to AI, which we view as a humane and comprehensive approach to trustworthy AI that can accommodate the pace of technological change.
Preface
Introduction
European Union’s Ethics Guidelines for AI
Should we trust AI?
Key technical features that may affect Trustworthy AI
Ethical principles and AI facts
Ethical requirements and AI facts
Case studies using Trustworthy AI
Large Language Models: GPT and others
Anthropomorphic AI: sex robots
Emerging issues beyond trustworthiness: delegating warfare to drones
Principles based Ethics and Virtue Ethics
The Ethics Appraisal Scheme in Horizon Europe Programme
Conclusion
References
Abbreviations
Glossary
Comentarios
Disponible sólo en formato electrónico.
Citación Chicago
Pérez y Madrid, Aniceto , y Connor Wright.
Trustworthy AI Alone Is Not Enough.
1ª ed.
Madrid:
Dykinson,
2023.
Citación APA
Pérez y Madrid, Aniceto ,
Wright, Connor
(2023).
Trustworthy AI Alone Is Not Enough. Dykinson.