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Ethics and Safety in the Future of Artificial Intelligence: Remarkable Issues

Year 2018, Volume: 2 Issue: 2, 65 - 70, 30.06.2018

Abstract

The
humankind is currently experiencing a life supported often with intelligent
systems designed and developed based on the foundations of Artificial
Intelligence. It is clear that this scientific field is one of key elements for
shaping better future for us. But there are also some anxieties regarding
possible ethical and safety related issues that may arise because of intense
use of powerful Artificial Intelligence oriented systems. In this context,
objective of this paper is to provide a look at to some remarkable issues about
ethics and safety within the future of Artificial Intelligence. After focusing
on currently wide-discussed issues, the paper also comes with some possible
solution suggestions for achieving a better Artificial Intelligence supported
future with no or less issues on ethics and safety.

References

  • [1] S. Russell, and P. Norvig, Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach. 1995, Prentice-Hall.
  • [2] M. Negnevitsky, Artificial intelligence: a guide to intelligent systems. 2005, Pearson Education.
  • [3] D. T. Pham, and P. T. N. Pham, “Artificial intelligence in engineering”. International Journal of Machine Tools and Manufacture, 39(6), 1999, 937-949.
  • [4] S. Russell, Ethics of artificial intelligence. Nature; London. 521.7553, 2015, 415-418.
  • [5] N. Bostrom, and E. Yudkowsky, The ethics of artificial intelligence. The Cambridge Handbook of Artificial Intelligence, 2014, 316-334.
  • [6] M. Anderson, S. L. Anderson, and C. Armen, Towards machine ethics. In Proceedings of the AOTP’04-The AAAI-04 Workshop on Agent Organizations: Theory and Practice, 2004.
  • [7] L. Muehlhauser, and L. Helm, The singularity and machine ethics. In Singularity Hypotheses (pp. 101-126). 2012, Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
  • [8] B. Hibbard, Ethical Artificial Intelligence. 2014, arXiv preprint arXiv:1411.1373.
  • [9] M. Anderson, and S. L. Anderson, “Machine ethics: Creating an ethical intelligent agent”. AI Magazine, 28(4), 2007, 15.
  • [10] R. V. Yampolskiy, Artificial intelligence safety engineering: Why machine ethics is a wrong approach. In Philosophy and Theory of Artificial Intelligence (pp. 389-396). 2013, Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
  • [11] A. Pavaloiu, and U. Kose, “Ethical artificial intelligence-An open question. Journal of Multidisciplinary Developments, 2(2), 2017, 15-27.
  • [12] R. Kurzweil, The Singularity is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology. 2005, Penguin.
  • [13] B. Goertzel, “Human-level artificial general intelligence and the possibility of a technological singularity: A reaction to Ray Kurzweil's The Singularity Is Near, and McDermott's critique of Kurzweil”. Artificial Intelligence, 171(18), 2007, 1161-1173.
  • [14] N. Bostrom, Superintelligence: Paths, dangers, strategies. 2014, OUP Oxford.
  • [15] N. Bostrom, “Existential risks”. Journal of Evolution and Technology, 9(1), 2002, 1-31.
  • [16] MIT Technology Review. Do We Need Asimov’s Laws?. 2014, TechnologyReview.com. Retrieved December 3, 2017, from https://www.technologyreview.com/s/527336/do-we-need-asimovs-laws/
  • [17] The Associated Press, For Driverless Cars, a Moral Dilemma: Who Lives and Who Dies?, 2017, NBC News Web Site. Retrieved December 3, 2017, from http://www.nbcnews.com/tech/innovation/driverless-cars-moral-dilemma-who-lives-who-dies-n708276
  • [18] M. R. Montaigne, The Complete Essays of Montaigne. 1958, philpapers.org.
  • [19] S. Bernezzani, 10 Jobs Artificial Intelligence Will Replace (and 10 That Are Safe). 2017, HubSpot.com. Retrieved December 2, 2017, from https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/jobs-artificial-intelligence-will-replace
  • [20] P. A. Taylor, Hackers: Crime in the digital sublime. Psychology Press, 1999.
  • [21] T. Jordan, and P. Taylor, “A sociology of hackers”. The Sociological Review, 46(4), 1998, 757-780.
  • [22] F. Xia, L. T. Yang, L. Wang, and A. Vinel, “Internet of things”. International Journal of Communication Systems, 25(9), 2012, 1101.
  • [23] H. Kopetz, Internet of Things. In Real-time systems (pp. 307-323), 2011, Springer US.
  • [24] F. Wortmann, and K. Flüchter, “Internet of things”. Business & Information Systems Engineering, 57(3), 2015, 221-224.
  • [25] O. Evans, and N. D. Goodman, Learning the preferences of bounded agents. In NIPS 2015 Workshop on Bounded Optimality, 2015.
  • [26] O. Evans, A. Stuhlmüller, and N. D. Goodman, Learning the preferences of ignorant, inconsistent agents. 2015, arXiv preprint arXiv:1512.05832.
  • [27] L. Orseau, and S. Armstrong, Safely interruptible agents. In Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence: 32nd Conference (UAI 2016), edited by Alexander Ihler and Dominik Janzing, 2016, (pp. 557-566).
  • [28] R. S. Sutton, and A. G. Barto, Reinforcement Learning: An Introduction. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1998.
  • [29] P. Abbeel, and A. Y. Ng, Inverse reinforcement learning. In Encyclopedia of machine learning (pp. 554-558). 2011, Springer US.
  • [30] A. Y. Ng, and S. J. Russell, Algorithms for inverse reinforcement learning. In Icml, 2000, (pp. 663-670).
Year 2018, Volume: 2 Issue: 2, 65 - 70, 30.06.2018

Abstract

References

  • [1] S. Russell, and P. Norvig, Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach. 1995, Prentice-Hall.
  • [2] M. Negnevitsky, Artificial intelligence: a guide to intelligent systems. 2005, Pearson Education.
  • [3] D. T. Pham, and P. T. N. Pham, “Artificial intelligence in engineering”. International Journal of Machine Tools and Manufacture, 39(6), 1999, 937-949.
  • [4] S. Russell, Ethics of artificial intelligence. Nature; London. 521.7553, 2015, 415-418.
  • [5] N. Bostrom, and E. Yudkowsky, The ethics of artificial intelligence. The Cambridge Handbook of Artificial Intelligence, 2014, 316-334.
  • [6] M. Anderson, S. L. Anderson, and C. Armen, Towards machine ethics. In Proceedings of the AOTP’04-The AAAI-04 Workshop on Agent Organizations: Theory and Practice, 2004.
  • [7] L. Muehlhauser, and L. Helm, The singularity and machine ethics. In Singularity Hypotheses (pp. 101-126). 2012, Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
  • [8] B. Hibbard, Ethical Artificial Intelligence. 2014, arXiv preprint arXiv:1411.1373.
  • [9] M. Anderson, and S. L. Anderson, “Machine ethics: Creating an ethical intelligent agent”. AI Magazine, 28(4), 2007, 15.
  • [10] R. V. Yampolskiy, Artificial intelligence safety engineering: Why machine ethics is a wrong approach. In Philosophy and Theory of Artificial Intelligence (pp. 389-396). 2013, Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
  • [11] A. Pavaloiu, and U. Kose, “Ethical artificial intelligence-An open question. Journal of Multidisciplinary Developments, 2(2), 2017, 15-27.
  • [12] R. Kurzweil, The Singularity is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology. 2005, Penguin.
  • [13] B. Goertzel, “Human-level artificial general intelligence and the possibility of a technological singularity: A reaction to Ray Kurzweil's The Singularity Is Near, and McDermott's critique of Kurzweil”. Artificial Intelligence, 171(18), 2007, 1161-1173.
  • [14] N. Bostrom, Superintelligence: Paths, dangers, strategies. 2014, OUP Oxford.
  • [15] N. Bostrom, “Existential risks”. Journal of Evolution and Technology, 9(1), 2002, 1-31.
  • [16] MIT Technology Review. Do We Need Asimov’s Laws?. 2014, TechnologyReview.com. Retrieved December 3, 2017, from https://www.technologyreview.com/s/527336/do-we-need-asimovs-laws/
  • [17] The Associated Press, For Driverless Cars, a Moral Dilemma: Who Lives and Who Dies?, 2017, NBC News Web Site. Retrieved December 3, 2017, from http://www.nbcnews.com/tech/innovation/driverless-cars-moral-dilemma-who-lives-who-dies-n708276
  • [18] M. R. Montaigne, The Complete Essays of Montaigne. 1958, philpapers.org.
  • [19] S. Bernezzani, 10 Jobs Artificial Intelligence Will Replace (and 10 That Are Safe). 2017, HubSpot.com. Retrieved December 2, 2017, from https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/jobs-artificial-intelligence-will-replace
  • [20] P. A. Taylor, Hackers: Crime in the digital sublime. Psychology Press, 1999.
  • [21] T. Jordan, and P. Taylor, “A sociology of hackers”. The Sociological Review, 46(4), 1998, 757-780.
  • [22] F. Xia, L. T. Yang, L. Wang, and A. Vinel, “Internet of things”. International Journal of Communication Systems, 25(9), 2012, 1101.
  • [23] H. Kopetz, Internet of Things. In Real-time systems (pp. 307-323), 2011, Springer US.
  • [24] F. Wortmann, and K. Flüchter, “Internet of things”. Business & Information Systems Engineering, 57(3), 2015, 221-224.
  • [25] O. Evans, and N. D. Goodman, Learning the preferences of bounded agents. In NIPS 2015 Workshop on Bounded Optimality, 2015.
  • [26] O. Evans, A. Stuhlmüller, and N. D. Goodman, Learning the preferences of ignorant, inconsistent agents. 2015, arXiv preprint arXiv:1512.05832.
  • [27] L. Orseau, and S. Armstrong, Safely interruptible agents. In Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence: 32nd Conference (UAI 2016), edited by Alexander Ihler and Dominik Janzing, 2016, (pp. 557-566).
  • [28] R. S. Sutton, and A. G. Barto, Reinforcement Learning: An Introduction. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1998.
  • [29] P. Abbeel, and A. Y. Ng, Inverse reinforcement learning. In Encyclopedia of machine learning (pp. 554-558). 2011, Springer US.
  • [30] A. Y. Ng, and S. J. Russell, Algorithms for inverse reinforcement learning. In Icml, 2000, (pp. 663-670).
There are 30 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Engineering
Journal Section Articles
Authors

Utku Kose 0000-0002-9652-6415

İbrahim Arda Cankaya This is me

Tuncay Yigit

Publication Date June 30, 2018
Published in Issue Year 2018 Volume: 2 Issue: 2

Cite

IEEE U. Kose, İ. A. Cankaya, and T. Yigit, “Ethics and Safety in the Future of Artificial Intelligence: Remarkable Issues”, IJESA, vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 65–70, 2018.

ISSN 2548-1185
e-ISSN 2587-2176
Period: Quarterly
Founded: 2016
Publisher: Nisantasi University
e-mail:ilhcol@gmail.com