Can AI Developers Be Held Liable for Negligence? (lawfaremedia.org) 30
Bryan Choi, an associate professor of law and computer science focusing on software safety, proposes shifting AI liability onto the builders of the systems:
To date, most popular approaches to AI safety and accountability have focused on the technological characteristics and risks of AI systems, while averting attention from the workers behind the curtain responsible for designing, implementing, testing, and maintaining such systems...
I have previously argued that a negligence-based approach is needed because it directs legal scrutiny on the actual persons responsible for creating and managing AI systems. A step in that direction is found in California's AI safety bill, which specifies that AI developers shall articulate and implement protocols that embody the "developer's duty to take reasonable care to avoid producing a covered model or covered model derivative that poses an unreasonable risk of causing or materially enabling a critical harm" (emphasis added). Although tech leaders have opposed California's bill, courts don't need to wait for legislation to allow negligence claims against AI developers. But how would negligence work in the AI context, and what downstream effects should AI developers anticipate?
The article suggest two possibilities. Classifying AI developers as ordinary employees leaves employers then sharing liability for negligent acts (giving them "strong incentives to obtain liability insurance policies and to defend their employees against legal claims.") But AI developers could also be treated as practicing professionals (like physicians and attorneys). "{In this regime, each AI professional would likely need to obtain their own individual or group malpractice insurance policies." AI is a field that perhaps uniquely seeks to obscure its human elements in order to magnify its technical wizardry. The virtue of the negligence-based approach is that it centers legal scrutiny back on the conduct of the people who build and hype the technology. To be sure, negligence is limited in key ways and should not be viewed as a complete answer to AI governance. But fault should be the default and the starting point from which all conversations about AI accountability and AI safety begin.
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader david.emery for sharing the article.
I have previously argued that a negligence-based approach is needed because it directs legal scrutiny on the actual persons responsible for creating and managing AI systems. A step in that direction is found in California's AI safety bill, which specifies that AI developers shall articulate and implement protocols that embody the "developer's duty to take reasonable care to avoid producing a covered model or covered model derivative that poses an unreasonable risk of causing or materially enabling a critical harm" (emphasis added). Although tech leaders have opposed California's bill, courts don't need to wait for legislation to allow negligence claims against AI developers. But how would negligence work in the AI context, and what downstream effects should AI developers anticipate?
The article suggest two possibilities. Classifying AI developers as ordinary employees leaves employers then sharing liability for negligent acts (giving them "strong incentives to obtain liability insurance policies and to defend their employees against legal claims.") But AI developers could also be treated as practicing professionals (like physicians and attorneys). "{In this regime, each AI professional would likely need to obtain their own individual or group malpractice insurance policies." AI is a field that perhaps uniquely seeks to obscure its human elements in order to magnify its technical wizardry. The virtue of the negligence-based approach is that it centers legal scrutiny back on the conduct of the people who build and hype the technology. To be sure, negligence is limited in key ways and should not be viewed as a complete answer to AI governance. But fault should be the default and the starting point from which all conversations about AI accountability and AI safety begin.
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader david.emery for sharing the article.
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This will simply result in endless litigation trying to score jackpots from deep pockets. Why don't we just put a warning label on every AI engine saying "use at your own risk, output may not be what you want". AI is in its infancy, it is going to have a HUGE number of errors in it. AFAIK no significant AI engine in existence can be blindly used without humans supervising its decisions. Consider AI as making suggestions, and the YOU decide whether or not to accept that suggestion.
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Coders will insist on liability insurance as part of their employment package.
There will be less money for innovation and more money for lawyers and bureaucrats.
More development will move overseas.
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A counter argument is that if the tech is known to be buggy and not ready for prime time (as you clearly believe to be the case), but the com
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Bridge builders don't have the same kind of limited liability licenses (for good reason), but if the software causes too much damage, the limited liability license isn't going to help either.
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Re: You can already go to jail (Score:2)
The key is your software has to cause damages. If it does, then you can be sued.
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"This is not enough. The risk is that the output may not be what we want you to hear."
-- From a totalitarian state or some equivalent though-police department.
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How about a regulatory authority? (Score:2)
Ask 10 people and you'll get 10 different answers.
Ask the FAA and you'll get one answer, and it'll be a precise answer.
The FAA has a bunch of codified rules for software development and testing. As I understand it, the intent was that if the code was developed and tested according to FAA rules, then the manufacturer would not be held liable for problems; specifically, the airplane manufacturer could not be sued for building an unsafe plane, because the design processes were the best standards of the industry.
(And note that the NTSB and FAA analyze crashes
Re: Who decides what an 'unreasonable risk ' is? (Score:2)
No human involved. I do wonder what copilot would say though.
CEOs, sure (Score:2)
Those making the business decisions are the ones responsible.
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The next big thing in AI (Score:2)
Artificial Insurance.
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We don't blame weather forcasts for being wrong (Score:1)
AI is random noise, statistics, and a predictive algorithm that guesses at what the inputted information is.
If there's a 90% chance of rain it's not like I'm mad when it stays a nice sunny day.
AI is great when you straight up have the original data, and can compare it. Until recently, we couldn't even get pictures with people with the correct number of fingers. Why in the world would you blame the AI makers for mistakes? It's only as good as the data going in, if your data doesn't exist, the AI will guess.
All programmers should be liable (Score:2)
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Well, no. But other engineering fields provide guidelines. Essentially, if you pay for a professionally made thing, you have a reasonable expectation of it being fit for purpose and having no severe flaws. Bu there are degrees, even in established engineering disciplines and it depends on what you can reasonably expect from a product. The problem is "free" stuff, whether really free (FOSS) or just free do download and use. Obviously, even something you get for free should either be labelled "experimental, m
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There's a reason this requirement isn't in place for computers / IT: It's not a static system, and the variables introduced into it may not even exist for literal decades after it's brought into service. Placing liability on the designers of the system for a problem that may not exist until well after the original designers have retired isn't going to get you a lot of people volunteering to go in
What's he smoking? (Score:2)
You can't even get that form of liability coverage from developers who don't program AI, so you think an AI developer should put his/her head in the guillotine? Why don't you just let the developers take out liability insurance and call it aday?
Nobody ever sued Microsoft (Score:1)
for spreadsheet errors, lost Outlook emails, etc. Why would dodgy AI be any different?
Why should they? (Score:2)
Software vendors can release any old POS code and cause untold damage with zero consequences. Why would AI developers be treated any different?
I content that both should be held liable. It's high time Microsoft should answer for bugs in Windows that allows malware to exfiltrate personal data for example, and officers of companies that release reckless software face jail time.
Similarly, companies that use "algorithms" to moderate their sites, like Youtube or Amazon, should be held accountable for whatever th
When Twitter became 'news' (Score:2)
I remember when Twitter became a 'news' source: Competing networks rushed to publish the latest meme, which usually lacked an eye-witness and/or facts. Will broadcast networks repeat the same pissing-contest using AI?
We already know LLMs hallucinate and worse, they feed on their on own garbage, resulting in a toxic 'personality' such as Microsoft Tay. Still, reporting and journalism, is seen as the perfect job for LLMs, turning many words into few. Such LLMs will also have to include the bias of broad
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Make Comp Sci associate professors responsible (Score:1)
Associate Computer Science professors should be criminally charged when their students go on to write shitty code that ends up exposing PII (like FB keeping billions of passwords in the clear, or companies CONSTANTLY getting hacked).
Instead of those companies bearing the burden of having good practices, and not have to get their customers "one free year of LifeLock" (a negative value given the information leaked or hacked) the people who were negligent in teaching the programmers should be charged with that