Rainie, Lee

Experts Doubt Ethical AI Design Will Be Broadly Adopted as the Norm Within the Next Decade / by Lee Rainie, Janna Anderson and Emily A. Vogels ; Pew Research Center .-- [Washington] : Pew Research Center, 16 June 2021 .-- 127 p. ; 1 documento PDF

A majority worries that the evolution of artificial intelligence by 2030 will continue to be primarily focused on optimizing profits and social control. They also cite the difficulty of achieving consensus about ethics. Many who expect progress say it is not likely within the next decade. Still, a portion celebrate coming AI breakthroughs that will improve life. As this unfolds, a number of experts and advocates around the world have become worried about the long-term impact and implications of AI applications. They have concerns about how advances in AI will affect what it means to be human, to be productive and to exercise free will. In light of this, Pew Research Center and Elon University’s Imagining the Internet Center asked experts where they thought efforts aimed at creating ethical artificial intelligence would stand in the year 2030. Some 602 technology innovators, developers, business and policy leaders, researchers and activists responded to this specific question:

By 2030, will most of the AI systems being used by organizations of all sorts employ ethical principles focused primarily on the public good?. In response, 68% chose the option declaring that ethical principles focused primarily on the public good will not be employed in most AI systems by 2030; 32% chose the option positing that ethical principles focused primarily on the public good will be employed in most AI systems by 2030.

Inteligencia Artificial


AI
ética
avance
bien público
norma


Anderson, Janna
Vogels, Emily A.


Pew Research Center