Monthly Archives: April 2019

 

Administering Artificial Intelligence

Michael Froomkin will lead a discussion of Alicia Solow-Niederman‘s Administering Artificial Intelligence on Saturday, April 13, at 11:00 a.m. at #werobot 2019. Calls for sector-specific regulation or the creation of a federal agency or commission to guide and constrain artificial intelligence, or AI, development are increasing. This turn to administrative law is understandable because AI’s […]

 

The Human/Weapon Relationship in the Age of Autonomous Weapons and the Attribution of Criminal Responsibility for War Crimes

Madeleine Elish will lead a discussion of Marta Bo‘s The Human/Weapon Relationship in the Age of Autonomous Weapons and the Attribution of Criminal Responsibility for War Crimes on Saturday, April 13, at 4:00 p.m. Friday, April 12, at 1:45 p.m. at #werobot 2019. This paper will inquire into how the advent of artificial intelligence in warfare […]

 

Emerging Legal and Policy Trends in Recent Robot Science Fiction

Kevin Bankston will lead a discussion of Robin Murphy‘s Emerging Legal and Policy Trends in Recent Robot Science Fiction on Saturday, April 13, at 8:30 a.m. at #werobot 2019. Science fiction has a long history of predicting technological advances and reflecting societal concerns or expectations. This paper examines popular print science fiction for the past five […]

 

Robots in Space: Sharing Our World with Autonomous Delivery Vehicles

Kristen Thomasen will lead a discussion of Mason Marks‘s Robots in Space: Sharing Our World with Autonomous Delivery Vehicles on Friday, April 12, at 3:30 p.m. at  #werobot 2019. Industrial robots originated in mid-Twentieth Century factories where they increased the efficiency of manufacturing. Their implementation was an extension of earlier industrial automation such as the introduction […]

 

The Moral Labyrinth

We’ve put up a page about our special art installation, ‘The Moral Labyrinth” by Sarah Newman & Jessica Fjeld, which will be on display during We Robot 2019.  Check it out.

 

Death of the AI Author

Kate Darling will lead a discussion of Carys Craig and Ian Kerr‘s Death of the AI Author on Friday, April 12, at 1:45 p.m. Saturday, April 13, at 4:00 p.m. at #werobot 2019. Much of the second-generation literature on AI and authorship asks whether an increasing sophistication and independence of generative code should cause us […]

 

AI, Professionals, and Professional Work: The Practice of Law with Automated Decision Support Technologies

Madeleine Elish will lead a discussion of Deirdre Mulligan and Daniel Kluttz‘s AI, Professionals, and Professional Work: The Practice of Law with Automated Decision Support Technologies on Saturday, April 13, at 4:00 p.m. Friday, April 12, at 1:45 p.m. at #werobot 2019. Technical systems employing algorithms are shaping and displacing human decision making in a variety […]

 

Through the Handoff Lens: Are Autonomous Vehicles No-Win for Driver-Passengers

Madeleine Elish will lead a discussion of Jake Goldenfein, Deirdre Mulligan, and Helen Nissenbaum‘s The Human/Weapon Relationship in the Age of Autonomous Weapons and the Attribution of Criminal Responsibility for War Crimes on Saturday, April 13, at 4:00 p.m. Friday, April 12, at 1:45 p.m. at #werobot 2019. There is a great deal of hype around […]