The Different Faces of AI Ethics Across the World: A
Principle-Implementation Gap Analysis
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2206.03225v1
- Date: Thu, 12 May 2022 22:41:08 GMT
- Title: The Different Faces of AI Ethics Across the World: A
Principle-Implementation Gap Analysis
- Authors: Lionel Nganyewou Tidjon and Foutse Khomh
- Abstract summary: Artificial Intelligence (AI) is transforming our daily life with several applications in healthcare, space exploration, banking and finance.
These rapid progresses in AI have brought increasing attention to the potential impacts of AI technologies on society.
Several ethical principles have been released by governments, national and international organisations.
These principles outline high-level precepts to guide the ethical development, deployment, and governance of AI.
- Score: 12.031113181911627
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Artificial Intelligence (AI) is transforming our daily life with several
applications in healthcare, space exploration, banking and finance. These rapid
progresses in AI have brought increasing attention to the potential impacts of
AI technologies on society, with ethically questionable consequences. In recent
years, several ethical principles have been released by governments, national
and international organisations. These principles outline high-level precepts
to guide the ethical development, deployment, and governance of AI. However,
the abstract nature, diversity, and context-dependency of these principles make
them difficult to implement and operationalize, resulting in gaps between
principles and their execution. Most recent work analysed and summarized
existing AI principles and guidelines but they did not provide findings on
principle-implementation gaps and how to mitigate them. These findings are
particularly important to ensure that AI implementations are aligned with
ethical principles and values. In this paper, we provide a contextual and
global evaluation of current ethical AI principles for all continents, with the
aim to identify potential principle characteristics tailored to specific
countries or applicable across countries. Next, we analyze the current level of
AI readiness and current implementations of ethical AI principles in different
countries, to identify gaps in the implementation of AI principles and their
causes. Finally, we propose recommendations to mitigate the
principle-implementation gaps.
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