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I have posted a draft of my latest essay, The Path of Robotics Law, on SSRN. Here is the abstract: This
essay, written as a response to Ryan Calo's valuable discussion in
"Robotics and the Lessons of Cyberlaw," describes key problems that
robotics and artificial intelligence (AI) agents present for law.
The
first problem is how to distribute rights and responsibilities among
human beings when non-human agents create benefits like artistic works
or cause harms like physical injuries. The difficulty is caused by the
fact that the behavior of robotic and AI systems is "emergent;" their
actions may not be predictable in advance or constrained by human
expectations about proper behavior. Moreover,the programming and
algorithms used by robots and AI entities may be the work of many hands,
and may employ generative technologies that allow innovation at
multiple layers. These features of robotics and AI enhance
unpredictability and diffusion of causal responsibility for what robots
and AI agents do.
Lawrence Lessig’s famous dictum that “Code is
Law” argued that combinations of computer hardware and software, like
other modalities of regulation, could constrain and direct human
behavior. Robotics and AI present the converse problem. Instead of code
as a law that regulates humans, robotics and AI feature emergent
behavior that escapes human planning and expectations. Code is lawless.
The
second problem raised by robotics and AI is the "substitution effect."
People will substitute robots and AI agents for living things—and
especially for humans. But they will do so only in certain ways and only
for certain purposes. In other words, people tend to treat robots and
AI agents as special-purpose animals or special-purpose human beings.
This substitution is likely to be incomplete, contextual, unstable, and
often opportunistic. People may treat the robot as a person (or animal)
for some purposes and as an object for others. The problem of
substitution touches many different areas of law, and it promises to
confound us for a very long time.
Finally, the essay responds to
Calo's argument about the lessons of cyberlaw for robotics. Calo argues
that lawyers should identify the “essential characteristics” of robotics
and then ask how the law should respond to the problems posed by those
essential characteristics. I see the lessons of cyberlaw quite
differently. We should not think of essential characteristics of
technology independent of how people use technology in their lives and
in their social relations with others. Because the use of technology in
social life evolves, and because people continually find new ways to
employ technology for good or for ill, it may be unhelpful to freeze
certain features of use at a particular moment and label them “essential
characteristics.” Innovation in technology is not just innovation of
tools and techniques; it may also involve innovation of economic, social
and legal relations. As we innovate socially and economically, what
appears most salient and important about our technologies may also
change. Posted
8:35 AM
by JB [link]