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The Cambridge Handbook of Responsible Artificial Intelligence, 2022
- Silja Voeneky, Philipp Kellmeyer, Oliver Müller, Wolfram Burgard:
The Cambridge Handbook of Responsible Artificial Intelligence - Interdisciplinary Perspectives. Cambridge Law Handbooks, Cambridge University Press 2022, ISBN 9781009207898 - Silja Voeneky, Philipp Kellmeyer, Oliver Müller, Wolfram Burgard:
Introduction. 1-8 - Wolfram Burgard:
Artificial Intelligence: Key Technologies and Opportunities. 11-18 - Jaan Tallinn, Richard Ngo:
Automating Supervision of AI Delegates. 19-30 - Catrin Misselhorn:
Artificial Moral Agents: Conceptual Issues and Ethical Controversy. 31-49 - Johanna Thoma:
Risk Imposition by Artificial Agents: The Moral Proxy Problem. 50-66 - Christoph Durt:
Artificial Intelligence and Its Integration into the Human Lifeworld. 67-82 - Mathias Risse:
Artificial Intelligence and the Past, Present, and Future of Democracy. 85-103 - Thomas Burri:
The New Regulation of the European Union on Artificial Intelligence: Fuzzy Ethics Diffuse into Domestic Law and Sideline International Law. 104-122 - Thorsten Schmidt, Silja Voeneky:
Fostering the Common Good: An Adaptive Approach Regulating High-Risk AI-Driven Products and Services. 123-149 - Weixing Shen, Yun Liu:
China's Normative Systems for Responsible AI: From Soft Law to Hard Law. 150-166 - Thomas Metzinger:
Towards a Global Artificial Intelligence Charter. 167-175 - Jonathan Zittrain:
Intellectual Debt: With Great Power Comes Great Ignorance. 176-184 - Christiane Wendehorst:
Liability for Artificial Intelligence: The Need to Address Both Safety Risks and Fundamental Rights Risks. 187-209 - Jan von Hein:
Forward to the Past: A Critical Evaluation of the European Approach to Artificial Intelligence in Private International Law. 210-226 - Wilfried Hinsch:
Differences That Make a Difference: Computational Profiling and Fairness to Individuals. 229-251 - Antje von Ungern-Sternberg:
Discriminatory AI and the Law: Legal Standards for Algorithmic Profiling. 252-278 - Ralf Poscher:
Artificial Intelligence and the Right to Data Protection. 281-289 - Boris P. Paal:
Artificial Intelligence as a Challenge for Data Protection Law: And Vice Versa. 290-308 - Sangchul Park, Yong Lim, Haksoo Ko:
Data Governance and Trust: Lessons from South Korean Experiences Coping with COVID-19. 309-328 - Jan Lieder:
From Corporate Governance to Algorithm Governance: Artificial Intelligence as a Challenge for Corporations and Their Executives. 331-346 - Stefan Thomas:
Autonomization and Antitrust: On the Construal of the Cartel Prohibition in the Light of Algorithmic Collusion. 347-358 - Matthias Paul:
Artificial Intelligence in Financial Services: New Risks and the Need for More Regulation? 359-376 - Fruzsina Molnár-Gábor, Johanne Giesecke:
Medical AI: Key Elements at the International Level. 379-396 - Christoph Krönke:
"Hey Siri, How Am I Doing?": Legal Challenges for Artificial Intelligence Alter Egos in Healthcare. 397-411 - Philipp Kellmeyer:
'Neurorights': A Human Rights-Based Approach for Governing Neurotechnologies. 412-426 - Boris Eßmann, Oliver Müller:
AI-Supported Brain-Computer Interfaces and the Emergence of 'Cyberbilities'. 427-444 - Ebrahim Afsah:
Artificial Intelligence, Law, and National Security. 447-474 - Alex Leveringhaus:
Morally Repugnant Weaponry?: Ethical Responses to the Prospect of Autonomous Weapons. 475-487 - Dustin A. Lewis:
On 'Responsible AI' in War: Exploring Preconditions for Respecting International Law in Armed Conflict. 488-506
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