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Risky Artificial Intelligence: The Role of Incidents in the Path to AI Regulation

Abstract

The history of high-tech regulation is a path studded with incidents. Each adverse event allowed the gathering of more information on high technologies and their impacts on people, infrastructure, and other technologies, posing the bases for their regulation. With the increasing diffusion of artificial intelligence (AI) use, it is plausible that this connection between incidents and high-tech regulation will be confirmed for this technology as well. This study focuses on the role of AI incidents and an efficient strategy of incident data collection and analysis to improve our knowledge of the impact of AI technologies and regulate them better. To pursue this objective, the paper first analyses the evolution of high-tech regulation in the aftermath of incidents. Second, the paper focuses on the recent developments in AI regulation through soft and hard laws. Third, this study assesses the quality of the available AI incident databases and their capacity to provide information useful for opening and regulating the AI black box. This study acknowledges the importance of implementing a strategy for gathering and analysing AI incident data and approving flexible AI regulation that evolves with such a new technology and with the information that we will receive from adverse events—an approach that is also endorsed by the European Commission and its proposal to regulate and harmonise rules on AI.

Published: 2023-05-30
Pages:133 to 152
Section: Symposium: Condition Critical
How to Cite
Lupo, Giampiero. 2023. “Risky Artificial Intelligence: The Role of Incidents in the Path to AI Regulation”. Law, Technology and Humans 5 (1):133-52. https://doi.org/10.5204/lthj.2682.

Author Biography

ISASI-CNR Institute of Applied Sciences and Intelligent Systems - National Research Council of Italy
Italy Italy

Giampiero Lupo is a researcher at the Research Institute of Applied Sciences & Intelligent Systems of the National Research Council of Italy. At the Institute, he works and worked on several projects and researches regarding e-justice, e-justice evaluation, justice systems’ organization and governance and analysis of justice systems’ statistical data. He received his PhD in Political Science‐Comparative and European Politics in 2010 at the University of Siena. He has been a researcher of the University of Bologna working on deliberative democracy, quality of democracy, justice systems, e-justice. He participates and participated to a set of international projects as "LINK: Linking Information for Adaptive and Accessible Child-Friendly Courts", “e-CODEX” and "ACT, Autonomy Trough Cyberjustice". As part of his research and technical assistance activities, he has collaborated and collaborates with national and international public bodies such as several Ministries of Justice in Europe, European Council, European Commission, JLOS (Justice, Law and Order Sector - Uganda), CEPEJ (European Commission for the Efficiency of Justice), Embassy of Canada, University of Montreal. He is member of the CEPEJ Artificial Intelligence Advisory Body (AIAB). He is the author and co-author of more than 20 scientific publications in conferences, workshops, international journals, and books on issues related to the use and impact of ICT technologies in judicial systems, ethical profiles of Artificial Intelligence, smart cities, evaluation of e-justice, access to justice, quality of justice.

Open Access Journal
ISSN 2652-4074