AI companies are adopting ‘care language’: Three reasons why we should be concerned
Latest blog posts
Professor Edward Harcourt explores what makes human beings uniquely valuable in the age of AI
Professor Ignacio Cofone, Professor of Law and Regulation of AI at the University of Oxford, Institute for Ethics in AI and Faculty of Law, explores how the “black box” framing of AI systems is often a deliberate choice rather than an unavoidable feature.
Claude's new Constitution: two evaluative continua
What Should We Do About Chatbots? Eating People, Pornography and Education
The professional discussion around the development and deployment of autonomous weapon systems (AWS) has devoted much attention to the (in)ability of AWS to comply with international humanitarian law (IHL)
This blog explores how our current legal and regulatory frameworks, built for a simpler, more individualistic world, fail to account for the systemic, relational, and power-shifting harms of AI.
Following previous summits at Bletchley Park (2023) and Seoul (2024), global leaders re-convened at the Paris AI Summit this month to find a shared direction for the regulation of artificial intelligence (AI).
Regulatory overreach or regulatory capture? This is not the crux. Ethical AI Development necessitates a fundamental shift in focus. This blog post argues that corporate structure is the key.
In search of ethical AI: the possibility of a democratically governed future of work
AI ethics can do more than help us to think about regulating AI systems. If AI artificially recreates something we possess - intelligence - the way we imagine our own capacities may be critical to turning the AI future in a humane direction.
