程序代写 FCA 367

PowerPoint Presentation

A Law of AI?

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Professor Jeannie
Melbourne Law School

At the end of this module, you should be able to:

Understand the role of policy, regulation and law in responding to social concerns about AI

Reflect on the relationship between the ethical principles of AI and law

Understand the different models of law that may be applied to regulate AI

Apply as an example the prohibition on misleading conduct in the ACL (ACCC v Meta)

Reflect on the relationship between AI Ethics and Law.

Santow, Ed, ‘Emerging from an AI Utopia’ (2020) Science Magazine 9

Paterson, and Maker, Yvette, ‘AI in the Home: Artificial Intelligence and Consumer Protection’ in and (eds), The Cambridge Handbook of Private Law and Artificial Intelligence (Cambridge University Press, Forthcoming)

Harding, Liam, Paterson, , Bant, Elise, ‘ACCC vs Big Tech: Round 10 and counting’ Pursuit (Thursday, 24 Mar 2022)

G+T EU AI Act Overview

In the recordings

The structure of law

The relationship between law and ethics

Key concepts

Why Regulate AI?

Promote community values?

Uphold democratic principles?

Reduce the risk of unacceptable harms?

What law should apply to regulate AI?

Existing law?

Privacy or data protection law?

An AI Law?

Privacy Act 1988 (Cth)

APP 1: Open and transparent management of personal information, including a clearly expressed and up to date privacy policy

APP 3: Collection of solicited personal information, primarily only where it is reasonably necessary for the organisation’s functions or activities

Premised on consent and control of data by individuals.

But still only a partial solution

People give away data to get services…

General Data Protection Regulation (EU) (GDPR)

Individual rights:

The right to be informed

The right of access

The right to rectification

The right to erasure

The right to restrict processing

The right to data portability

The right to object

Rights in relation to automated decision making and profiling.

Transparency.
Aims to ensure California consumers know they’re talking to a real person or a piece of software.

 (a) It shall be unlawful for any person to use a bot to communicate or interact with another person in California online, with the intent to mislead the other person about its artificial identity for the purpose of knowingly deceiving the person about the content of the communication in order to incentivize a purchase or sale of goods or services in a commercial transaction or to influence a vote in an election. A person using a bot shall not be liable under this section if the person discloses that it is a bot.
(b) The disclosure required by this section shall be clear, conspicuous, and reasonably designed to inform persons with whom the bot communicates or interacts that it is a bot.

California Business and Professions Code § 17940

EU Draft AI Law

Risk based categories

EU AI: Obligations

An AI Law is not on the agenda in Australia – so can existing law do the job?

Existing Law

Discrimination Law – discussed in Ed Santow’s article

Consumer Protection Law – discussed in Paterson and Maker

Useful and still to be explored…?

Adequate but not sufficient ….?

Australian Consumer Law (Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) Schedule 2

Section 18

A person shall not, in trade or commerce, engage in conduct that is misleading or likely to mislead

ACCC v Google (2021) FCA 367
https://www.accc.gov.au/media-release/correction-accc-alleges-google-misled-consumers-about-expanded-use-of-personal-data

ACCC v Meta (just commenced)

Litigation on misleading conduct and bad algorithmic behaviour

ACCC v Meta

AI ethics informing law

Litigation for discrimination or misleading conduct requires a certain degree of transparency to be established.

AI ethics and its values of transparency and explainability might just be a way to do this….

Melbourne Law School

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