This is a brilliant premise for exploring culpability in the age of AI. Considering the complexity of modern autonomous systems, what if the true culpability resides not just in the immediate incident, but in the bias or limitations of the AI's traning data?
This is a brilliant premise for exploring culpability in the age of AI. Considering the complexity of modern autonomous systems, what if the true culpability resides not just in the immediate incident, but in the bias or limitations of the AI's traning data?
It's a great question. You should definitely read the book. It's a fascinating read!