Abstract

The ethics of artificial intelligence (AI) is a widely discussed topic. There are numerous initiatives that aim to develop the principles and guidance to ensure that the development, deployment and use of AI are ethically acceptable. What is generally unclear is how organisations that make use of AI understand and address these ethical issues in practice. While there is an abundance of conceptual work on AI ethics, empirical insights are rare and often anecdotal. This paper fills the gap in our current understanding of how organisations deal with AI ethics by presenting empirical findings collected using a set of ten case studies and providing an account of the cross-case analysis. The paper reviews the discussion of ethical issues of AI as well as mitigation strategies that have been proposed in the literature. Using this background, the cross-case analysis categorises the organisational responses that were observed in practice. The discussion shows that organisations are highly aware of the AI ethics debate and keen to engage with ethical issues proactively. However, they make use of only a relatively small subsection of the mitigation strategies proposed in the literature. These insights are of importance to organisations deploying or using AI, to the academic AI ethics debate, but maybe most valuable to policymakers involved in the current debate about suitable policy developments to address the ethical issues raised by AI.

Highlights

  • The discussion of the ethical aspects of artificial intelligence (AI) remains lively

  • As an initial orientation to the reader, we offer this graphical overview in Fig. 1 which distinguishes ethical benefits and three categories of ethical issues that are explained in more detail below

  • The approach to AI ethics based on strengthening human rights in businesses as proposed by the Council of Europe and others does not seem to have arrived in organisations

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Summary

Introduction

The discussion of the ethical aspects of artificial intelligence (AI) remains lively. The Netherlands 5 Business Systems and Operations, University of Northampton, Northampton, UK topic (2016a; b) may be a good marker for the growth in public attention. The reason for this growing attention is rooted in the capabilities of these technologies which can increasingly fulfil tasks that used to be reserved for humans. Can they beat the best humans in games that were previously thought to require human intelligence, but they are approaching or surpassing human-level achievements in a broad range of activities, from facial recognition and diagnosis of cancer cells to the optimisation of organisational or societal processes. The recognition of the capabilities of AI provides the basis for the expectation that further technical development will lead to fundamental changes to the way we live our lives

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