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Since 2017, more than two dozen national governments have released AI strategies or plans to develop ethics standards, policies, and regulations.Organizations, universities, and governments are calling on companies using AI to discuss and outline ethical principles to govern their use of the technology. Since 2017, more than national governments have released AI strategies or plans to develop ethics standards, policies, and regulations. Today, major technology companies, such as and have published their own internal principles and are dedicating new to address ethical issues such as bias and lack of transparency. Other initiatives by the world’s largest tech companies include:* A new partnership between Facebook and the Technical University of Munich (TUM) to form , with an initial investment of $7.5 million.* Amazon and the National Science Foundation recently earmarked $10 million for * Salesforce announced its tackling bias in AI with new additions to its .In a recent Deloitte survey, of executives named ethical risks as one of the top three potential concerns related to AI. However, organizing an ethics committee or research center is a costly undertaking. Companies can take a more practical approach first, outlining the mission of their AI-related work and forming their ethics principles around that. One way business leaders can jumpstart this conversation is with the Ethical OS Toolkit.
- Have you seen instances of personal or individual bias enter into your product’s algorithms? How could these have been prevented or mitigated?
- Is the technology reinforcing or amplifying existing bias?
- Who is responsible for developing the algorithm? Is there a lack of diversity in the people responsible for the design of the technology?
- How will you push back against a blind preference for automation (the assumption that AI-based systems and decisions are correct and don’t need to be verified or audited)?
- Are your algorithms transparent to the people impacted by them? Is there any recourse for people who feel they have been incorrectly or unfairly assessed?
Enterprises must consider the ethical implications of the AI products and services they are building, and a good first step is for IT leaders and their teams to discuss the questions above openly and honestly together. As Stephen Hawking said, “The short-term impact of AI depends on who controls it, the long-term impact depends on whether it can be controlled at all.”