Nature of the publication | Journal article |
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Title of the publication | What humans lose when we let AI decide |
Journal name/Book publisher | MIT Sloan Management Review |
DOI | mit.edu |
Abstract | I t’s been more than 50 years since HAL, the malevolent computer in the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, first terrified audiences by turning against the astronauts he was supposed to protect. That cinematic moment captures what many of us still fear in AI: that it may gain superhuman powers and subjugate us. But instead of worrying about futuristic sci-fi nightmares, we should instead wake up to an equally alarming scenario that is unfolding before our eyes: We are increasingly, unsuspectingly yet willingly, abdicating our power to make decisions based on our own judgment, including our moral convictions. What we believe is “right” risks becoming no longer a question of ethics but simply what the “correct” result of a mathematical calculation is. |
Author #1 | Christine Moser |
Affiliation Author #1 | Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam |
Author #2 | Frank den Hond |
Affiliation Author #2 | Hanken School of Economics, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam |
Author #3 | Dirk Lindebaum |
Affiliation Author #3 | Grenoble Ecole de Management |