Journal: AI Ethics

Volume 1, Issue 4

389 -- 394R. Wallace. 'The names have changed, but the game's the same': artificial intelligence and racial policy in the USA
395 -- 403David Lauer. Facebook's ethical failures are not accidental; they are part of the business model
405 -- 423Robert Hanna, Emre Kazim. Philosophical foundations for digital ethics and AI Ethics: a dignitarian approach
425 -- 434Shimon Kaplan, Doron Handelman, Amir Handelman. Sensitivity of neural networks to corruption of image classification
435 -- 444Ken Daley. Two arguments against human-friendly AI
445 -- 462Philip C. Treleaven, Jeremy Barnett, Andrew Knight, Will Serrano. Real Estate Data Marketplace
463 -- 476Clément Henin, Daniel Le Métayer. A framework to contest and justify algorithmic decisions
477 -- 490Andreia Martinho, Adam Poulsen, Maarten Kroesen, Caspar G. Chorus. Perspectives about artificial moral agents
491 -- 499Elias Moser. Against robot taxes: scrutinizing the moral reasons for the preservation of work
501 -- 515Marc Steen, Tjerk Timan, Ibo van de Poel. Responsible innovation, anticipation and responsiveness: case studies of algorithms in decision support in justice and security, and an exploration of potential, unintended, undesirable, higher-order effects
517 -- 528Andrea Owe, Seth D. Baum. Moral consideration of nonhumans in the ethics of artificial intelligence
529 -- 544Michelle Seng Ah Lee, Luciano Floridi, Jatinder Singh. Formalising trade-offs beyond algorithmic fairness: lessons from ethical philosophy and welfare economics
545 -- 552Jun Kyung You. A critique of the 'as-if' approach to machine ethics
553 -- 562Etienne Huber. The future of online trust (and why Deepfake is advancing it)
563 -- 567David De Cremer, Leander De Schutter. How to use algorithmic decision-making to promote inclusiveness in organizations
569 -- 577Jimmy Yicheng Huang, Abhishek Gupta, Monica Youn. Survey of EU ethical guidelines for commercial AI: case studies in financial services
579 -- 591John-Stewart Gordon, Ausrine Pasvenskiene. Human rights for robots? A literature review
593 -- 610Michael Laakasuo, Volo Herzon, Silva Perander, Marianna Drosinou, Jukka Sundvall, Jussi Palomäki, Aku Visala. Socio-cognitive biases in folk AI ethics and risk discourse
611 -- 617Daniel W. Tigard. Workplace automation without achievement gaps: a reply to Danaher and Nyholm

Volume 1, Issue 3

205 -- 208Catherine Petrozzino. Who pays for ethical debt in AI?
209 -- 211Yi Zeng 0001, Kang Sun, Enmeng Lu. Declaration on the ethics of brain-computer interfaces and augment intelligence
213 -- 218Aimee van Wynsberghe. Sustainable AI: AI for sustainability and the sustainability of AI
219 -- 225Emre Kazim, Adriano S. Koshiyama. The interrelation between data and AI ethics in the context of impact assessments
227 -- 237John Danaher, Sven Nyholm. Automation, work and the achievement gap
239 -- 247Bertrand K. Hassani. Societal bias reinforcement through machine learning: a credit scoring perspective
249 -- 260Ryan Steed, Aylin Caliskan. A set of distinct facial traits learned by machines is not predictive of appearance bias in the wild
261 -- 271Charlotte Stix, Matthijs M. Maas. Bridging the gap: the case for an 'Incompletely Theorized Agreement' on AI policy
273 -- 281David M. Douglas, David Howard, Justine Lacey. Moral responsibility for computationally designed products
283 -- 296Steven Umbrello, Ibo van de Poel. Mapping value sensitive design onto AI for social good principles
297 -- 300Kelly Forbes. Opening the path to ethics in artificial intelligence
301 -- 310Emre Kazim, Danielle Mendes Thame Denny, Adriano S. Koshiyama. AI auditing and impact assessment: according to the UK information commissioner's office
311 -- 0Emre Kazim, Danielle Mendes Thame Denny, Adriano S. Koshiyama. Correction to: AI auditing and impact assessment: according to the UK information commissioner's office
313 -- 329Christian Herzog né Hoffmann. On formal ethics versus inclusive moral deliberation
331 -- 345Tyler L. Jaynes. On human genome manipulation and Homo technicus: the legal treatment of non-natural human subjects
347 -- 353Bernardo A. Huberman, Tad Hogg. Privacy and data balkanization: circumventing the barriers
355 -- 387Kareem Othman. Public acceptance and perception of autonomous vehicles: a comprehensive review

Volume 1, Issue 2

93 -- 99Kevin LaGrandeur. How safe is our reliance on AI, and should we regulate it?
101 -- 108Jamie Brandon. Using unethical data to build a more ethical world
109 -- 111Paula Boddington. AI and moral thinking: how can we live well with machines to enhance our moral agency?
113 -- 117Daniel W. Tigard. Responsible AI and moral responsibility: a common appreciation
119 -- 130Patrick van Esch, J. Stewart Black, Denni Arli. Job candidates' reactions to AI-Enabled job application processes
131 -- 138Christoph Ebell, Ricardo Baeza-Yates, Richard Benjamins, Hengjin Cai, Mark Coeckelbergh, Tania Duarte, Merve Hickok, Aurelie Jacquet, Angela Kim, Joris Krijger, John MacIntyre, Piyush Madhamshettiwar, Lauren Maffeo, Jeanna Matthews, Larry R. Medsker, Peter Smith, Savannah Thais. Towards intellectual freedom in an AI Ethics Global Community
139 -- 140Christoph Ebell, Ricardo Baeza-Yates, Richard Benjamins, Hengjin Cai, Mark Coeckelbergh, Tania Duarte, Merve Hickok, Aurelie Jacquet, Angela Kim, Joris Krijger, John MacIntyre, Piyush B. Madhamshettiwar, Lauren Mafeo, Jeanna Matthews, Larry R. Medsker, Peter Smith, Savannah Thais. Correction to: Towards intellectual freedom in an AI Ethics Global Community
141 -- 150Thorsten Jelinek, Wendell Wallach, Danil Kerimi. Policy brief: the creation of a G20 coordinating committee for the governance of artificial intelligence
151 -- 155Heidi Furey, Scott Hill. MIT's moral machine project is a psychological roadblock to self-driving cars
157 -- 0Heidi Furey, Scott Hill. Correction to: MIT's moral machine project is a psychological roadblock to self-driving cars
159 -- 172Thiago Guimaraes Moraes, Eduarda Costa Almeida, José Renato Laranjeira de Pereira. Smile, you are being identified! Risks and measures for the use of facial recognition in (semi-)public spaces
173 -- 181Josef Baker-Brunnbauer. Management perspective of ethics in artificial intelligence
183 -- 193Bartlomiej Chomanski. If robots are people, can they be made for profit? Commercial implications of robot personhood
195 -- 203Don Gotterbarn, David Kreps. Being a data professional: give voice to value in a data driven society

Volume 1, Issue 1

1 -- 3John MacIntyre, Larry R. Medsker, Rachel Moriarty. Past the tipping point?
5 -- 19Beishui Liao, Michael Anderson 0001, Susan Leigh Anderson. Representation, justification, and explanation in a value-driven agent: an argumentation-based approach
21 -- 25Dave Lauer. You cannot have AI ethics without ethics
27 -- 31Susan Leigh Anderson, Michael Anderson 0001. AI and ethics
33 -- 37Anthony J. Rhem. AI ethics and its impact on knowledge management
39 -- 0Anthony J. Rhem. Correction to: AI ethics and its impact on knowledge management
41 -- 47Merve Hickok. Lessons learned from AI ethics principles for future actions
49 -- 53Richard Benjamins. A choices framework for the responsible use of AI
55 -- 59Hengjin Cai. Reaching consensus with human beings through blockchain as an ethical rule of strong artificial intelligence
61 -- 65Jason Borenstein, Ayanna M. Howard. Emerging challenges in AI and the need for AI ethics education
67 -- 72Mark Coeckelbergh. AI for climate: freedom, justice, and other ethical and political challenges
73 -- 80Ray Eitel-Porter. Beyond the promise: implementing ethical AI
81 -- 86Peter Smith, Laura Smith. Artificial intelligence and disability: too much promise, yet too little substance?
87 -- 91Olivia Gambelin. Brave: what it means to be an AI Ethicist