The field of artificial intelligence has made tremendous advances
in the last few decades, but as smart as AI is now, it is getting
exponentially smarter and becoming more autonomous in its actions.
This raises a host of challenges to current legal doctrine,
including whether the output of AI entities should count as
'speech', the extent to which AI should be regulated under
antitrust and criminal law statutes, and whether AI should be
considered an independent agent and responsible for its actions
under the law of tort or agency. Containing chapters written by
leading U.S., EU, and International law scholars, the Research
Handbook presents current law, statutes, and regulations on the
role of law in an age of increasingly smart AI, addressing issues
of law that are critical to the evolution of AI and its role in
society. To provide a broad coverage of the topic, the Research
Handbook draws upon free speech doctrine, criminal law, issues of
data protection and privacy, legal rights for increasingly smart AI
systems, and a discussion of jurisdiction for AI entities that will
not be 'content' to stay within the geographical boundaries of any
nation state or be tied to a particular physical location. Using
numerous examples and case studies, the chapter authors discuss the
political and jurisdictional decisions that will have to be made as
AI proliferates into society and transforms our government and
social institutions. The Research Handbook will also introduce
designers of artificially intelligent systems to the legal issues
that apply to the make-up and use of AI from the technologies,
algorithms, and analytical techniques. This essential guide to the
U.S., EU, and other International law, regulations, and statutes
which apply to the emerging field of 'law and AI' will be a
valuable reference for scholars and students interested in
information and intellectual property law, privacy, and data
protection as well as to legal theorists and social scientists who
write about the future direction and implications of AI. The
Research Handbook will also serve as an important reference for
legal practitioners in different jurisdictions who may litigate
disputes involving AI, and to computer scientists and engineers
actively involved in the design and use of the next generation of
AI systems. Contributors include: W. Barfield, S. Bayern, S.J.
Blodgett-Ford, R.G.A. Bone, T. Burri, A. Chin, J.A. Cubert, M. de
Cock Buning, S. De Conca, S-.A. Elvy, A. Ezrachi, R. Leenes, Y.
Lev-Aretz, A.R. Lodder, R.P. Loui, T.M. Massaro, L.T. McCarty, J.O.
McGinnis, F. Moslein, H. Norton, N. Packin, U. Pagallo, S.
Quattrocolo, W. Samore, F. Shimpo, M.E. Stucke, R. van den Hoven
van Genderen, L. Vertinsky, A. von Ungern-Sternberg, J.F. Weaver,
Y-.H. Weng, I. Wildhaber
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