1st Edition

Algorithmic Ethics Algorithms and Society

Edited By Michael Filimowicz Copyright 2023

    This book focuses on how new technologies are raising and reshaping ethical questions and practices that aim to automate ethics into program outputs.

    With new powerful technologies come enhanced capacities to act, which in turn require new ethical concepts for guiding just and fair actions in the use of these new capabilities. The new algorithmic regimes, for their ethical articulation, build on prior ethics discourses in computer and information ethics, as well as the philosophical traditions of ethics generally. Especially as our technologies become more autonomous, operating alongside us in the home, workplace or on the roads, ethics has the potential to limit negative effects and shape the new technical terrains in a more humanly recognizable way. The volume covers a critique of human-centered AI, the effects of AI and the Internet of Things in the domain of human resource management, how decentralized finance applications on the blockchain encode ethical norms into “smart contracts,” and the personal surveillance risks of audio beacon technology operating invisibly in our cellphones.

    Scholars and students from many backgrounds, as well as policy makers, journalists and the general reading public will find a multidisciplinary approach to questions posed by research in algorithmic ethics from the fields of management, sociology, social policy, public service, religion and interactive media.

    1 Visions of Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence: Relations with Ethics and Power
    Lilla Vicsek and Tamás Tóth

    2 Values, Work and Well-being in Artificial Intelligence Society: Exacerbating Dilemmas in Human Resource Management
    Johnny Långstedt and James Arrowsmith

    3 In the Forefront of Code: Ethics in Decentralized Finance
    Andreas Langenohl

    4 Audio Beacon Technologies, Surveillance and the Digital Paradox
    Julian Iliev

    Biography

    Michael Filimowicz is Senior Lecturer in the School of Interactive Arts and Technology (SIAT) at Simon Fraser University. He has a background in computer-mediated communications, audiovisual production, new media art and creative writing. His research develops new multimodal display technologies and forms, exploring novel form factors across different application contexts including gaming, immersive exhibitions and simulations.