Autonomous systems, including generative AI, have been adopted faster than previous digital innovations. Their impact on society might as well be more profound, with a radical restructuring of the economy of knowledge and dramatic consequences for social and institutional balances. Different attitudes to control these systems have emerged rooted in the classical pillars of legal systems, proprietary rights, and social responsibility. We show how an illusion of control might be guiding governments and regulators, while autonomous systems might be driving us to inescapable delusion.

Grumbach, S., Resta, G., Torlone, R. (2024). Autonomous Intelligent Systems: From Illusion of Control to Inescapable Delusion. In arXiv.

Autonomous Intelligent Systems: From Illusion of Control to Inescapable Delusion

Stéphane Grumbach;Giorgio Resta;Riccardo Torlone
2024-01-01

Abstract

Autonomous systems, including generative AI, have been adopted faster than previous digital innovations. Their impact on society might as well be more profound, with a radical restructuring of the economy of knowledge and dramatic consequences for social and institutional balances. Different attitudes to control these systems have emerged rooted in the classical pillars of legal systems, proprietary rights, and social responsibility. We show how an illusion of control might be guiding governments and regulators, while autonomous systems might be driving us to inescapable delusion.
2024
Grumbach, S., Resta, G., Torlone, R. (2024). Autonomous Intelligent Systems: From Illusion of Control to Inescapable Delusion. In arXiv.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11590/468169
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