Generative Ethics and the New Bing

Speaker
Professor Seth Lazar, Professor John Tasioulas, Dr Jeffrey Howard, Dr Charlotte Unruh
Event date
Event time
17:00 - 18:30
Venue
Hybrid - in-person and online
Venue details

If you would like to attend the talk in-person in Oxford, please register using the link below

Event type
Lectures and seminars
Event cost
Free
Disabled access?
Yes
Booking required
Required

Abstract: Generative AI has taken the world by storm over the last nine months, from artistic tools that may upend the creative economy, to an AI-powered ‘copilot for the web’ that just might threaten to kill you if you don’t do what it says. Recent (often prescient) work helps to plot the potential harms of AI systems that generate text and images on demand, but can moral philosophy add a useful lens to help us understand which risks should concern us most, and which we can (for now) discount? For example, how should we weigh and respond to the risks of manipulative but narrow dialogue agents against hypothetical future systems with more general capabilities? And how will the prospect of governing algorithmic systems with natural language prompts affect long-standing debates in machine ethics? This talk makes first steps in developing a ‘generative (AI) ethics’, offering suggestions for how moral philosophy can help understand, prioritise, and reduce the risks posed by recent advances in AI.

This event is hybrid. Find out more about attending remotely here: Ethics in AI Colloquium - Generative Ethics and the New Bing