ISBN |
9781786615794 |
Note |
Sisaldab bibliograafiat ja registrit |
Contents |
Introduction: The Control Paradox for Dummies ; Part I: Introducing the Paradox. Chapter One: The paradox ; ChapterTwo: Control and the Empowerment Illusion ; Part II: Control and Delegation. Chapter Three: The Concept of Control and Direct Control. ; Chapter Four: Social Control and Technological Control ; Chapter Five: Delegating Control and the Practice of Delegation ; Part III: The Technological Paradox. Chapter Six: Control, Drones and Autonomous Weapons ; Chapter Seven: VAR, Authority and Loss of Control ; Chapter Eight: Self-Driving Cars and Meaningful Human Control ; Chapter Nine: Smartphones from Empowerment to Surveillance: Local Control and Global Control ; Chapter Ten: Health Data & Healthcare Algorithms (or: Medical AI) ; Part IV: The Political Paradox. Chapter Eleven: Taking Back Control: From Brexit to Trump and the Control Paradox of Representative Democracy ; Chapter Twelve: Delegating Responsibility? |
Note |
New technology is introduced for the purpose of improving our control over a certain task: however, software, AI and robots often cause understandable fears of machines taking control of us. This is what Ezio di Nucci calls 'the control paradox'. Through the notion of the control paradox, Di Nucci shows how the lack of direct control within representative democracies could be motivating populism and argues that a better understanding of delegation is a possible solution. |
Subject |
sotsiaalne kontroll
|
|
tehisintellekt
|
|
poliitilised aspektid
|
|
demokraatia
|
More terms |
Social control |
|
Social control -- Political aspects |
|
Artificial intelligence -- Social aspects |
|
Democracy |
UDC |
316.6
|
|
316.4
|
|