000 03125nam a2200385Ia 4500
000 03836nam a22004215i 4500
001 978-3-031-19447-4
003 DE-He213
005 20240319121013.0
007 cr nn 008mamaa
008 230116s2023 sz | s |||| 0|eng d
020 _a9783031194474
_9978-3-031-19447-4
082 _a343.099
100 _aKsiężak, Paweł.
_935051
245 _aToward a Conceptual Network for the Private Law of Artificial Intelligence
_cby Paweł Księżak, Sylwia Wojtczak.
_h[electronic resource] /
250 _a1st ed. 2023.
260 _aCham
_bSpringer International Publishing
_c2023
300 _aVIII, 296 p. 1 illus.
_bonline resource.
520 _aThis book provides a set of proposals for the new conceptual network required in order to establish civil law rules for a world permeated by Artificial Intelligence. These proposals are intended by their authors to push the debate on the new civil law forward. In spite of the natural conservatism of jurists, some innovative or even futuristic ideas are called for, also because the future, even this not-so-distant one, is difficult to foresee. Paradoxically, and unlike in the past, this lack of knowledge must not stop us from planning. If it does, humankind may, as some pessimists already claim, lose its chance to win the battle for control of the world. The rise and expansion of Artificial Intelligence and robotics in recent years has highlighted a pressing need to create a suitable legal framework for this new phenomenon. The debate on the subject, although wide-ranging and involving many new legal documents, is still quite general and preliminary in nature, although these preparatory works illustrate the very real need to develop appropriate new civil law arrangements. It is exactly the branch of private law where the necessity of these new rules appears to be the most imperative. Autonomous vehicles, medical robots, and expertise software raise fundamental questions on aspects of civil liability such as culpability; whereas the growth in popularity of automated, intelligent software systems for concluding contracts requires a new approach to many fundamental and deeply rooted elements of contract law, e.g. consciousness, intent, error, deception, interpretation of contracts and good faith. Ruling on these specific matters demands the identification and clarification of certain key points, which shall become the foundation for constructing AI/robot civil law.
650 _aArtificial intelligence.
_935052
650 _aArtificial Intelligence.
_935053
650 _aCivil law.
_935054
650 _aCivil Law.
_935055
650 _aComputers
_935056
650 _aInformation technology
_935057
650 _aIT Law, Media Law, Intellectual Property.
_935058
650 _aLaw
_935059
650 _aLaw
_935059
650 _aLegal Aspects of Computing.
_935060
650 _aMass media
_935061
650 _aTheories of Law, Philosophy of Law, Legal History.
_935062
700 _aWojtczak, Sylwia.
_935063
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-19447-4
942 _cEBK
_2ddc
999 _c15527
_d15527