•  182
    Applications of artificial intelligence (AI) for cybersecurity tasks are attracting greater attention from the private and the public sectors. Estimates indicate that the market for AI in cybersecurity will grow from US$1 billion in 2016 to a US$34.8 billion net worth by 2025. The latest national cybersecurity and defence strategies of several governments explicitly mention AI capabilities. At the same time, initiatives to define new standards and certification procedures to elicit users’ trust …Read more
  •  14
    In this chapter, I argue that the European commission’s report, ‘Ethics guidelines for trustworthy AI’, provides a clear benchmark to evaluate the responsible development of AI systems, and to facilitate international support for AI solutions that are good for humanity and the environment.
  •  14
    In this chapter I argue that the point is not to decide whether robots will qualify someday as a kind of persons, but to realise that we are stuck within the wrong conceptual framework. The digital is forcing us to rethink new solutions for new forms of agency. We must keep in mind that the debate is not about robots but about us, who will have to live with them, and about the kind of infosphere and societies we want to create.
  •  57
    As cyber attacks continue to escalate in terms of frequency, impact, and level of refinement so do the efforts of state actors to acquire new offensive capabilities to defend, counter or retaliate incoming attacks. Artificial Intelligence (AI) has become a key technology both for attacking and defending in cyberspace. When considered in the current regulatory vacuum this is problematic, as AI-enabled cyber conflict may escalate and threaten national security and international stability. This is …Read more
  •  53
    Prayer-Bots and Religious Worship on Twitter: A Call for a Wider Research Agenda
    with Carl Öhman and Robert Gorwa
    In Luciano Floridi (ed.), Ethics, Governance, and Policies in Artificial Intelligence, Springer Verlag. pp. 299-306. 2021.
    The automation of online social life is an urgent issue for researchers and the public alike. However, one of the most significant uses of such technologies seems to have gone largely unnoticed by the research community: religion. Focusing on Islamic Prayer Apps, which automatically post prayers from its users’ accounts, we show that even one such service is already responsible for millions of tweets daily, constituting a significant portion of Arabic-language Twitter traffic. We argue that the …Read more
  •  11
    Artificial Intelligence (AI) research and regulation seek to balance the benefits of innovation against any potential harms and disruption. However, one unintended consequence of the recent surge in AI research is the potential re-orientation of AI technologies to facilitate criminal acts, term in this article AI-Crime (AIC). AIC is theoretically feasible thanks to published experiments in automating fraud targeted at social media users, as well as demonstrations of AI-driven manipulation of sim…Read more
  •  36
    In this chapter, I argue that in translating ethical principles for digital technologies into ethical practices, even the best efforts may be undermined by some unethical risks. Five of them are already encountered or foreseeable in the international debate about digital ethics: (1) ethics shopping; (2) ethics bluewashing; (3) ethics lobbying; (4) ethics dumping; and (5) ethics shirking.
  •  16
    This is the introduction to the volume. It highlights the various “seasons” through which the development of AI has gone, and how the failures and successes of AI raise ethical questions, and require an ethical approach.
  •  35
    Mobility is an essential component of life in any society, so a transformation of mobility will affect the foundations of any society, and it is hard to imagine a more profound transformation of mobility than autonomous driving. This is why understanding attitudes towards the benefits and shortcomings of autonomous vehicles means being able to address societal welfare and individual well-being more successfully. In this chapter I argue that digital technologies have made it possible to detach th…Read more
  •  53
    The Ethics of Algorithms: Key Problems and Solutions
    with Andreas Tsamados, Nikita Aggarwal, Josh Cowls, Jessica Morley, Huw Roberts, and Mariarosaria Taddeo
    In Luciano Floridi (ed.), Ethics, Governance, and Policies in Artificial Intelligence, Springer Verlag. pp. 97-123. 2021.
    Research on the ethics of algorithms has grown substantially over the past decade. Alongside the exponential development and application of machine learning algorithms, new ethical problems and solutions relating to their ubiquitous use in society have been proposed. This article builds on a review of the ethics of algorithms published in 2016 (Mittelstadt et al. Big Data Soc 3(2)). The golas are to contribute to the debate on the identification and analysis of the ethical implications of algori…Read more
  •  48
    An increasing number of financial services (FS) companies are adopting solutions driven by artificial intelligence (AI) to gain operational efficiencies, derive strategic insights, and improve customer engagement. However, the rate of adoption has been low, in part due to the apprehension around its complexity and self-learning capability, which makes auditability a challenge in a highly regulated industry. There is limited literature on how FS companies can implement the governance and controls…Read more
  •  48
    We propose a formal framework for interpretable machine learning. Combining elements from statistical learning, causal interventionism, and decision theory, we design an idealised explanation game in which players collaborate to find the best explanation(s) for a given algorithmic prediction. Through an iterative procedure of questions and answers, the players establish a three-dimensional Pareto frontier that describes the optimal trade-offs between explanatory accuracy, simplicity, and relevan…Read more
  •  13
    _Philosophy and Computing_ explores each of the following areas of technology: the digital revolution; the computer; the Internet and the Web; CD-ROMs and Mulitmedia; databases, textbases, and hypertexts; Artificial Intelligence; the future of computing. Luciano Floridi shows us how the relationship between philosophy and computing provokes a wide range of philosophical questions: is there a philosophy of information? What can be achieved by a classic computer? How can we define complexity? What…Read more
  •  102
    State legislatures in the United States have assumed a growing role in shaping artificial intelligence (AI) regulation, as federal inaction persists. This article examines the emerging landscape of state-level AI policies and the tensions that state legislators must navigate to craft effective, feasible, and forward- looking legislation. Drawing on insights from the Yale Digital Ethics Center’s 2025 Summit on State AI Legislation (SSAIL), which convened over 60 stakeholders, including lawmakers,…Read more
  •  277
    This article introduces the concept of “distant writing”, a novel literary practice in which authors act as designers, employing Large Language Models (LLMs) to generate narratives, while retaining creative control through precise prompting and iterative refinement. Unlike Moretti’s distant reading, which uses computational analysis to interpret large corpora of existing texts, distant writing harnesses computational tools (LLMs) to author new narratives, reshaping the literary production proces…Read more
  •  198
    The article analyses the integration of Large Language Model (LLM)-based interfaces (editorial LLMs or eLLMs) in scholarly publishing workflows, focusing specifically on their growing role in editorial screening, manuscript preparation, and peer-review processes. It assesses the benefits eLLMs offer, including efficiency gains, improved compliance with journal guidelines, enhanced objectivity, and reduced editorial workload; and the risks, especially algorithmic biases, false positives and negat…Read more
  •  138
    This article analyses the epistemological asymmetry between remembering and forgetting Good and Evil and their ethical implications. While philosophy has traditionally focused on the metaphysical asymmetry (the privation theory that Evil exists only as an absence of Good), this article addresses the uneven moral distribution arising from memory practices: remembering Good is morally good, whereas forgetting Good, forgetting Evil, and remembering Evil may each bear morally negative implications. …Read more
  •  477
    This article introduces a conjecture that formalises a fundamental trade-off between provable correctness and broad data-mapping capacity in Artificial Intelligence (AI) systems. When an AI system is engineered for deductively watertight guarantees (demonstrable certainty about the error-free nature of its outputs)—as in classical symbolic AI—its operational domain must be narrowly circumscribed and pre-structured. Conversely, a system that can input high-dimensional data to produce rich informa…Read more
  •  648
    Sam Altman has claimed that by the end of this year, OpenAI will be capable of "truly astonishing cognitive tasks." But what exactly does "cognition" mean in the context of artificial intelligence? As the sophistication of such technologies, our dependence on them, and the rhetoric used to sell them escalates, it's vital we grapple with this question. Earlier this year, Luciano Floridi, founding director of the Digital Ethics Center at Yale University, joined Alexandros Schismenos, post-doctoral…Read more
  •  22
    Digital Ethics: Its Nature and Scope
    with Corinne Cath and Mariarosaria Taddeo
    In Carl Öhman & David Watson (eds.), The 2018 Yearbook of the Digital Ethics Lab, Springer Verlag. pp. 9-17. 2019.
    The digital revolution provides huge opportunities to improve private and public life, and our environments, from health care to smart cities and global warming. Unfortunately, such opportunities come with significant ethical challenges. In particular, the extensive use of increasingly more data—often personal, if not sensitive (Big Data)—the growing reliance on algorithms to analyse them in order to shape choices and to make decisions (including machine learning, AI, and robotics), and the grad…Read more
  •  25
    In this chapter, I present some ideas that I hope may help improve political thinking and practice in a mature information society. The ambition is quintessentially philosophical: trying to understand and improve the world, to the extent that each of us can contribute, in this case with some intellectual work. That is all. It is not a little, I realize, but it is not much either. It is the usual paradox: how important is a vote, or, in this case, a conceptual contribution? As much as a grain of …Read more
  •  26
    Conclusion: What Do We Know About Group Privacy?
    with Linnet Taylor and Bart Sloot
    In Bart van der Sloot, Luciano Floridi & Linnet Taylor (eds.), Group privacy, Springer Verlag. pp. 225-237. 2016.
    This chapter draws together the conclusions of the book as a whole, namely that the available typologies of group privacy, such as collective action lawsuits or the articulation of the rights of political or activist groups, are intuitively insufficient to address the landscape emerging from the new data analytic technologies. The book has demonstrated that there are multiple and often divergent perspectives on what a group is and how it should be addressed with regard to privacy, but this diver…Read more
  •  5
    Introduction: A New Perspective on Privacy
    with Linnet Taylor and Bart Sloot
    In Bart van der Sloot, Luciano Floridi & Linnet Taylor (eds.), Group privacy, Springer Verlag. pp. 1-12. 2016.
    The introduction outlines the origin of the book in the concerns arising from new data analytical technologies with regard to collectives. Although their effects have so far been addressed only on the individual level, in fact profiling and machine learning technologies are directed at the group level and are used to formulate types, not tokens – they work to scale, and enable their users to target the collective as much as the individual. This means that our legal, philosophical and analytic at…Read more
  •  14
    Group Privacy: A Defence and an Interpretation
    In Bart van der Sloot, Luciano Floridi & Linnet Taylor (eds.), Group privacy, Springer Verlag. pp. 83-100. 2016.
    In this chapter I identify three problems affecting the plausibility of group privacy and argue in favour of their resolution. The first problem concerns the nature of the groups in question. I shall argue that groups are neither discovered nor invented, but designed by the level of abstraction (LoA) at which a specific analysis of a social system is developed. Their design is therefore justified insofar as the purpose, guiding the choice of the LoA, is justified. This should remove the objectio…Read more
  •  157
    Open-Source AI Made in the EU: Why it is a Good Idea
    with Carlotta Buttaboni, Emmie Hine, Claudio Novelli, Tyler Schroder, and Grant Shanklin
    Minds and Machines 35 (2): 1-10. 2025.
    This article examines the feasibility and strategic advantages of developing open-source (OS) foundation models within the European Union (EU). Drawing upon recent developments in AI strategies globally, particularly in China, we argue that the EU’s robust regulatory framework and commitment to ethical principles uniquely position it to produce trustworthy OS foundation models. Due to stringent regulatory compliance, EU-developed OS foundation models would inherently ensure greater trustworthine…Read more
  •  143
    Artificial intelligence (AI) assurance is an umbrella term describing many approaches—such as impact assessment, audit, and certification procedures—used to provide evidence that an AI system is legal, ethical, and technically robust. AI assurance approaches largely focus on two overlapping categories of harms: deployment harms that emerge at, or after, the point of use, and individual harms that directly impact a person as an individual. Current approaches generally overlook upstream collective…Read more
  •  931
    This article examines potential regulatory pathways for AI in the United States following the Trump administration's 2025 revocation of the Biden-era AI Executive Order. We outline two competing governance scenarios: decentralized state-level regulation (with minimal federal oversight) and centralized federal dominance (through legislative pre-emption). We critically evaluate each model's policy implications, constitutional challenges, and practical trade-offs, particularly regarding innovation …Read more