Javascript must be enabled to continue!
AI Ethics as Subordinated Innovation Network
View through CrossRef
AI ethics is proposed, by the Big Tech companies which lead AI research and development, as the cure for diverse social problems posed by the commercialization of data-intensive technologies. It aims to reconcile capitalist AI production with ethics. However, AI ethics is itself now the subject of wide criticism; most notably, it is accused of being no more than “ethics washing” - a cynical means of dissimulation for Big Tech, while it continues its business operations unchanged. This paper aims to critically assess, and go beyond the ethics washing thesis. I argue that AI ethics is indeed ethics washing, but not only that. It has a more significant economic function for Big Tech. To make this argument I draw on the theory of intellectual monopoly capital. I argue that ethics washing is better understood as a subordinated innovation network: a dispersed network of contributors beyond Big Tech’s formal employment whose research is indirectly planned by Big Tech, which also appropriates its results. These results are not intended to render AI more ethical, but rather to advance the business processes of intellectual monopoly capitals. Because the parameters of AI ethics are indirectly set in advance by Big tech, the ostensible goal that AI ethics sets for itself-to resolve the contradiction between business and ethics-is in fact insoluble. I demonstrate this via an analysis of the latest trend in AI ethics: the operationalization of ethical principles.
Title: AI Ethics as Subordinated Innovation Network
Description:
AI ethics is proposed, by the Big Tech companies which lead AI research and development, as the cure for diverse social problems posed by the commercialization of data-intensive technologies.
It aims to reconcile capitalist AI production with ethics.
However, AI ethics is itself now the subject of wide criticism; most notably, it is accused of being no more than “ethics washing” - a cynical means of dissimulation for Big Tech, while it continues its business operations unchanged.
This paper aims to critically assess, and go beyond the ethics washing thesis.
I argue that AI ethics is indeed ethics washing, but not only that.
It has a more significant economic function for Big Tech.
To make this argument I draw on the theory of intellectual monopoly capital.
I argue that ethics washing is better understood as a subordinated innovation network: a dispersed network of contributors beyond Big Tech’s formal employment whose research is indirectly planned by Big Tech, which also appropriates its results.
These results are not intended to render AI more ethical, but rather to advance the business processes of intellectual monopoly capitals.
Because the parameters of AI ethics are indirectly set in advance by Big tech, the ostensible goal that AI ethics sets for itself-to resolve the contradiction between business and ethics-is in fact insoluble.
I demonstrate this via an analysis of the latest trend in AI ethics: the operationalization of ethical principles.
Related Results
The process of opening innovation networks: open innovation at Embrapa Florestas
The process of opening innovation networks: open innovation at Embrapa Florestas
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to map the process of opening an innovation network in the context of the Brazilian agroforestry sector.Design/methodology/approachQualitative c...
Social innovation : understanding selected Durban-based interior designers' perceptions of socially responsible interior design
Social innovation : understanding selected Durban-based interior designers' perceptions of socially responsible interior design
In a world with pressing social issues that require the collaboration of multiple stakeholders to solve them, this research sought to find out through the views of interior design ...
Tlacoqualli in Monequi "The Center Good"
Tlacoqualli in Monequi "The Center Good"
Photo by Andrew James on Unsplash
INTRODUCTION
Since its inception, bioethics has focused on Western conceptions of ethics and science. This has provided a strong foundation to bui...
Framing the Innovation Mindset
Framing the Innovation Mindset
Aim/Purpose: To build the skills of innovation, we must first establish a framework for the belief system that surrounds effective innovation practice. In building any belief syst...
Framing the Innovation Mindset
Framing the Innovation Mindset
Aim/Purpose: To build the skills of innovation, we must first establish a framework for the belief system that surrounds effective innovation practice. In building any belief syst...
A Critique of Principlism
A Critique of Principlism
Photo by Towfiqu barbhuiya on Unsplash
INTRODUCTION
Bioethics does not have an explicitly stated and agreed upon means of resolving conflicts between normative theories. As such, b...
Autonomy on Trial
Autonomy on Trial
Photo by CHUTTERSNAP on Unsplash
Abstract
This paper critically examines how US bioethics and health law conceptualize patient autonomy, contrasting the rights-based, individualist...
Innovation in family firms: The Brittelstand
Innovation in family firms: The Brittelstand
PurposeThe Brittelstand are innovative, family-owned firms that offer national and international opportunities in the United Kingdom (UK). These fast-growing businesses are custome...

