Artificial Intelligence Law is a book clarifying the controversial issues surrounding the use of AI and exploring in great detail how, far from being “unregulated,” the creation, distribution, and operation of AI systems currently is, and will remain, subject to a vast array of existing laws and regulations all over the world. It is inevitable, given the enormous media-driven concern generated by the recent application of artificial intelligence (AI) to an ever-expanding spectrum of day-to-day human experience, that the need for a clearly articulated legal response has become imperative. What’s in this Establishing undoubtedly that the traditional concepts of legal responsibility, including duty of care, negligence, and compensation for damages, will always apply to those humans who create and/or use artificially intelligent things or systems, the author shows how AI systems are clearly implicated in numerous existing legal regimes, including the relevant provisions under international law and EU law applicable provisions in the laws of the United States, the United Kingdom, France, China, India, Japan, South Korea, and Singapore, and numerous national provisions in the legal fields of health and safety, intellectual property, competition, privacy and data protection, and military engagement
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