The only book of its kind to look at how our legal system needs to change to accommodate a world in which machines, in addition to people, make decisions.
Acknowledgments
Part I May a Robot Hurt a Human Being?
1 It's Not What Isaac Asimov Promised, but Artificial Intelligence
Is Here
2 How to Sue a Robot: Liability and AI
Part II Must a Robot Obey Orders from a Human Being?
3 The Uniform Artificial Intelligence Act and the Regulation of
AI
4 In Robots Parentis: When Robots Have Custody of a Child (or an
Adult)
5 RIMBY (Robots in My Backyard)
6 AI and the Fourth Amendment
7 The Forthcoming United Nations Conventions on Artificial
Intelligence
Part III Will a Robot Protect Itself?
8 What Does a Robot Own?
9 Can AI Be Good for Us?
Notes
Index
John Frank Weaver is an attorney with McLane, Graf, Raulerson, and Middleton in Portsmouth, NH.
In this timely book, organized according to Isaac Asimov's 'Three
Laws of Robotics,' introduced in 1942, Weaver (attorney) discusses
the current and possible future roles of robots and related
technologies, and explores the legal aspects of those developments.
. . . Recommended.
*Choice*
getAbstract recommends Weaver's informed and sobering consideration
of AI to anyone who follows technological trends, economics, and
future visions of society. It will also intrigue entrepreneurs,
investors, and those working in defense and automotive fields,
manufacturing, shipping, medicine or home care.
*getAbstract*
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