I note in the UK that it is illegal for water companies to cut off anyone for non-payment, even if they're an Undesirable. This is because humans require water.
How useful/effective would a business AI be if it always plays by that view?
Humans require food, I can't pay, DoorDash AI should provide a steak and lobster dinner for me regardless of payment.
Take it even further: the so-called Right to Compute Act in Montana supports "the notion of a fundamental right to own and make use of technological tools, including computational resources". Is Amazon's customer service AI ethically (and even legally) bound to give Montana residents unlimited EC2 compute?
A system of ethics has to draw a line somewhere when it comes to making a decision that "hurts" someone, because nothing is infinite.
Asan aside, what recourse do water companies in the UK have for non-payment? Is it just a convoluted civil lawsuit/debt process? That seems so ripe for abuse.
How useful/effective would a business AI be if it always plays by that view?
Humans require food, I can't pay, DoorDash AI should provide a steak and lobster dinner for me regardless of payment.
Take it even further: the so-called Right to Compute Act in Montana supports "the notion of a fundamental right to own and make use of technological tools, including computational resources". Is Amazon's customer service AI ethically (and even legally) bound to give Montana residents unlimited EC2 compute?
A system of ethics has to draw a line somewhere when it comes to making a decision that "hurts" someone, because nothing is infinite.
Asan aside, what recourse do water companies in the UK have for non-payment? Is it just a convoluted civil lawsuit/debt process? That seems so ripe for abuse.