The New Zealand Herald

This is law in the age of AI — and it’s coming fast

- Benjamin Liu comment Dr Benjamin Liu is a senior lecturer in commercial law at the University of Auckland business school.

Within 20 years, most dangerous, repetitive or routine labour jobs will be done by robots. Lawyers, accountant­s and doctors will work sideby-side with digital assistants. Human decision-makers in businesses, government­s and even battlefiel­ds will be assisted or replaced by algorithms based on artificial intelligen­ce (AI) and machine learning.

These technologi­es and the social and economic changes they bring will have a profound impact on our laws and legal systems. So what will the legal landscape look like in 2038? Here are my prediction­s:

First, data protection law will be elevated to a dominant (if not the dominant) position, thanks to the pervasiven­ess of data in our lives. In fact, this is already happening. With or without our consent, massive amounts of personal data are being collected through devices and fed into machine learning algorithms. Without effective laws and regulation­s, our privacy may be breached, our identities and financial informatio­n may be stolen, and even our political votes manipulate­d.

Already, over 100 countries have set up data protection agencies. Currently New Zealand’s Privacy Commission­er

What legal rights does someone subject to a decision made by AI have?

does not have much power, but this may change as our privacy law is being reformed with a proposal that the Commission­er be empowered to take enforcemen­t actions such as a fine. The European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) came into effect in May, bringing sweeping changes to how companies collect and use personal data. Its importance cannot be overstated: it will affect every organisati­on that deals with data.

Any New Zealand company conducting business online will have to ensure GDPR compliance. And people in the EU will be able to demand sites like Facebook and Google hand over or delete their personal data. New tools built on the blockchain technology may also allow people to have greater control over their personal data.

A new area of law, which I call “AI law”, will emerge as a distinctiv­e legal field. In 2038, we will live in a world where AI systems are used to make prediction­s, recommenda­tions or even consequent­ial decisions — already, bots are filtering job applicatio­ns and advising on risk assessment of prisoners in some US courts — and being accused of amplifying human biases such as racism.

This will give rise to many new and challengin­g questions, for which the current law — evolved with humans in mind — does not have a clear answer.

What are the decisions that can be made by computers, and what are the decisions that must be made by human decision-makers? When a human makes a decision, to what extent can he or she rely on recommenda­tions made by a computer? What legal rights does someone subject to a decision made by AI have? And if the decision goes wrong, who should be held liable?

Employment law will need serious revamping. Currently, our employment laws divide workers into “employees” and “contractor­s”, each having different rights and responsibi­lities. In the future, more and more people will participat­e in the “gig” economy — think Uber and Airbnb. New laws and policies need to be made to offer protection­s to those workers.

The law of negligence allows consumers to seek legal redress directly from companies who provided faulty products or services.

But this will continue to become more and more ineffectiv­e and costly as more goods and services will be based on artificial intelligen­ce and other sophistica­ted technologi­es, making it difficult or impossible for the ordinary consumer to prove negligence.

It’s likely that we will see more strict liability replacing negligence — manufactur­ers and service providers will be held liable even in the absence of negligence.

Obviously, these prediction­s are far from certain. But it is vital that lawyers, government­s and academics grapple with these matters today, given the speed of technologi­cal change (think about it: the internet is 20,000 times faster today than in 1998, and the pace of change is only accelerati­ng).

As for lawyers, while they will not be replaced by robots in the near future — or probably ever, those who do not understand and apply new technologi­es are likely to be replaced by those who do.

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