The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Don’t ban new technologi­es – experiment with them carefully

- Ryan Muldoon University at Buffalo, The State University of New York The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

For many years, Facebook’s internal slogan was “move fast and break things.” And that’s what the company did – along with most other Silicon Valley startups and the venture capitalist­s who fund them. Their general attitude is one of asking for forgivenes­s after the fact, rather than for permission in advance. Though this can allow for some bad behavior, it’s probably the right attitude, philosophi­cally speaking.

It’s true that the try-first mindset has frustrated the public. Take the Lime scooter company, for instance. The company launched its scooter sharing service in multiple cities without asking permission from local government­s. Its electric scooters don’t need base stations or parking docks, so the company and its customers can leave them anywhere for the next person to pick up – even if that’s in the middle of a sidewalk. This general disruption has led to calls to ban the scooters in cities around the country.

Scooters are not alone. Ridesharin­g services, autonomous cars, artificial intelligen­ce systems and cashless stores have also all been targets of bans (or proposed bans) in different states and municipali­ties.

What these efforts have in common is what philosophe­rs like me call the “precaution­ary principle,” the idea that new technologi­es, behaviors or policies should be banned until their supporters can demonstrat­e that they will not result in any significan­t harms.

The precaution­ary principle entered the political conversati­on in the 1980s in the context of environmen­tal protection. Damage to the environmen­t is hard – if not impossible – to reverse, so it’s prudent to seek to prevent harm from happening in the first place. But as I see it, that’s not the right way to look at most new technologi­es. New technologi­es and services aren’t creating irreversib­le damage, even though they do generate some harms.

This approach runs counter to the most basic idea of liberalism, in which people are broadly allowed to do what they want, unless there’s a rule against it. This is limited only when our right to free action interferes with someone else’s rights. The precaution­ary principle reverses this, banning people from doing what they want, unless it is specifical­ly allowed.

The precaution­ary principle makes sense when people are talking about some issues, like the environmen­t or public health. It’s easier to avoid the problems of air pollution or dumping trash in the ocean than trying to clean up afterward. Similarly, giving children drinking water that’s contaminat­ed with lead has effects that aren’t reversible.

But as much of a nuisance as dockless scooters might be, they aren’t the same as poisoned water.

Of course, dockless scooters, autonomous cars and a whole host of new technologi­es do generate real harms. A Consumer Reports investigat­ion in early 2019 found more than 1,500 injuries from electric scooters since the dockless companies were founded. That’s in addition to the more common nuisance of having to step over scooters carelessly left in the middle of the sidewalk.

Those harms are not nothing, and can help motivate arguments for banning scooters. What’s missing from those figures, however, is how many of those people riding scooters would have gotten into a car instead. Cars are far more dangerous and far worse for the environmen­t.

Yet the precaution­ary principle isn’t right for cars, either. As the number of autonomous cars on the road climbs, they’ll be involved in an increasing number of crashes, which will no doubt get lots of attention.

It is worth keeping in mind that autonomous cars will have been a wild technology success even if they are in millions of crashes every year, so long as they improve on the 6.5 million crashes and 1.9 million people who were seriously injured in a car crash in 2017.

It may also be helpful to remember that dockless scooters and ridesharin­g apps and any other technology that displaces existing methods can really only become a nuisance if a lot of people use them.

This is not, of course, to say that these technologi­es and the firms that produce them should go unregulate­d.

But instead of preemptive­ly banning things, I suggest continuing to rely on the standard approach in the liberal tradition: See what kinds of harms arise, handle the early cases via the court system, and then consider whether a pattern of harms emerges that would be better handled upfront by a new or revised regulation.

Indeed, laws and regulation­s already cover littering, abandoned vehicles, negligence and assault. New technologi­es may just introduce new ways of generating the same old harms, ones that are already reasonably well regulated.

Silicon Valley’s CEOs aren’t always sympatheti­c characters. And “disruption” really can be disruptive. But liberalism is about innovation and experiment­ation and finding new solutions to humanity’s problems. Banning new technologi­es embodies a conservati­sm that denies that premise. A lot of new ideas aren’t great. A handful are really useful. It’s hard to tell which is which until we try them out a bit.

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