1. Principle 1 — Human Rights
Governance frameworks, including standards and regulatory bodies, should be established to oversee processes assuring that the use of A IS does not infringe upon human rights, freedoms, dignity, and privacy, and of traceability to contribute to the building of public trust in A IS.
4. Principle 4 — Transparency
Principle 4 — transparency
4. Principle 4 — Transparency
Issue: How can we ensure that A IS are transparent?
4. Principle 4 — Transparency
Develop new standards* that describe measurable, testable levels of transparency, so that systems can be objectively assessed and levels of compliance determined.
4. Principle 4 — Transparency
For designers, such standards will provide a guide for self assessing transparency during development and suggest mechanisms for improving transparency.
4. Principle 4 — Transparency
For designers, such standards will provide a guide for self assessing transparency during development and suggest mechanisms for improving transparency.
4. Principle 4 — Transparency
(The mechanisms by which transparency is provided will vary significantly, for instance 1) for users of care or domestic robots, a why did you do that button which, when pressed, causes the robot to explain the action it just took, 2) for validation or certification agencies, the algorithms underlying the A IS and how they have been verified, and 3) for accident investigators, secure storage of sensor and internal state data, comparable to a flight data recorder or black box.)
4. Principle 4 — Transparency
(The mechanisms by which transparency is provided will vary significantly, for instance 1) for users of care or domestic robots, a why did you do that button which, when pressed, causes the robot to explain the action it just took, 2) for validation or certification agencies, the algorithms underlying the A IS and how they have been verified, and 3) for accident investigators, secure storage of sensor and internal state data, comparable to a flight data recorder or black box.)