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Governing by Humans, Not by Robots: Regulating Humans and Artificial Intelligence in the 21st Century

Governing by Humans, Not by Robots: Regulating Humans and Artificial Intelligence in the 21st Century

George Gantzias
ISBN13: 9781799850779|ISBN10: 1799850773|EISBN13: 9781799850786
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-5077-9.ch007
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MLA

Gantzias, George. "Governing by Humans, Not by Robots: Regulating Humans and Artificial Intelligence in the 21st Century." Handbook of Research on Applied AI for International Business and Marketing Applications, edited by Bryan Christiansen and Tihana Škrinjarić, IGI Global, 2021, pp. 116-134. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-5077-9.ch007

APA

Gantzias, G. (2021). Governing by Humans, Not by Robots: Regulating Humans and Artificial Intelligence in the 21st Century. In B. Christiansen & T. Škrinjarić (Eds.), Handbook of Research on Applied AI for International Business and Marketing Applications (pp. 116-134). IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-5077-9.ch007

Chicago

Gantzias, George. "Governing by Humans, Not by Robots: Regulating Humans and Artificial Intelligence in the 21st Century." In Handbook of Research on Applied AI for International Business and Marketing Applications, edited by Bryan Christiansen and Tihana Škrinjarić, 116-134. Hershey, PA: IGI Global, 2021. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-5077-9.ch007

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Abstract

Artificial intelligence and robots together with fake news have challenged irrevocably not only the traditional business organizations and representative democracy but also the role of regulatory mechanisms in digital capitalism. In 2020, companies will need to develop a new culture (i.e., the business intelligence culture[BIC]) in order to understand that human resources, currently one of the lowest rungs in a company ladder, will be elevated to the same position as research and development. This chapter examines and analyses artificial intelligence, robots, and human decision-making process together with the role of automatic decision-making algorithms in business systems. It considers critical questions regarding global regulation, ethical standards, public interest, and democracy. It examines the need for regulation in digital capitalism. Finally, it outlines the models business intelligence culture (BIC) and collective will democracy (CWD) as methodological tools to analyze humans and robots' governance in the digital era.

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