Missing Mechanisms of Manipulation in the EU AI Act

Autores/as

  • Matija Franklin University College London
  • Hal Ashton University College London
  • Rebecca Gorman
  • Stuart Armstrong

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32473/flairs.v35i.130723

Palabras clave:

EU AI Act, Manipulation, Influence, Preference Change, Behavior Change, AI Policy

Resumen

The European Union Artificial Intelligence (AI) Act proposes to ban AI systems that ”manipulate persons through subliminal techniques or exploit the fragility of vulnerable individuals, and could potentially harm the manipulated individual or third person”. This article takes the perspective of cognitive psychology to analyze and understand what algorithmic manipulation consists of, who vulnerable individuals may be, and what is considered as harm. Subliminal techniques are expanded with concepts from behavioral science and the study of preference change. Individual psychometric differences which can be exploited are used to expand the concept of vulnerable individuals. The concept of harm is explored beyond physical and psychological harm to consider harm to one's time and right to an un-manipulated opinion. The paper offers policy recommendations that extend from the paper's analyses.

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Publicado

2022-05-04

Cómo citar

Franklin, M., Ashton, H., Gorman, R., & Armstrong, S. (2022). Missing Mechanisms of Manipulation in the EU AI Act. The International FLAIRS Conference Proceedings, 35. https://doi.org/10.32473/flairs.v35i.130723

Número

Sección

Special Track: Security, Privacy, Trust and Ethics in AI