Automatic Authorities: Power and AI
Seth Lazar

TL;DR
This paper critically examines how AI systems, especially automated authorities, exercise power over individuals and society, emphasizing the need for legitimacy and proper authority in AI-driven power relations.
Contribution
It introduces a philosophical framework to analyze AI-enabled power, focusing on legitimacy, authority, and the ethical implications of automated systems exercising power.
Findings
AI systems enable and intensify power over individuals.
Justifying AI power requires legitimacy and proper authority.
Proposes criteria for assessing the legitimacy of AI exercise of power.
Abstract
As rapid advances in Artificial Intelligence and the rise of some of history's most potent corporations meet the diminished neoliberal state, people are increasingly subject to power exercised by means of automated systems. Machine learning and related computational technologies now underpin vital government services. They connect consumers and producers in new algorithmic markets. They determine how we find out about everything from how to vote to where to get vaccinated, and whose speech is amplified, reduced, or restricted. And a new wave of products based on Large Language Models (LLMs) will further transform our economic and political lives. Automatic Authorities are automated computational systems used to exercise power over us by determining what we may know, what we may have, and what our options will be. In response to their rise, scholars working on the societal impacts of AI…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEthics and Social Impacts of AI
