
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In the last episode, Brian Wong, argued that there’s a “gap” between the harms that developing and using AI causes, on the one hand, and identifying who is responsible for those harms. At the end of that discussion, Brian claimed that we’re all responsible for those harms. But how could that be? Aren’t some people more responsible than others? And if we are responsible, what does that mean we’re supposed to do differently? In part 2 Brian explains how he thinks about what responsibility is and how it has implications for our social responsibilities.
By Reid Blackman4.9
5454 ratings
In the last episode, Brian Wong, argued that there’s a “gap” between the harms that developing and using AI causes, on the one hand, and identifying who is responsible for those harms. At the end of that discussion, Brian claimed that we’re all responsible for those harms. But how could that be? Aren’t some people more responsible than others? And if we are responsible, what does that mean we’re supposed to do differently? In part 2 Brian explains how he thinks about what responsibility is and how it has implications for our social responsibilities.

3,979 Listeners

9,556 Listeners

46 Listeners

30,203 Listeners

112,416 Listeners

56,511 Listeners

3,578 Listeners

3,275 Listeners

261 Listeners

5,518 Listeners

450 Listeners

15,938 Listeners

20 Listeners

2 Listeners

9,326 Listeners