Plans to increase adoption of ethics in AI unveiled by Digital Catapult

2 mins read

Digital Catapult has released its first Ethics Framework and is inviting artificial intelligence (AI) companies to test the framework as a means to integrate ethical practice into the development of AI and machine learning technologies. This is part of Digital Catapult’s Machine Intelligence Garage Ethics Committee: an independent body dedicated to realising responsible AI development in the UK.

According to the Committee, the Ethics Framework sets out key ethical considerations and underlying questions that provide a practical approach for startups, individual developers and experts to use in planning for and addressing the ethical challenges faced by their business, technology and ideas.

The Committee believes ethics should be a central consideration for companies and individuals developing AI in order to create positive meaningful change for society. Those who have considered the ethical implications of their products and services, and who monitor, manage and communicate effectively about them, will have a competitive edge, the Committee says.

Startups are the primary target audience for the Ethics Framework. The Committee considers startups as the hardest testing ground for ethical tools since they have little time or resource for unnecessary work or abstract discussion. Conversely, startups and scaleups can more readily reap the potential rewards, since they are unencumbered with legacy infrastructure and can embed ethical practices right from the beginning of their business growth.

The Ethics Framework will, therefore, initially be offered to companies on Digital Catapult’s Machine Intelligence Garage programme to see how it can be applied to the systems that these startups are already in the process of creating.

In addition, a series of workshops and roundtable events will be organised for companies and individuals outside of the programme to engage, with a view to helping to update and evolve the Ethics Framework over time, to understand how wider industry adoption can be effectively rolled out, and to produce or highlight tools that embed good ethical practice within good engineering practice.

Dr Jeremy Silver, CEO, Digital Catapult, says: “At this very early stage in its development, presenting industry with a set of enforceable rules might deter companies from trying to navigate and understand what responsible AI looks like in practice. The Ethics Framework has been designed to provide guidance for companies to explore what role ethics might play in their projects and to help share best practice across industry.”

Dr Luciano Floridi, Professor of Philosophy and Ethics of Information & Digital Ethics Lab Director at University of Oxford, and Chair of the Ethics Committee, comments: “It's been well discussed that the ethical application of AI is one of the pressing questions of our time. The first Ethics Framework provides a guiding light for the ethical and responsible development of AI.

“It is critical that businesses of all sizes start to think and act ethically and responsibly. We know from working directly with early stage AI companies that a highly practical framework, which speaks in the language and caters to the needs of those developing AI enabled products or services, is required at this crucial stage in the formation of the UK’s already remarkable AI community. The new Ethics Framework is a robust enabler for innovation that will decrease risks and opportunity costs.”