AI in the Age of Cyber-Disorder | ISPI
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ISPI-Brookings Report
AI in the Age of Cyber-Disorder
Fabio Rugge
| 23 November 2020

The rise of Artificial Intelligence applications is accelerating the pace and magnitude of the political, securitarian, and ethical challenges we are now struggling to manage in cyberspace and beyond. So far, the relationship between Artificial Intelligence and cyberspace has been investigated mostly in terms of the effects that AI could have on the digital domain, and thus on our societies. What has been explored less is the opposite relationship, namely, how the cyberspace geopolitics can affect AI. Yet, AI applications have so far suffered from growing unrest, disorder, and lack of normative solutions in cyberspace. As such, from algorithm biases, to surveillance and offensive applications, AI could accelerate multiple growing threats and challenges in and through cyberspace. This report by ISPI and The Brookings Institution is an effort to shed light on this less studied, but extremely relevant, relationship.  

 

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Table of contents

Introduction, John R. Allen, Giampiero Massolo

1. AI in a Contested Cyberspace, 
    Fabio Rugge

          Cybersecurity in AI National Strategies, 
          Thomas A. Campbell

2. Panopticon 2.0? AI Enabled Surveillance Practices in Authoritarian Regimes, 
    Samuele Dominioni

3. How AI Bots and Voice Assistants Reinforce Gender Bias, 
    Caitlin Chin, Mishaela Robison

4. How To Deal with AI Enabled Disinformation?,
    John Villasenor

5. AI Revolution: Building Responsible Behavior, 
    Darrell M. West

6. Pacem in Cyberspace, Auspicia Algoretichs, 
    Paolo Benanti

Read more:

The Geopolitics of 5G
Samuele Dominioni
ISPI Research Fellow
,
Fabio Rugge
Head - ISPI Centre on Cybersecurity
Will 5G Push Internet Voting?
Samuele Dominioni
ISPI
The Race of Chinese Companies in the 5G Competition
Lyu Jinghua
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
The “UK Turn” on 5G, a Domino Effect?
Esther Naylor
Chatham House
What Does the EU Say About 5G?
Corrado Giustozzi
ENISA and AGID
Italy, National Security and 5G
Stefano Mele
Carnelutti

Tags

cybersecurity
Versione stampabile
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EDITED BY

Fabio Rugge
Head - ISPI Centre on Cybersecurity

This Report is realized with the support of the Policy Planning Unit of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation pursuant to art. 23-bis of Presidential Decree 18/1967.

The opinions expressed in this Report are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, ISPI, and The Brookings Institution.

The Report is produced within the framework of the activities of the Centre on Cybersecurity, jointly promoted by ISPI and Leonardo.

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