The Dangers of Computational Law and Cybersecurity; Perspectives from Engineering and the AI Act

07/01/2022
by   Kaspar Rosager Ludvigsen, et al.
0

Computational Law has begun taking the role in society which has been predicted for some time. Automated decision-making and systems which assist users are now used in various jurisdictions, but with this maturity come certain caveats. Computational Law exists on the platforms which enable it, in this case digital systems, which means that it inherits the same flaws. Cybersecurity addresses these potential weaknesses. In this paper we go through known issues and discuss them in the various levels, from design to the physical realm. We also look at machine-learning specific adversarial problems. Additionally, we make certain considerations regarding computational law and existing and future legislation. Finally, we present three recommendations which are necessary for computational law to function globally, and which follow ideas in safety and security engineering. As indicated, we find that computational law must seriously consider that not only does it face the same risks as other types of software and computer systems, but that failures within it may cause financial or physical damage, as well as injustice. Consequences of Computational Legal systems failing are greater than if they were merely software and hardware. If the system employs machine-learning, it must take note of the very specific dangers which this brings, of which data poisoning is the classic example. Computational law must also be explicitly legislated for, which we show is not the case currently in the EU, and this is also true for the cybersecurity aspects that will be relevant to it. But there is great hope in EU's proposed AI Act, which makes an important attempt at taking the specific problems which Computational Law bring into the legal sphere. Our recommendations for Computational Law and Cybersecurity are: Accommodation of threats, adequate use, and that humans remain in the centre of their deployment.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
08/24/2020

Multidimensionality of Legal Singularity: Parametric Analysis and the Autonomous Levels of AI Legal Reasoning

Legal scholars have in the last several years embarked upon an ongoing d...
research
10/15/2021

Law Smells: Defining and Detecting Problematic Patterns in Legal Drafting

Building on the computer science concept of code smells, we initiate the...
research
07/01/2019

Ich weiß, was du nächsten Sommer getan haben wirst: Predictive Policing in Österreich

Predictive policing is a data-based, predictive analytical technique use...
research
09/14/2022

Law Informs Code: A Legal Informatics Approach to Aligning Artificial Intelligence with Humans

We are currently unable to specify human goals and societal values in a ...
research
07/27/2020

Dissecting liabilities in adversarial surgical robot failures: A national (Danish) and European law perspective

Being connected to a network exposes surgical robots to cyberattacks, wh...
research
06/30/2022

Uniting Machine Intelligence, Brain and Behavioural Sciences to Assist Criminal Justice

I discuss here three important roles where machine intelligence, brain a...
research
06/01/2023

Sustainable AI Regulation

This paper suggests that AI regulation needs a shift from trustworthines...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset