global guidelines around the use of AI, researchers found that while most of the guidelines valued privacy, transparency, and accountability, very few valued truthfulness, intellectual property, or children's rights. Further, most of these guidelines described ethical principles and values without proposing practical methods for implementing them and without pushing for legally binding regulation, a team of researchers from the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, found.
To determine if a global consensus existed regarding the use of artificial intelligence (AI), the researchers identified and analysed 200 documents related to AI ethics and governance published between 2014 and 2022 from 37 countries and six continents and written or translated into five different languages — English, Portuguese, French, German and Spanish.
They found that the most commonly appearing principles were transparency, security, justice, privacy, and accountability, showing up in 82.5, 78, 75.5, 68.5, and 67 per cent of the documents, respectively.
On the other hand, labour rights, truthfulness, intellectual property, and children/adolescent rights appeared the least — 19.5, 8.5, 7, and 6 per cent, respectively — in these documents, they said in their study published in the journal Patterns, emphasising that these principles deserved more attention.
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