Ethics Readiness of Artificial Intelligence: A Practical Evaluation Method
Adomaitis, Laurynas, Israel-Jost, Vincent, Grinbaum, Alexei
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
In the governance of emerging technologies, ethical guidance has often relied on so-called soft law instruments--codes of conduct, guidelines, or frameworks--designed to promote responsible behavior without imposing binding legal constraints. This is partly due to the difficulty of imposing harmonized regulations across the EU, especially in a global context characterized by strong reservations expressed by other international actors, e.g. the United States of America, with regard to the regulation of artificial intelligence (AI) that "unduly burdens AI innovation" (Kratsios, Sacks, and Rubio 2025) . Another reason is related to the principle, upheld in several member states such as Germany, that protects scientific freedom by constitutional law. Nevertheless, the recent trajectory of technological regulation in the European Union shows that soft law can evolve into hard law: this has been the case, notably, with the adoption of the AI Act (European Commission 2022; Terpan 2015) .
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Dec-11-2025
- Country:
- Asia
- Middle East > Israel (0.40)
- Singapore (0.04)
- Europe
- Germany (0.24)
- Netherlands > South Holland
- Dordrecht (0.04)
- Sweden (0.04)
- North America > United States
- California > Los Angeles County
- Los Angeles (0.14)
- Illinois > Cook County
- Chicago (0.04)
- New York (0.04)
- California > Los Angeles County
- Asia
- Genre:
- Research Report (0.40)
- Industry:
- Government > Regional Government
- Europe Government (0.86)
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (1.00)
- Law (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government
- Technology:
- Information Technology
- Artificial Intelligence
- Issues > Social & Ethical Issues (0.68)
- Machine Learning (0.93)
- Representation & Reasoning (0.67)
- Robots (1.00)
- Security & Privacy (1.00)
- Artificial Intelligence
- Information Technology