This book offers a critical guide to the profound impact of Artificial Intelligence on legal systems. It begins by deconstructing the promise of algorithmic justice and advocating for the protection of fundamental 'neural rights'. The analysis then moves from theory to practice, examining concrete applications and landmark cases within courtrooms and administrations. Key issues such as liability for AI errors, copyright for AI-generated content, algorithmic discrimination, and predictive policing are rigorously explored. From chatbots to criminal sentencing, this volume provides an essential framework for legal scholars, practitioners, and policymakers to understand and navigate the complex ethical, regulatory, and human rights challenges of integrating AI into the very fabric of law and justice.
This book offers a critical guide to the profound impact of Artificial Intelligence on legal systems. Key issues such as liability for AI errors, copyright for AI-generated content, algorithmic discrimination, and predictive policing are rigorously explored.
Introduction to Artificial Intelligence: From the Theory of its Origins
to the Defence of Human Rights. AI IN ACADEMY. Artificial Intelligence and
The Cyber Utopianism of Justice: Why AI is not Intelligence and Mans
Struggle to Survive Himself. The Protection of Neural Rights in the Age of
Neurotechnologies and AI: The Ethical Challenge for Law and Neuroscience. AI
IN COURT. AI in Administrative Justice in Italy: First Projects and Notes. AI
and Judicial Review of Technical Discretion: The Possible Procedural Fallout
of a Massive Extension of Artificial Intelligence to Administrative
Activities Connoted by Technical Discretion. Substitutions and Algorithms: A
Commentary on the Judgment of the Court of Turin. From the Judgment of the
European Court of Justice of 4 July 2023 (Case C-252/21) to Paid Social
Profiles: The Intervention of Ex-Post Justice That Doesnt Solve the Problem
of Citizens Data Management. ChatGPT vs. Privacy Guarantor. Liability for
Chatbot Error: A Commentary on the Case Moffatt vs. Air Canada. Artificial
Intelligence: The Proposed Directive on Non-Contractual Liability. The Use of
AI in Parliamentary Processes: A First Critical Examination. Artificial
Intelligence at the Service of Legal Systems: Saudi Arabia Introduces
Enhanced Turjman Translation Device. Copyrights and Artificial Intelligence
Systems: Legal Principles and Requirements Underlying Law in a Globalised
World. Image Generated By AI: For a Chinese Court Can Be Protected By
Copyright A First Comparison with American Jurisprudence. Thomson Reuters
Wins First Copyright Lawsuit Against AI. AI Training: Copyrighted Photos Can
Be Used Even Without Consent, But Only for Research and by Onlus. Open AI vs.
Deepseek: When AI Accuse Each Other of Copyright Infringement. AI
Hallucinations and GDPR Protections: Finding the Balance Between Access and
Redress Rights and AI. When Public Administration Discrimination Comes from
AI: An UK Case Study. Artificial Intelligence in the Service of Criminal
Justice? AI and Criminal Law: Benefits and Dangers of A De-Humanisation of
Justice Predictive AI Applications in Criminal Law Between Ordinary and Legal
Limits and General Guarantee Principles: A Synthetic Picture. The Standards
for the Development and Adoption of Artificial Intelligence Technologies: A
First Analytical Review of Italian Legislation. Recidivism and Predictive
Policing: The Limits of the AI Act and the Guidelines to the Regulation. AI
Manipulative and Deceptive: European Commission Guidelines on Prohibited
Advertising Practices. AI and Prohibition of Social Scoring in the European
Commission Guidelines. Can AI be Sustainable for the Environment? Medical
Research and Personal Data Processing: The Amendment of Article 110 of the
Privacy Code and the AI ACT. Metas AI can Read Minds: Limits and Problems of
an Uncontrolled Development of Neurotechnology. AI and Human Emotions:
Definition, Regulation and Possible Implications. Technology and Personal
Integrity Protection: The Constitutional Court of Chile on the Protection of
Neural Rights. Legal Nature and Probabilistic Value of Significant Damage
in the use of Artificial Intelligence. When the Judgement is Invented by AI:
The Responsibility of Judges and Solicitors. Artificial Intelligence in Law
Firms: A British Case. The Enforceability of Data Subjects' Rights over Data
Inferred by AI. Artificial Intelligence as a Tool for Challenging Decisions
Evidential Value and Regulatory Challenges in Challenging Public Decisions.
The Granting of Credit Through AI Systems: The Prohibition of Discriminatory
Practices, The Risk of Unlawful Customer Profiling and the Violation of
Information Obligations Responsibility Profiles and the Systemic Imbalance
between Banks and Citizens. Google AI Mode: Algorithmic Synthesis and the
Crisis of the Information Ecosystem. Access to Accounts by Heirs. Who is
Criminally Liable if AI Kills? From Self-Driving Vehicles to the
Administration of Drugs From Armed Autonomous Drones to Chatbots That Induce
Suicide. A Journey into AI that can Kill. Index.
Michele Di Salvo is a researcher, author, and expert operating at the dynamic intersection of neuroscience, psychology, law, and artificial intelligence. With a career spanning scientific research, clinical theory, and policy analysis, he is recognized for his interdisciplinary approach to understanding the human mind and its interaction with emerging technologies. Director of Neural Nexus Review at National Agency for Artificial Intelligence and Chairman of CrossMedia Labs. Member of Society for Neuroscience, the European Federation of Neuroscience Societies, the International Neuropsychoanalysis Society, the Cognitive Neuroscience Society and the International Neuroethics Society. His research focuses on the neuroscientific foundations of psychology.