A tragic scandal at the UK Post Office highlights the need for legal change, especially as organizations embrace artificial intelligence to enhance decision-making.
Short of a floating point bug, computers don’t make mistakes. They do exactly what they’re programmed to do. The issue is the people developing them are fallible and QC has gone out the window globally, so you’re going to get computers that operate as good as the Devs and QC are.
There's always small hardware quirks to be accounted for, but when we are talking about machine learning, which is not directly programmed, it's less applicable to blame developers.
The issue is that computer system are now used to whitewash mistakes or biases with a veneer of objective impartiality. Even an accounting system's results are taken as fact.
Consider that an AI trained with data from the history of policing and criminal cases might make racist decisions, because the dataset includes a plenty of racist bias, but it's very easy for the people using it to say "welp, the machine said it so it must be true". The responsibility for mistakes is also abstracted away, because the user and even the software provider might say they had nothing to do with it.
I the example you gave I would actually put the blame the software provider. It wouldn't be ridiculously difficult to anonimize the data, get rid of name, race, gender, and leave only the information about the crime committed, the evidence, any extenuating circumstances, and the judgment.
It's more difficult then simply throwing in all the data, but it can and should be done. It could still contain some bias, based on things like the location of the crime. But the bias would be already greatly reduced.
All the more reason that devs and admins need to take responsibility and NOT roll out "AI" solutions withoit backstopping them with human verification, or at minimum ensure that the specific solutions they employ are ready for production.
It's all cool and groovy that we have a new software stack that can remove a ton of labor from humans, but if it's too error-prone, is it really useful? I get that the bean counters and suits are ready to boot the data entry and other low level employees to boost their bottom line, but this will become a race to the bottom via blowing their collective loads too early.
Though let's be real, we already know that too many companies are going to do this and then try to absolve themselves of liability when shit goes to hell because of their shit.
Having worked in IT for many years, bosses only hear the "it can be done" part and never the "but we should add these precautions" or "but we should follow these best practices"
Those translate to "those developers want to add unnecessary extra costs" to them.
You might be presenting it backwards. We need LLMs to be right-sized for translation between pure logical primitives and human language. Let a theorem prover or logical inference system (probably written in Prolog :-) ) provide the smarts. A LLM can help make the front end usable by regular people.
We spent decades treating computers like fancy calculators. They have more utility than that, and we are currently trying to find a more valuable way to use that utility.
In that process, there will be a time where the responses you get will need to be independently verified. As the technology matures, it will get more and more accurate and useful. If we could just skip past the development part and get to the fully engineered solution, we would… but that’s not really how anything new ever comes into being.
As for the current state of the technology, you can get a ton of useful information out of LLMs right now by asking them to give you a list of options you wouldn’t have thought of, general outlines of a course of action, places or topics to research to find a correct answer… etc. However, if you expect the current iteration of the technology to do everything for you without error and without verifying the output, you are going to have a bad time.
The thing is, intelligence is the capacity to create information that can be separately verified.
For this you need two abilities:
the ability to create information, which I believe is quantum based (and which I call "intuition"), and
the ability to validate, or verify information, which I believe is based on deterministic logic (and which I call "rationalization").
If you get the first without the second, you end up in a case we call "insanity", and if you have the second without the first, you are merely a computer.
Animals, for example, often have exemplary intuition, but very limited rationalization (which happens mostly empirically, not through deduction), and if they were humans, most would be "bat shit crazy".
My point is that computers have had the ability to rationalize since day one. But they haven't had the ability to generate new data, ever. Which is a requirement for intuition. In fact, this is absolutely true of random generators too, for the very same reasons. And the exact same way that we have pseudorandom generators, in my view, LLMs are pseudointuitive. That is, close enough to the real thing to fool most humans, but distinctively different to a formal system.
As of right now, we have successfully created a technology that creates pseudointuitive data out of seemingly unrelated, real life, actually intuitive data. We still need to find a way to reliably apply rationalization to that data.
And until then, it is utterly important that we do not conflate our premature use of that technology with "the inability of computers to produce accurate results".
However, if you are at the receiving end of a mistake made my either a classic algorithm or an machine learning algorithm, then you probably won't care whether it was the computer or the programmer making the mistake. In the end the result is the same.
"Computers make mistakes" is just a way of saying that you shouldn't blindly trust whatever output the computer spits out.
if you are at the receiving end of a mistake made my either a classic algorithm or an machine learning algorithm, then you probably won't care whether it was the computer or the programmer making the mistake
I'm absolutely expecting corporations to get away with the argument that "they cannot be blamed for the outcome of a system that they neither control nor understand, and that is shown to work in X% of cases". Or at least to spend billions trying to.
And in case you think traceability doesn't matter anyway, think again.
IMHO it's crucial we defend the "computers don't make mistakes" fact for two reasons:
Computers are defined as working through the flawless execution of rational logic. And somehow, I don't see a "broader" definition working in the favor of the public (i.e. less waste, more fault tolerant systems), but strictly in favor of mega corporations.
If we let the public opinion mix up "computers" with the LLMs that are running on them, we will get even more restrictive ultra-broad legislation against the general public. Think "3D printers ownership heavily restricted because some people printed guns with them" but on an unprecedented scale. All we will have left are smartphones, because we are not their owners.