Research on Legal Issues Related to Artificial Intelligence from the Perspective of New Quality Productive Forces
DOI: 10.23977/law.2024.030612 | Downloads: 18 | Views: 178
Author(s)
Shuai Ren 1
Affiliation(s)
1 College of Law, Australian National University, Canberra, 2600, ACT Australia
Corresponding Author
Shuai RenABSTRACT
Digital productive forces are the production of the third information revolution, the change of the economic base will cause the change of the superstructure. New quality productive forces take data rights as the means of production, artificial intelligence as the carrier, and network communication as the way. Due to the lag of legislation, there is a serious lag in the legislation related to artificial intelligence, which is mainly reflected in the division and ownership judgment of data rights and interests, the inability of current criminal law to regulate some AI crimes, the lack of soft law norms in AI governance, the conflict of legal ethics faced by different legal systems, and the concurrence of criminal jurisdiction. In this article, we believe that we can overcome the problem of lagging legislation by realizing the connection between international law and domestic law, formulating corresponding penalty rules based on artificial intelligence program algorithm, making good use of international non-governmental organizations to create soft law, and promoting the idea of a community with a shared future for mankind.
KEYWORDS
New quality productive forces, Artificial intelligence, Soft law, Criminal jurisdictionCITE THIS PAPER
Shuai Ren. Research on Legal Issues Related to Artificial Intelligence from the Perspective of New Quality Productive Forces. Science of Law Journal (2024) Vol. 3: 80-87. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/DOI: 10.23977/law.2024.030612.
REFERENCES
[1] Xiang Z. (2020) The connotation Division and attribution Judgment of data Rights and Interests. Shanghai Law Research, 3(01), 338-351.
[2] Haocai L. and Qiang Z. (2013) Multidimensional Thinking on Soft Law Research. Chinese Law, 5, 102-111.
[3] Xianquan L. (2019) Criminal Law in the Era of Artificial Intelligence, Shanghai: People's Publishing House.
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