The Wider Realm to Artificial Intelligence in International Law
Proceedings CAIRIA-2018, ISBN 978-93-5300-754-6
6 Pages Posted: 29 Jun 2018 Last revised: 20 Jul 2018
Date Written: March 15, 2018
Abstract
International Law subsists towards a traditionalist approach of the legal instruments existing between states. This traces its origins towards a sui generis act of responsive considerations, which form the psychological and material content of state practice. However, the basic tenets of International Law have not yet developed. The limiting factors that have prevented it are not exhaustive nor exclusive but just heavily traditional. A better set of examples may include the jurisprudence of Budapest Convention on Cybercrime and the action against Russia by NATO in 2007 regarding the cyber-attack in Estonia. Moreover, the approaches of North Korea pertaining to WannaCry and the need of a civilized set of legal principles are in scarcity or if there are any such, the traditionalism of the so-called manifestation is in a permanent question of concern, which, in the end, is fatal for the future approaches in International Law The question of individual agility and representation in a cyber realm stands unquestioned by International Law even where there is a subjected realization of AI, based on null human intervention, which may broaden. Artificial Intelligence does not only manifest the sui generis realm of nullity of human sense and presence, but it also moves towards the synthesis towards a more technical but reflective aspect of society, which shall affect statehood and non-state actors. The paper thus focuses on the ad hoc purpose to devise some basic principles on how the instruments of International Law can modernize its limits via AI.
Keywords: International Law, Artificial Intelligence, Political Subjectivity, Informational Bias, Sovereignty.
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