Bag om Digital Transformation of Identity in the Age of Artificial Intelligence
1. Digital Social Science
1.1 What does the advanced Technology mean for human-being?
1.1.1 When AI excesses the Leader of the Primates
1.1.2 Big-data accumulates everything
1.2 The Sign of Latent Risks
1.2.1 How Can We depict a Good Future opened by advanced technologies?
1.2.2 Asilomar Conference on Beneficial AI
1.3 Grounding in the Actuality
1.3.1 Grounding between Technologies and Thought
1.3.2 Brief Historical Perspective of Digital Progress
1.4 What is a Role of digital social science in those contexts?
1.4.1 Definition of Digital Social Science and its Vector
1.4.2 Sociological Taxonomy
1.4.3 Interdisciplinary Taxonomy
References
2. Investigating Identity
2.1 Lexical Definitions
2.1.1 From Personality Science
2.1.2 From Sociological Context
2.1.3 AI and Agents
2.2 Preconditions for Identity
2.2.1 Preconditions
2.2.2 Civil Law rules on AI and Robotics in EU
2.3 Identity and its areas in digitized society
2.4 Methodologies for Identity in digitized society
References
3. Identity Ambiguity
3.1 Communications with the others
3.1.1 The Self encounters the others
3.1.2 Empathy for the others
3.2 Physical-body contact and Interconnected online contact
3.2.1 A Case: the Question for life
3.2.2 Existence of the Others
3.2.3 Other Existence as Intruder to My Space and Time
3.3 Identity as existence and representation
3.4 Dignity for Human-Being
3.4.1 Difference between Artefact and Human
3.4.1.1 Extensional Artefact of Body
3.4.1.2 Dignity
3.4.2 Barriers against Ethical Misconducts by AI
3.4.3 Trustful AI
References
4. Identity Valuation
4.1 Earning Money by Big-Data
4.2 Scoring a value of your life
4.2.1 Your Digitized Scores by the AI
4.2.1.1 Scoring Services
4.2.1.2 On Value
4.2.1.3 Theories on Value
4.2.2 Internalizing the External Moral Standard through Scoring
4.2.2.1 Internalizing Value among Citizens
4.2.2.2 An Example of Social Simulation on Dominant Influence of the Value
4.2.3 Working for the Ethical Rules and Economic Valuation
4.3 Distinction: Random Selection or Modified Life
4.3.1 Genetic Therapy and its Value for Life
4.3.2 Genome Editing and Modification of Life
4.3.3 Sociological Criticisms
4.3.4 Value Chains beyond Family and Individuals
4.4 AI Optimizing Economic Satisfactions for Medical Services
4.5 Regaining Priceless Value of own Identity
References
5. Identity Protection
5.1 Identity Management in social context
5.2 What Data Should be protected?
5.2.1 Individual
5.2.1.1 Level 0: Sensibility on somewhat data by physical contacts
5.2.1.2 Level 1: Identification data for publicly intercommunications
5.2.1.3 Level 2: Protection as the way for access controls on privacy and sensitive private data
5.2.1.4 Level 3: Guarding private data of each individual by any external attacks in daily living
5.2.1.5 Level 4: Protections for the private rights to manage each physical-body and its parts
5.2.2 Enterprises5.2.3 Nations
5.2.4 DataBase Management and Data Base Protection
5.3 Information Bank
5.4 Block Chain and Its Distributed Database
5.5 Rule of Conduct for Auhthority in Medical Data
5.6 Risk Management on Identity
5.6.1 Online harms and Reputation Management for each Individual
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