Responsible AI Agents
Journal:
arXiv
Published Date:
Feb 25, 2025
Abstract
Thanks to advances in large language models, a new type of software agent,
the artificial intelligence (AI) agent, has entered the marketplace. Companies
such as OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, and Salesforce promise their AI Agents will
go from generating passive text to executing tasks. Instead of a travel
itinerary, an AI Agent would book all aspects of your trip. Instead of
generating text or images for social media post, an AI Agent would post the
content across a host of social media outlets. The potential power of AI Agents
has fueled legal scholars' fears that AI Agents will enable rogue commerce,
human manipulation, rampant defamation, and intellectual property harms. These
scholars are calling for regulation before AI Agents cause havoc.
This Article addresses the concerns around AI Agents head on. It shows that
core aspects of how one piece of software interacts with another creates ways
to discipline AI Agents so that rogue, undesired actions are unlikely, perhaps
more so than rules designed to govern human agents. It also develops a way to
leverage the computer-science approach to value-alignment to improve a user's
ability to take action to prevent or correct AI Agent operations. That approach
offers and added benefit of helping AI Agents align with norms around user-AI
Agent interactions. These practices will enable desired economic outcomes and
mitigate perceived risks. The Article also argues that no matter how much AI
Agents seem like human agents, they need not, and should not, be given legal
personhood status. In short, humans are responsible for AI Agents' actions, and
this Article provides a guide for how humans can build and maintain responsible
AI Agents.