The digital revolution is rapid in time and global in space, characterised by a variety of technologies and a multidimensional and multilayered nature. It presents challenges for the legal frameworks designed for a pre-digital world and need a forward-looking set of dynamic tools to be governed. Existing legal approaches differ by region and value system, struggling to keep pace with the AI’s pervasiveness and ubiquity. The paper analyses how EU, US, and China struggle to regulate the digital revolution. The right to health is used as an example to highlight the different regional approaches to healthcare, and how these differences are reflected in the ways digital health is addressed. Current legal tools are showing their inadequacy in addressing power imbalances inherent in the first (algorithmic profiling) and second step (conversational agents) of HMI. Inspiring by the Digital Humanism, the paper proposes "digital vulnerability" as a key concept for regulating HMI. Declaring the ontological vulnerability of humans in any interaction with AI, making the concept of digital vulnerability a new macro-category in private law, and interpreting existing norms or drafting future ones on its basis could be the right legal tool to lay the foundation for a global digital law.
Diurni, A. (2025). Global Challenges in Human-Machine Interaction: The Case of the Digital Healthcare. In M.L.I.e.J.R. M. Bertolaso (a cura di), Healthcare in the Digital Age: Perspectives for Sustainable Innovation and Assessment (pp. 299-326). Palgrave Macmillan.
Global Challenges in Human-Machine Interaction: The Case of the Digital Healthcare
AMALIA DIURNI
2025-01-01
Abstract
The digital revolution is rapid in time and global in space, characterised by a variety of technologies and a multidimensional and multilayered nature. It presents challenges for the legal frameworks designed for a pre-digital world and need a forward-looking set of dynamic tools to be governed. Existing legal approaches differ by region and value system, struggling to keep pace with the AI’s pervasiveness and ubiquity. The paper analyses how EU, US, and China struggle to regulate the digital revolution. The right to health is used as an example to highlight the different regional approaches to healthcare, and how these differences are reflected in the ways digital health is addressed. Current legal tools are showing their inadequacy in addressing power imbalances inherent in the first (algorithmic profiling) and second step (conversational agents) of HMI. Inspiring by the Digital Humanism, the paper proposes "digital vulnerability" as a key concept for regulating HMI. Declaring the ontological vulnerability of humans in any interaction with AI, making the concept of digital vulnerability a new macro-category in private law, and interpreting existing norms or drafting future ones on its basis could be the right legal tool to lay the foundation for a global digital law.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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