1,625 research outputs found
The Road to Artificial Super-Intelligence: Has International Law a Role to Play?
Part I of this article deals with the road to artificial general super-intelligence.
Part II addresses the controls, if any, that should be exercised over the production and use of partially or fully autonomous machines of artificial intelligence before and after they become super-intelligent. More particularly, should there be legal and ethical limits to their use and to what extent should international law play a role in this connection
TORTS-DEFAMATION-LIBEL BY SILENCE
In an almanac published in 1939, Professor Turpain of the University of Poitiers, France, purported to name the inventors of radio. He failed to include the name of E. Branly. In 1940 Branly brought suit in the lower civil court of Poiters against Professor Turpain, alleging that he had been \u27\u27libelled by silence. The court agreed with him. The court of appeals of Poitiers reversed the decision of the lower court and dismissed the case. Following Branly\u27s death, his heirs questioned the validity of the decision of the court of appeals in the court of Cassation. The court held, in setting aside the judgment of the court of appeals and reinstating the judgment of the lower court, that an author of a book or article on history, even though he acts in good faith, has the duty to use caution when he purports to report facts. In case of a failure to do so, the author is responsible to those who are injured by his lack of caution in research and reporting facts. Branly v. Turpain, Cass., Ch. Civ., sect. civ., Feb. 27, 1951, Gaz. Pal., April 6, 1951; D.H. 19e cahier, p. 329
Schwartz: The Code Napoleon and the Common Law World
A Review of The Code Napoleon and the Common Law World. Edited by Bernard Schwartz
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