Royal Society Open Science (May 2024)

Towards algorithm auditing: managing legal, ethical and technological risks of AI, ML and associated algorithms

  • Adriano Koshiyama,
  • Emre Kazim,
  • Philip Treleaven,
  • Pete Rai,
  • Lukasz Szpruch,
  • Giles Pavey,
  • Ghazi Ahamat,
  • Franziska Leutner,
  • Randy Goebel,
  • Andrew Knight,
  • Janet Adams,
  • Christina Hitrova,
  • Jeremy Barnett,
  • Parashkev Nachev,
  • David Barber,
  • Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic,
  • Konstantin Klemmer,
  • Miro Gregorovic,
  • Shakeel Khan,
  • Elizabeth Lomas,
  • Airlie Hilliard,
  • Siddhant Chatterjee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.230859
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5

Abstract

Read online

­Business reliance on algorithms is becoming ubiquitous, and companies are increasingly concerned about their algorithms causing major financial or reputational damage. High-profile cases include Google’s AI algorithm for photo classification mistakenly labelling a black couple as gorillas in 2015 (Gebru 2020 In The Oxford handbook of ethics of AI, pp. 251–269), Microsoft’s AI chatbot Tay that spread racist, sexist and antisemitic speech on Twitter (now X) (Wolf et al. 2017 ACM Sigcas Comput. Soc. 47, 54–64 (doi:10.1145/3144592.3144598)), and Amazon’s AI recruiting tool being scrapped after showing bias against women. In response, governments are legislating and imposing bans, regulators fining companies and the judiciary discussing potentially making algorithms artificial ‘persons’ in law. As with financial audits, governments, business and society will require algorithm audits; formal assurance that algorithms are legal, ethical and safe. A new industry is envisaged: Auditing and Assurance of Algorithms (cf. data privacy), with the remit to professionalize and industrialize AI, ML and associated algorithms. The stakeholders range from those working on policy/regulation to industry practitioners and developers. We also anticipate the nature and scope of the auditing levels and framework presented will inform those interested in systems of governance and compliance with regulation/standards. Our goal in this article is to survey the key areas necessary to perform auditing and assurance and instigate the debate in this novel area of research and practice.

Keywords