The Laboratorium (2d ser.) (Speech In, Speech Out)

amarashar's bookmarks 2018-07-23

Summary:

Collins and Skover make a two-step argument about “whether and why First Amendment coverage given to traditional forms of speech should be extended to the data processed and transmitted by robots.” First, they assert (based on reader-response literary criticism) that free speech theory can be “intentionless”: what matters is a listener’s experience of meaning rather than a speaker’s intentions. Second, they conclude that therefore utility will become the new First Amendment norm. The premise is right, but the conclusion does not follow. Sometimes robotic transmissions are speech and sometimes they aren’t, so the proper question is not “whether and why?” but “when?” Collins and Skover are right that listeners’ experiences can substitute for speakers’ intentions, and in a technological age this will often be a more principled basis for grounding speech claims. But robotic “speech” can be useful for reasons that are not closely linked to listeners’ experiences, and in these cases their proposed “norm of utility” is not really a free speech norm.

Link:

http://2d.laboratorium.net/post/174861519405/speech-in-speech-out

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Harmful Speech » amarashar's bookmarks

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Date tagged:

07/23/2018, 12:24

Date published:

07/23/2018, 08:24