Article (Scientific journals)
Whose Bias is it, Anyway? The Need for a Four-Eyes Principle in AI-Driven Competion Law Proceedings
De Cooman, Jérôme
2024In European Papers, 9 (3), p. 998-1016
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Keywords :
cartel screening; cognitive bias; procedural fairness; human oversight; competition enforcement; dawn raid
Abstract :
[en] Artificial Intelligence (hereafter, ‘AI’) systems are widely adopted by public administrations. Competition law does not escape the rule. This is unsurprising, given AI systems promise to address well-documented flaws in human decision-making, e.g. arbitrariness or bias. What is more, AI systems carries the potential to strengthen ex officio investigations. AI-driven cartel screening flags indicators of collusion that then trigger the need for further investigation. This Article does not discard hat AI systems increase effectiveness that in turn increase substantive fairness. Rather, it questions whether increasing effectiveness with AI systems has an impact on procedural fairness. The argument is that although the use of algorithms increases procedural fairness by removing noise and cognitive biases from the decision-making process, the overall impact on procedural fairness remains far from clear given that the introduction of AI systems in public administration might perniciously generates new type of biases or harmful behaviours. This Article suggests that a four-eyes principle is a workable solution to mitigate that pitfall.
Disciplines :
European & international law
Author, co-author :
De Cooman, Jérôme  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Cité
Language :
English
Title :
Whose Bias is it, Anyway? The Need for a Four-Eyes Principle in AI-Driven Competion Law Proceedings
Publication date :
31 December 2024
Journal title :
European Papers
eISSN :
2499-8249
Publisher :
European Centre for European Law, Rome, Italy
Volume :
9
Issue :
3
Pages :
998-1016
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 08 January 2025

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