This article marks the end of one epoch and the beginning of another. The epoch of ‘norm inversion’ 1 - where technique supplants law, and law forgets justice - is drawing to a close. The instrument of FAIR-DO has done its work: it has diagnosed the malady at scale and created a demand for its cure. Its historical mission is complete. Now dawns the epoch of coordinative governance. Its challenge is not broken systems, but systems incapable of interoperability. When an algorithm does not understand the law, one AI does not understand another, and a human understands neither - yet all are compelled jointly to sustain logistics, energy, healthcare. Here, there is no place for utopia. There is only the pragmatic question: how can we establish the minimal necessary, verifiable, and enforceable rules between autonomous systems that share no common language or purpose, yet share a common risk of catastrophic failure? This is a project not of harmony, but of functionality. Not about how to reach agreement, but about how, while remaining rivals, to avoid destroying the infrastructure upon which all depend.
Georgii A Bondarenko (Wed,) studied this question.