Opzioni
Periodico
ITALIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC LAW
Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) has become a structural element of
contemporary cultural systems, influencing how meaning,
language, and identity are created and circulated. Its pervasive role
raises a set of intertwined problems that affect the preservation of
cultural diversity and the visibility of non-dominant traditions.
The rapid expansion of AI-generated content reinforces
cultural homogenization and the invisibility of minority voices. The
structure of algorithms and the biases embedded in training data
reproduce hegemonic narratives, while the centralization of digital
platforms concentrates control over access to cultural and creative
content. This process generates new forms of discrimination,
under-representation, and dependency within global cultural
flows.
Further issues arise from over-reliance on synthetic data,
leading to model collapse and loss of epistemic diversity, and from
the absence of cultural impact assessments in existing regulatory
frameworks. The EU AI Act, for instance, remains largely sector-
neutral, neglecting the cultural implications of AI systems.
The paper examines these challenges—ethical, legal, and
epistemic—that threaten cultural pluralism in the age of artificial
intelligence.
Diritti
open access
license:creative commons
license uri:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
Soggetti
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Artificial Intelligen...
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Council of Europe
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Framework Convention ...
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Human Right
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Democracy
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Rule of Law
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EU AI Act
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Algorithmic Governanc...
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Transparency
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Human Oversight
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Digital Acqui
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AI Impact Assessment
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Administrative Law
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Autonomous Ship
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Cultural Invisibility...
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Private Law
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Comparative Law
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International Law
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Public Administration...
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AI Regulation