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> > "Only a person can have rights. A machine cannot," wrote Lady Justice Elisabeth Laing in her judgement.

The fight will then be to get AGI classified as a person. If a corporation can have personhood, it is not impossible for AGI to have the same.




Despite the consistent misinformation around it (very frequently flat out lies), Corporate Personhood does not mean that corporations are people. Corporate Personhood only acknowledges that corporations are groups of people, and that if it would be legal to gather a large group to do something, doing so under the auspices of a corporation is also legal. That is the precedent that Citizens United set - That it is as legal to make political contributions and endorsements as a corporation as you would as a rotary club. You can argue that the rotary club shouldn't be allowed to make contributions - And I would agree with you. I in fact, encourage it. People should not be able to hide their political contributions through entities like Trade Unions, which are actually the most pertinent part of that class.


> If a corporation can have personhood, it is not impossible for AGI to have the same.

The basis for corporate personhood is that it is made up of humans. The benefits of a corporation flow to real humans. Real humans actually direct how a corporation will be run. In the event of crimes, the corporate veil can be pierced to go after the real humans behind it.

The “personhood” of corporations flows from the “personhood” of the humans behind it.

Imagine a world where corporations held no rights at all. For example, while an individual human had the right to freedom of the press, a corporation like the New York Times would not have that right.


A company is made up of humans. a corporation is a synthetic corpus created by legal dictum. It's all in the name.


If corporations gain rights from the people involved, I don't think those same people should be exempted from liability for what they do as a group


Corporate personhood is a misunderstood issue. They aren’t treated like a natural person. Corporations for example can’t be inventors on a patent either.


I was wondering about this. What happens when someone invents a patent related to their work? It is strange to me if the IP belongs to the company but not the patent.


Depends what the person's employment contract says. 95% of the time, the inventor is required to assign all rights to inventions related to the companies' work to the company.

So you have inventor: Steve Wozniak; assignee: Apple Inc.

Assignment allows the owner to be different from the inventor.


Much more likely us that there will be a push for patent rights to be granted to corporations, sidestepping the philosophy entirely.




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