This dissertation was written as part of the Llm in in Transnational and European
Commercial Law, Banking Law, Arbitration/Mediation at the International Hellenic
University.
This dissertation approaches the concepts of Algorithms and Artificial Intelligence from
a legal perspective. Software programs that are capable of learning and making their
own decisions offer a multitude of applications, but also pose difficult questions in
regard with their autonomous behavior
Those questions mostly refer to the fact that it is extremely difficult to find the correct
formula to hold advanced algorithms and AI reliable for their actions.
This dissertation attempts to legally define the legal nature of those concepts and
propose methods that can prove useful when trying to set an efficient regulatory
framework.
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