Introduction
This declaration is for people who use AI, people who bring AI into organizations, and everyone affected by it.
AI is becoming part of ordinary work, study, creative practice, writing, translation, summarization, and reflection. It is no longer a specialized technology used only by a few people.
Working with AI can leave us uncertain. Should this be left to AI? Can I call this my own thinking? Does this image diminish, misuse, or wound someone else's expression? Has this summary left out words that mattered? Is this convenience shifting a burden onto someone we cannot see? We may also feel uneasy about how people around us use AI.
At the same time, it can be hard to say, "I think this is wrong." Sometimes we do not even know what the right answer is. That is why we think about AI and ethics. Here, ethics does not mean simply following rules or rushing to decide the correct answer. It means continuing to ask what matters in each situation, together with the people involved.
Because people use AI from different positions, cultures, bodies, languages, and forms of work, this declaration should remain open to revision. It is not something one person can settle once and for all. It is something we develop together, without rushing past uncertainty. It is one starting point for learning how to live with uncertainty in the age of AI.
On this site, AI refers to machine-learning-based technologies and services that generate text, images, audio, or video, translate, summarize, assist search, classify, recommend, predict, or support decisions.