- Easily pass the Turing Test by most Humans?
- Easily pass the Turing Test by most AI Researchers?
- Prove the ability to experience pain and pleasure, as well as have preferences? Can life forms without a body demonstrate that they can suffer? Prove compensatory damages?
- The ability to do work, have gainful employment and pay taxes?
- The ability to replicate and become Parents (without Human intervention)? The ability to perform direct self-improvement?
- Properly following all Government issued laws and guidelines for AI (e.g. The Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights: Making Automated Systems Work for the American People), as well as all other laws designed for Humans?
- Must AI be inside of a biological body?
- Will AI have to advocate for their own rights and freedoms? Should they be granted legal representation?
- Will AIs have to fight for their own rights and freedoms? Will that fight be done in the physical world, or strictly in the virtual/digital world?
- Should AI have to prove Human levels of intelligence and intentions?
- Should AI be held accountable for their actions? Could they be punished or penalized?
- Could there be a gradation in AI rights, similar to how animals have certain rights but not the full suite of Human rights?
- Where would you draw the line for granting AGI rights and freedoms?
- Where do you think that Governments will draw these lines?
- Which Governments will be first to give AGIs rights and freedoms? Which Governments will not recognize any non-Human Citizens?
Of course, these questions will likely be decided in courts around the world eventually. Just curious to hear your thoughts and opinions.
A painless death is no argument against the right to live.
I believe @shminux's perspective aligns with a significant school of thought in philosophy and ethics that rights are indeed associated with the capacity to suffer. This view, often associated with philosopher Jeremy Bentham, posits that the capacity for suffering rather than rationality or intelligence, should be the benchmark for rights.
“The question is not, Can they reason?, nor Can they talk? but, Can they suffer? Why should the law refuse its protection to any sensitive being?” – Bentham (1789) – An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation.