In the previous articles, we have discussed the different provisions of the regulations for AI adoption and usage in Judiciary released by the Supreme Court as a draft for public comments. Thee comments are required to be submitted before 20th June and there is very little time for all to study the proposition in depth. We have tried to decode the provisions so that others can quickly assimilate and formulate their views.
In this article in this series we discuss the General Principles of AI Governance which is a very important aspect of the regulation. These are comparable to the AI Governance principles and covered under the principles of DGPSI-AI.
The provisions of Chapter II are reproduced here for reference.
CHAPTER II: GENERAL PRINCIPLES TO GOVERN ADOPTION, DEPLOYMENT AND USE OF AI SYSTEMS IN COURTS
- Human primacy and judicial independence.—
(1) The use of Artificial Intelligence in Court processes shall at all times remain strictly subservient to human judgment and judicial authority.
(2) Every AI System shall function solely in an assistive capacity and shall not supplant or compromise the independent exercise of judicial authority by a duly appointed judicial officer.
(3) The ultimate authority to determine matters of law, fact and justice shall vest exclusively in the judicial officers of the competent jurisdiction.
- Rule of law.—
(1) The adoption and use of AI Systems in Courts shall be consistent with the provisions of the Constitution and any other law for the time being in force including the principles of natural justice and shall not be used in any manner that could undermine due process, the right to a fair trial, equality before law, or access to justice.
(2) The Bangalore Principles of Judicial Conduct (adopted in 2002) shall, in addition to these regulations, continue to govern the conduct of judicial officers in all matters, including those involving the use of AI.
- Fairness and non-discrimination.—
(1) The AI Systems used in Court processes shall be designed, trained and deployed in a manner that promotes fairness and avoids discrimination.
(2) No AI System shall be deployed that perpetuates, amplifies, or introduces bias on the grounds of race, religion, caste, sex, gender, disability, language, economic status, or any other ground prohibited under the Constitution or any law for the time being in force and special care shall be taken to protect the rights and interests of vulnerable groups including women, children, persons with disabilities, marginalised and minority communities, and persons from economically and socially disadvantaged backgrounds.
- Transparency and explainability.—
(1) Every AI System used in Court processes shall meet high standards of transparency and explainability.
(2) The functioning, data inputs and decision logic of any AI System used in a Court process shall be capable of being understood and, where appropriate, be explained to judicial officers, the parties concerned and the public.
(3) The deployment of AI Systems that are opaque or incapable of explanation shall be subject to heightened scrutiny and shall be restricted in high-risk applications affecting personal liberty or any lawful right of a person.
- Accountability.—
(1) Accountability for all decisions made by any officer with the assistance of AI shall rest exclusively upon such officer and it shall not be permissible to invoke the outputs of an AI System, the opaqueness of a Black Box system, or the occurrence of hallucination, as a ground for avoiding accountability for a palpably incorrect, illegal, or harmful decision.
(2) The Appropriate Authority shall ensure that clear and documented lines of accountability are established and maintained for the operation of every AI System or AI Tool in a Court.
(3) Where any AI-generated output or information is used in any Court, it shall be treated as advisory in nature and reasonable care shall be taken to verify the accuracy of such output before the same is utilised:
Provided that the officer responsible and accountable for using such AI Tool may, for reasons to be recorded in writing, dispense with the requirement of verification:
Provided further that such AI tools used exclusively for administrative (non-adjudicatory) functions and certified by the AI Secretariat to have established reliability, shall be deemed to satisfy verification requirements on a class basis, without requiring prior verification.
- Auditability and continuous oversight.––
(1) Every AI System in use in Court processes shall be subject to continuous monitoring and periodic technical, legal and ethical audits throughout their lifecycle and adequate mechanisms shall be established to detect, document and address errors, malfunctions and biases.
(2) Audit findings shall be recorded and disclosed in accordance with these regulations, and shall decide upon the continued deployment of AI Systems in Courts.
- Data protection and privacy.––
(1) The processing of personal data through AI Systems shall be governed by the principles of purpose limitation, data minimisation and data privacy by design in accordance with the provisions of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 (22 of 2023) or any other law for the time being in force, and sensitive judicial data shall be accorded the highest standard of protection.
(2) The right to privacy shall be ensured in all AI related operations of Courts.
- Purpose limitation.–– AI Systems shall be deployed and used solely for specific purposes for which they have been approved by the Appropriate Authority and any use of an AI System beyond the scope of its approved purpose shall require a separate and specific approval of the Appropriate Authority, which shall record reasons therefor.
- Proportionality.––
(1) The use of AI in any Court process shall be proportionate to the nature, complexity and risk profile of the relevant task.
(2) Applications involving higher levels of risk to personal liberty or any lawful right of a person, or the integrity of judicial outcomes shall be subject to correspondingly heightened safeguards including mandatory Human-in-the-Loop requirements and independent oversight.
- Inclusivity and accessibility.––
(1) AI Systems deployed in Courts shall be designed and operated to promote inclusivity and expand equitable access to justice.
(2) Specific attention shall be given to ensuring that the deployment of AI does not create or widen digital divides and that the benefits of AI-assisted judicial services are extended fairly to all stakeholders including those from rural, economically disadvantaged, or linguistically diverse communities.
- Data integrity.––
(1) AI Systems used in Court processes shall be trained and operated on the basis of data that is accurate, representative, lawfully obtained and to the extent feasible, free from discriminatory bias.
(2) The deployment of AI Systems, trained on unlawfully collected or demonstrably biased datasets, shall be prohibited.
- Cyber security.–– The confidentiality, integrity and availability of Court data, processed through or stored in AI Systems, shall be protected by robust, layered and continuously updated technical and organisational security measures, commensurate with the sensitivity of the data and the nature of the Court process.
- Presumption in favour of responsible AI adoption.––
(1) Every Court shall actively seek opportunities to deploy AI Systems or AI Tools that demonstrably improve access to justice, reduce delays, or enhance administrative efficiency, and unless proved otherwise, the presumption shall be in favour of responsible adoption of AI in Court processes:
Provided that no AI System or AI Tool used for the purpose of assistance in Court processes, shall replace humans as far as decision-making is concerned, and shall not be deployed for dispute-outcome prediction.
(2) The restriction on, or refusal to permit, the use of any AI System or AI Tool, shall be for reasons to be recorded in writing, and such restriction shall be reasonable and to such extent so as to address the concern identified.
- Innovation over Restraint—
(1) The adoption of Artificial Intelligence in Court processes shall be pursued, in a responsible manner, as a catalyst for impactful innovation in the justice delivery system; and the exploration, development and integration of AI Systems and AI Tools that demonstrably further the goals of judicial efficiency and easy access to justice shall be actively encouraged.
(2) All innovation under sub-regulation (1) shall be carried out with due regard to the other general principles set out in this Chapter, so as to maximise the overall benefit of AI adoption while eliminating or minimising potential harm; and, all other things being equal, an approach that prefers active and responsible adoption over restraint shall be encouraged.
What strikes the eye most in this regulation is the categoric statement in Section 4 that use of AI in judicial process will at all times remain strictly subservient to human judgement and judicial authority.
This came as a surprising but mortal blow to those who were quoting Albania Government which had appointed an AI as a minister. It is a direct response to the recent article in Economic Times which recommended that companies should adopt AI for DPDPA compliance so that the army of lawyers required otherwise could be eliminated. Section 4 has simply shut down such arguments once and for all.
Otherwise the principle of fairness, non discrimination, transparency, explain ability, accountability are covered under different sections.
Auditability and continuous oversight has been recommended along with Data Protection principles such as data minimisation, purpose limitation, proportionality.
The regulations prescribe that the systems must be trained on data that is accurate, representative and “lawfully” obtained.
Cyber Security is also indicated as a principle to be ensured..
Together there is emphasis on responsible adoption of AI though section 17 says “Innovation over Restraint”
When we look back on all the detailed regulation mandated here, it is obvious that “Restraint” over rides “Innovation” and the Court has in fact been more rigid than necessary. It appears that the authors have worked under a panic that Judicial system will be over whelmed by the AI usage and in due course may eliminate large part of the adjudication.
Given the delays in the Court, innovators can still push for AI usage in Mediation process and also in “With recourse arbitration”. This should not affect these regulations being implemented in the formal Judicial system.
I request readers to not only read all the articles but also take time to listen to the Audio overviews and Video overviews available in the link in the menu “Naavi Academy”. These will clarify the articles. However please remember that the articles are written directly by Naavi while the overviews have been created by my AI assistant. He could have slipped in a few places but I have not found any material error. There could be some exaggerations and praise for Naavi which was not prompted. Kindly ignore.
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