Is 'Human-Centric' AI Possible in the Age of
Algorithmic Power?
ㅣKarl Yang, Founder & Executive Director of KoSIF ㅣ
Artificial Intelligence (AI) has become the defining
topic of our time. Concerns that humanity might eventually be dominated by AI
are now frequently heard.
Indeed, humanity is standing before a massive
transition in civilized history. If the steam engine inaugurated industrial
society by replacing muscle, and the internet built information society by
establishing a social neural network, AI is now mechanizing the uniquely human
domain of "decision-making."
However, the essence of the AI era is not about how
smart machines have become. What truly matters is the foundational principle of
civilizational governance: What value system does this intelligence pursue, and
is it operating in a way that protects human dignity and social trust?
To put it another way: "If traditional capitalism
was driven by an 'invisible hand,' upon what value system is the new AI
capitalism being designed?"
The Reality of "Digital Feudalism"
Today’s discourse on AI seems trapped within the
narrow frameworks of technological hegemony and industrial productivity.
However, viewed through the lens of ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance)
capitalism, AI is not merely a technological advancement—it is an economic
reality that dictates power structures and the distribution of wealth.
While AI amplifies productivity exponentially, it
simultaneously accelerates the concentration of capital and data at a pace
unprecedented in history, casting the shadow of "digital feudalism."
In an era where AI has become an essential infrastructure for running
society—much like electricity or water—the corporations that monopolize this
infrastructure effectively hold the status of digital feudal lords. Despite
being private entities, they wield a powerful "executive authority"
capable of swaying the foundational trust capital of democracy and the very
value of labor.
As algorithms replace the norm-setting capabilities
once held by nations, we are facing a governance vacuum where we cannot control
private corporate interests when they clash with public values.
The core issue here is that the velocity of technology
has outpaced the speed of social consensus and governance. Unless the
"inclusive value creation" championed by ESG capitalism is
established as a prerequisite, AI will not be a productivity revolution;
rather, it will become a potent risk factor that deepens social instability.
Existential Challenges: Labor and Democracy
At the heart of this disruption lies the issue of
redefining labor. AI is encroaching not only upon low-skilled labor but also
into high-skilled intellectual domains such as law, medicine, and research.
This is not simply a matter of job displacement; it is an existential challenge
to the very role humans play in society.
Democracy is equally in jeopardy. As generative AI
reduces the cost of information production to nearly zero, deepfakes and
precision-engineered manipulation of public opinion are becoming routine. This
is fundamentally eroding "social capital"—the trust that serves as
the bedrock of democracy.
From a governance perspective, AI demands clear
accountability. Who bears responsibility for decisions hidden behind
algorithms?
From an ESG viewpoint, AI developers are not mere
solution providers; they are architects of social systems. Therefore, they must
bear strict social responsibilities equivalent to the fiduciary duty of
financial institutions, meaning they must actively prove the transparency and
mitigate the biases of their algorithms.
The Environmental Burden and the Core Questions
Environmental costs must also be treated as core
management metrics. AI is simultaneously a savior that optimizes energy
efficiency and a "resource black hole" that devours staggering
amounts of electricity and water. Moving forward, AI’s carbon footprint and
resource efficiency should not be viewed as optional ethical choices. They must
be treated as material investment criteria and regulatory targets that dictate
a corporation's non-financial value.
Ultimately, the core questions of the AI era converge
into four points:
If the answers to these questions culminate in the monopoly of market power, AI will serve as an amplifier of inequality. Conversely, if the core tenets of ESG capitalism—Accountability, Inclusivity, and Sustainability—are embedded into the DNA of AI systems, AI can become a civilizational tool that expands universal human welfare.
AI does not decide its own future. Our tomorrow will
be determined by the value system upon which we anchor AI. The most realistic
and powerful framework to set that standard is a new capitalism rooted firmly
in ESG principles.