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    JUDAISM AND AI DESIGN ETHICS PART 2

    In the first part of this
    essay, we saw that
    Judaism has long
    wrestled with the
    ethics of publishing
    and the dangers
    of unreliable or
    misleading content.
    The halakhic tradition demands accuracy,
    rejects heresy and insists that those who
    release information bear responsibility for
    its impact. Just as authors and publishers
    were accountable for what they printed,
    so too AI builders must ensure that their
    systems do not spread falsehood or
    undermine faith. We also noted that Jewish
    history offers two lenses—policy and
    consumer responsibility. Lacking political
    power, Jewish communities often relied
    on their own creative tools to safeguard
    Torah values. In this second part, we turn
    to those communal strategies and ask what
    lessons they provide for the age of artificial
    intelligence.
    IV. Consumer Driven Control
    Jewish communal leadership could never
    control the printing presses because the
    Jewish printers did not necessarily listen to
    authorities and also a Jewish author could

    always go to a Christian printing press
    who did not follow Jewish leaders. Indeed,
    many mainstream Jewish authors used
    Christian printers for a variety of reasons.
    On the one hand, the lack of control
    offered Jewish booksellers an opportunity.
    Since people could buy forbidden books
    elsewhere, Jewish merchants were also
    technically allowed to sell the books to
    people outside our community. While
    people struggled through poverty and
    hunger, this still was frowned upon, even if
    not outright forbidden (Rema, Yoreh De’ah
    139:15; see also She’arim Ha-Metzuyanim
    Ba-Halakhah 167:7). However, the lack of
    regulatory power risked communal chaos
    and demanded another solution.
    Due to this inability to control the producers,
    Jewish leadership turned to consumers.
    They developed the system of haskamos,
    rabbinic approbations appended to books.
    A haskamah certifies that a book contains
    no heresy, inaccurate or otherwise harmful
    content. In this way, rabbinic authorities
    guide the community not by controlling
    what is printed but by influencing what is
    purchased and read.
    This model parallels contemporary kosher
    certification. Few Jews can inspect a food

    factory, but they can look for a trusted
    hechsher, certification symbol. Similarly,
    consumers cannot control printing presses,
    but they can rely on rabbinic approbations.
    This represents a consumer-driven model
    of quality assurance: if you cannot regulate
    the system directly, you can still guide its
    use.
    An important example of this approach
    appears in the responsa of Rav Moshe

    Isserles (Rema; no. 11). In sixteenth-
    century Venice, two competing editions of

    the Mishneh Torah appeared, one legitimate
    and one that copied it. The publishers were
    non-Jews, so they would not heed rabbinic
    rulings. How could the Jewish community
    respond?
    The Rema ruled that Jews in Poland may
    purchase only the proper edition. Since he
    could not control the publishers directly,
    he appealed to consumers. If Jews cannot
    enforce ethical production, they can
    voluntarily choose ethical consumption.
    This strategy of appealing to consumer
    behavior was a way of enforcing Jewish
    ethical standards even without regulatory
    power. Even if it does not stop the publisher,
    it creates a communal ethical standard.
    This approach can also apply to AI ethics.
    Builders may not always be persuaded by
    ethical arguments but consumers can still
    insist on using only those systems that
    meet traditional standards as determined
    by leading ethicists or ethical certification
    agencies. Market behavior, guided by
    conscience and communal momentum,
    can shape outcomes even in environments
    dominated by non-ethical actors.
    V. Toward a “Kosher AI” Model
    These precedents point toward a model
    for AI that is faithful to Torah values.
    On the builder’s side, responsibilities are
    clear:
    1) Ensure accuracy, preventing harm from
    false or misleading statements.
    2) Filter out content reflecting dangerous
    worldviews.
    3) Follow ethical guidelines that meet
    traditional values.
    But just as importantly, the community
    must act as ethical consumers. Within the
    observant Jewish community, just as we
    buy food only with kosher certification,
    we should demand AI systems that are
    “kosher-certified” to align with traditional
    Jewish values. Similarly, traditionalist
    communities throughout the country
    can band together and through market
    force demand ethically certified AI that
    conforms to traditional values.

    This shifts part of the responsibility from
    builders to users. Builders are obligated
    to the ethical demands of truth and

    responsibility, but users must demand value-
    driven systems. If regulators fail to curb AI

    excesses, consumers must demand a higher
    level of responsibility. Even if regulators
    manage to impose ethical standards, they
    will be minimal standards and religious
    communities will want stronger controls
    that they will achieve through consumer
    choice.
    Realistically, we cannot expect a “Kosher
    AI” for Amazon recommendations. But we
    can demand the option of a kosher version

    of ChatGPT and we can expect a decision-
    model for self-driving cars that respects

    traditional values.
    VI. Conclusion: Lessons from the Past
    for the Digital Age
    The Jewish tradition provides a rich
    precedent for thinking about methods to
    ensure AI ethics. Just as the printing press
    forced communities to grapple with the
    dangers of heresy and confusion, AI raises
    similar risks in a new technological context.
    Rav Moshe Feinstein taught that confusion
    is itself dangerous. The Rema taught
    that when power is limited, consumer
    behavior can enforce ethical standards.
    And generations of rabbis used haskamos
    and kosher certification to guide the faithful
    toward safe and reliable works.
    The lesson is twofold. Builders of AI are
    ethically obligated to ensure accuracy and
    responsibility, never releasing a system that
    endangers truth or allows impropriety. But
    consumers, too, bear responsibility. They
    must demand ethically-certified AI, systems
    aligned with their values and worldviews.
    In the digital age, the community cannot be
    passive. Just as we check the hechsher on
    our food, we must check the certification
    on our information. AI is, or at least will
    be, too powerful and too pervasive to
    leave unexamined. We currently have the
    opportunity to ensure ethical building of
    AI systems. We must use our combined
    consumer power to ensure that our needs
    are met.