
Consent in the Age of AI (Part 3)
10 min read
In the first two parts of this series, I explored a question that began in an unexpected place. What initially appeared to be a discussion about artificial intelligence gradually became a discussion about consent. What began as concerns about security, data stewardship, and information governance eventually led to something deeper: the realization that many debates about AI are not really about technology at all. They are about people. More specifically, they are about the obligations that arise when one person benefits from the labor, creativity, likeness, voice, experiences, or identity of another. Once that connection becomes visible, the conversation changes. We are no longer talking merely about data, artifacts, or outputs. We are talking about the people whose lives made those things possible.
Along the way, I found myself returning to a simple but increasingly important observation. Artificial intelligence has a remarkable ability to separate artifacts from the human beings connected to them. A photograph becomes image data, a voice recording becomes a sample, a body of writing becomes a statistical pattern, and a lifetime of experience becomes a dataset. None of these descriptions are technically incorrect. However, as the artifact becomes easier to analyze, store, reproduce, and transform, the person behind it becomes easier to overlook. The central question of consent emerges precisely at that point:
When does our desire to benefit from another person begin to eclipse our obligation to respect them?
