Modern Australian
Men's Weekly

.

CSIRO wants our laws turned into computer code. Here's why that's a bad idea

  • Written by Joe McIntyre, Senior Lecturer in Law, University of South Australia

Most of our laws are dense, obscure and effectively unintelligible for most people (even some lawyers). In a country where, every year, 25% of the population face serious legal issues yet often cannot afford to protect their rights in court, any move to make the law more comprehensible seems like a good idea.

However, reforms proposed by CSIRO to embrace “legislation-as-code” – where the law would be directly read and applied by machines – is not just misguided and deaf to history, it’s dangerous.

Read more: We need human oversight of machine decisions to stop robo-debt drama

‘Legislation-as-code’

The argument for this idea goes that, as the law is just a series of rules, we should be able to reduce those rules to programmable code. When the legislation is drafted, it will be written both in human-readable words and machine-readable code. The aim is legislation could be directly applied by machines.

This agenda in Australia is being led by Digital Transformation Agency and Department of Human Services in collaboration with Data61, CSIRO’s AI and digital science arm. The approach promises “a world where government rules are easy to find, understand and follow” which should improve compliance while reducing costs. In recent submissions made to the Senate, CSIRO said:

The goal is that computer-assisted reasoning using these logics should give the same answers as judges and lawyers doing legal reasoning about the black-letter law.

The move to experiment with legislation as code is attracting attention across the world, with Australia following Denmark’s and New Zealand’s leads.

Unfortunately, as great as these ambitions sound, they ignore the very nature of law itself.

Law in practice is always dynamic and discretionary. Every law requires interpretation: does a directive to only drive on the left allow you to drive on the right to avoid a child playing in the road? What if it were not a child, but a dog? The law does not and cannot provide a single right answer, and will always depend upon judgement.

CSIRO wants our laws turned into computer code. Here's why that's a bad idea The law says cars must drive on the left in Australia. But what if they have to cross the road to avoid hitting a child? from www.shutterstock.com

It follows that judges make law. Not in the same way as parliament which actually passes the laws, but in their complex choices, judges contribute to the changing way we interpret and enforce laws.

The problem with codifying law

To understand the problem, some history is in order. During the French Revolution, the gross misbehaviour of the aristocratic judges of the Ancien Régime motivated the restriction of judicial power.

In the new order judges were expected to be the “bouche de la loi”: the mouthpiece for the law. The great Napoleonic Code of 1804 sought to reduce all French law into a single comprehensive and exhaustive document, clearly written and accessible to all, which judges could apply in an objective, disinterested and purely logical manner.

This conception of the judge held sway for much of the 19th century, yet every attempt to prevent judges considering factors beyond the code, or altering the law by its application, ended in failure. While the concept was politically attractive, it was internally incoherent and bore little relationship to practice.

By the end of that century, theorists such as François Gény and Oliver Wendell Holmes led a revolt against the practice.

This period showed that laws are incomplete, logical deduction isn’t always adequate, and judges need to be able to properly evaluate and take extra-legal considerations into account.

Holmes observed:

[the] life of the law has not been logic: it has been experience.

It is beyond ironic that the “legislation-as-code” movement now shares a name as well as an ambition with the Napoleonic Code. By misconceiving law as a complete system of rules that can be reduced to logical code that excludes discretion and evaluation, it is doomed to repeat the errors of the past.

To allow machines to “interpret” legislation as code does not eliminate the role of values, but rather replaces the evolving values of the judiciary with the values of the programmer and reinforces bias towards past values choices.

The “legislation-as-code” approach risks reinforcing a disingenuous conception of judges as mere dispute-resolvers and not as co-equal governors; the third arm of government.

It distracts from the many ways judges are held to account and promotes an expansive role for parliament and the executive. And as the robodebt saga has already shown, it will inevitably be the vulnerable who suffer most when the technology fails.

Read more: Robo-debt is only one way government stigmatises claimants. There's only so much a class action can do

Authors: Joe McIntyre, Senior Lecturer in Law, University of South Australia

Read more http://theconversation.com/csiro-wants-our-laws-turned-into-computer-code-heres-why-thats-a-bad-idea-130131

How a Burleigh Heads Plumber Tests for Pipe Leaks

Pipe leaks can be deceptively difficult to spot. Some announce themselves with a steady drip under the sink, but many develop quietly behind walls, ...

What Local Businesses Should Expect from IT Services in Melbourne?

If you run a Melbourne business with roughly 7–100 staff, you have probably noticed something over the last couple of years. The IT problems got m...

How Professional Cleaning Improves Indoor Air Quality

Indoor air quality (IAQ) plays a crucial role in our health, comfort, and overall wellbeing. Australians spend nearly 90% of their time indoors-at hom...

Solar and Solar Battery Systems: Powering Smarter Homes in Victoria

As energy prices continue to rise and sustainability becomes a priority for Australian homeowners, more families are investing in Solar and Solar Ba...

Plumbing Emergency Melbourne: What to Do When Every Minute Counts

A sudden plumbing issue can quickly turn into a major disaster if not handled promptly. From burst pipes and overflowing toilets to leaking gas line...

Why Older Melbourne Homes Require Detailed Building & Pest Inspections

Older homes make up a large part of Melbourne’s housing stock. Victorian terraces, Edwardian houses, Californian bungalows, and post-war brick hom...

7 Essential Tips for Choosing Reliable Moving Services in Perth

Moving to a new home or office can be exciting, but it also comes with stress, planning, and plenty of decisions. One of the most important choices yo...

How to Find the Best Real Estate Agent Near You on the Central Coast

Choosing the right real estate agent can make a major difference to your final sale price, days on market, and overall experience. The Central Coast...

Unlock Durability And Beauty With Burnt Timber Cladding Solutions

Imagine a home or commercial space that not only stands the test of time but also tells a story through its very facade. In the world of architectur...

Offroad Caravans: Built for Adventure Beyond the Beaten Track

Australia’s vast and varied landscapes invite travellers to explore far beyond sealed roads and crowded parks. Offroad caravans are purpose-built ...

The Expert's Guide to Understanding Large Bore Steel Pipe Specifications

When it comes to infrastructure, construction, and various industrial applications, the choice of materials is paramount. Among the options availabl...

Preparing for Your First Trip to San Francisco in 2026

San Francisco has long occupied a particular place in the Australian imagination. It is compact yet complex, progressive but historic, and visually st...

Modern Office Painting in Australia - It's the Real Game Changer

Walk into any modern Australian office today and you'll be struck by the fact it's a whole different beast from the ones we grew up with. Gone are t...

How to Choose the Right Suburb for Your Lifestyle

Choosing the right suburb is one of the most important decisions you’ll make when buying or renting a home. Beyond the property itself, the suburb...

Considering Cryolipolysis Fat Freezing? Here’s What You Need to Know

Body confidence can shift over time, and sometimes even good diet and training can still leave a stubborn area of fat that won’t budge. If you’r...

From Local Tradie to Digital Leader: The Strategy Behind Auto Gate Guys Sydney’s Growth

For many small trade businesses, digital marketing still feels like a buzzword, not a necessity. They rely on word-of-mouth referrals, repeat clients...

Electric Automation System: Smarter Control for Modern Electrical Infrastructure

Modern buildings and industrial facilities are increasingly dependent on intelligent control and efficiency. An electric automation system brings t...

The Damp Truth: Why Your Overflowing Gutters Are an Open Invitation for Termites

When it comes to protecting your home, most people think about visible threats — storm damage, cracked tiles, break-ins. But one of the most destruc...