Two False, One True
Spot the Real Ethical Rule
Keep searching until you find the happy monster, then click it to check your answer and move on to the next round.
If an upset monster pops up with an explanation, it means the statement is false... try again!
Each round shows three statements about AI and ethics. Two are FALSE. One is TRUE. Click the card you think is the real ethical rule humans actually follow.
Ready
Who's the Boss
Humans must review and approve all AI-assisted decisions.
AI should make the final decisions because it's more objective.
AI is allowed to operate alone if it's accurate enough.
Even when AI seems “objective,” policies warn it still carries bias and can’t make final decisions.
Accuracy isn’t enough; AI still needs human oversight to prevent harm.
AI NEVER replaces human judgment. Humans stay responsible for: decisions, outcomes, impacts
Next
Trust Me, I’m a Robot!
If AI sounds confident, you can treat the information as true.
AI can give great suggestions, but humans must check them.
If AI makes a mistake, it’s not the user’s responsibility to catch it.
Humans must review and approve all AI-assisted decisions.
AI is allowed to operate alone if it's accurate enough.
Accuracy isn’t enough; AI still needs human oversight to prevent harm.
Confidence doesn’t equal accuracy. AI can sound sure while being wrong.
Policies say users share responsibility for spotting and correcting errors.
Confidence ≠ accuracy. Users must verify information, correct errors, challenge AI outputs.
Next
Invisible Tools? No Thanks.
Humans must review and approve all AI-assisted decisions.
AI tools should be hidden so users don’t worry about them.
Only adults need to know whether AI was used.
You should always know when AI is being used.
AI is allowed to operate alone if it's accurate enough.
Accuracy isn’t enough; AI still needs human oversight to prevent harm.
Hidden AI is unethical. Users must know when AI is influencing them.
Transparency applies to everyone; students also need clear disclosure.
Transparency is a core rule. You deserve to know where AI is operating, what it's doing, how it affects decisions.
Next
Whose Values Count?
AI should follow one universal definition of fairness.
Different cultures and communities define fairness differently.
Humans must review and approve all AI-assisted decisions.
Fairness doesn’t need cultural perspectives.
AI is allowed to operate alone if it's accurate enough.
Accuracy isn’t enough; AI still needs human oversight to prevent harm.
There’s no single fairness. Ethics depend on culture and community.
Ignoring cultural perspectives leads to harm and misrepresentation.
Ethics must include diverse ways of knowing. Fairness is shaped by culture, relationships, land, and community.
Next
Who Fixes the System?
Humans must correct, retrain, and audit AI systems.
Humans must review and approve all AI-assisted decisions.
As long as the AI works most of the time, it doesn’t need reviews.
AI systems fix themselves over time.
AI is allowed to operate alone if it's accurate enough.
Accuracy isn’t enough; AI still needs human oversight to prevent harm.
AI can’t detect or repair its own bias. Humans must intervene.
Small unchecked errors can cause harm. Regular human review is required.
AI cannot “notice” or “repair” its own ethics. People must step in.
The End
Two False, One True
San-Shan Huang
Created on December 6, 2025
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Transcript
Two False, One True
Spot the Real Ethical Rule
Keep searching until you find the happy monster, then click it to check your answer and move on to the next round.
If an upset monster pops up with an explanation, it means the statement is false... try again!
Each round shows three statements about AI and ethics. Two are FALSE. One is TRUE. Click the card you think is the real ethical rule humans actually follow.
Ready
Who's the Boss
Humans must review and approve all AI-assisted decisions.
AI should make the final decisions because it's more objective.
AI is allowed to operate alone if it's accurate enough.
Even when AI seems “objective,” policies warn it still carries bias and can’t make final decisions.
Accuracy isn’t enough; AI still needs human oversight to prevent harm.
AI NEVER replaces human judgment. Humans stay responsible for: decisions, outcomes, impacts
Next
Trust Me, I’m a Robot!
If AI sounds confident, you can treat the information as true.
AI can give great suggestions, but humans must check them.
If AI makes a mistake, it’s not the user’s responsibility to catch it.
Humans must review and approve all AI-assisted decisions.
AI is allowed to operate alone if it's accurate enough.
Accuracy isn’t enough; AI still needs human oversight to prevent harm.
Confidence doesn’t equal accuracy. AI can sound sure while being wrong.
Policies say users share responsibility for spotting and correcting errors.
Confidence ≠ accuracy. Users must verify information, correct errors, challenge AI outputs.
Next
Invisible Tools? No Thanks.
Humans must review and approve all AI-assisted decisions.
AI tools should be hidden so users don’t worry about them.
Only adults need to know whether AI was used.
You should always know when AI is being used.
AI is allowed to operate alone if it's accurate enough.
Accuracy isn’t enough; AI still needs human oversight to prevent harm.
Hidden AI is unethical. Users must know when AI is influencing them.
Transparency applies to everyone; students also need clear disclosure.
Transparency is a core rule. You deserve to know where AI is operating, what it's doing, how it affects decisions.
Next
Whose Values Count?
AI should follow one universal definition of fairness.
Different cultures and communities define fairness differently.
Humans must review and approve all AI-assisted decisions.
Fairness doesn’t need cultural perspectives.
AI is allowed to operate alone if it's accurate enough.
Accuracy isn’t enough; AI still needs human oversight to prevent harm.
There’s no single fairness. Ethics depend on culture and community.
Ignoring cultural perspectives leads to harm and misrepresentation.
Ethics must include diverse ways of knowing. Fairness is shaped by culture, relationships, land, and community.
Next
Who Fixes the System?
Humans must correct, retrain, and audit AI systems.
Humans must review and approve all AI-assisted decisions.
As long as the AI works most of the time, it doesn’t need reviews.
AI systems fix themselves over time.
AI is allowed to operate alone if it's accurate enough.
Accuracy isn’t enough; AI still needs human oversight to prevent harm.
AI can’t detect or repair its own bias. Humans must intervene.
Small unchecked errors can cause harm. Regular human review is required.
AI cannot “notice” or “repair” its own ethics. People must step in.
The End