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⚖️justice
A prosecutor has real proof a serial fraudster is guilty, but it's inadmissible. A deepfake confession exists that would guarantee conviction. Do you use it?
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Why this dilemma matters
Justice questions ask whether the law, fairness, or mercy should lead the call. Choosing “Use the deepfake — the person is genuinely guilty and victims deserve justice” prioritises equal treatment for all; choosing “Reject it — fabricated evidence corrupts the justice system for everyone” gives more weight to proportionate response to one case.
Worth asking yourself
- Who is the rule protecting, and who is paying for it?
- Is mercy a kind of justice here, or its opposite?
More Justice Dilemmas
- A new tax would halve the income of the top 1% and double the income of the bottom 20%. The total wealth in society stays the same.
- An AI sentencing tool is more consistent than human judges across similar cases, but cannot explain its reasoning. Should it be used?
- You are a juror. Every piece of evidence says guilty — but your gut tells you the defendant is innocent. The jury must be unanimous.
- DNA evidence exonerates an innocent person after 25 years on death row. The real killer is 85, frail, and dying. Do they go to prison?