Quick facts
- Topic: Ethics
- Tags: Ethics, Artificial Intelligence, AI Trends, Law
- Length: 327 pages
- Best for: A clear, no-hype briefing on AI in gambling for policy readers, educators, sceptics, and anyone thinking about AI's social consequences.
How AI is reshaping ethics
It maps the practical applications, the operational pinch points, the decision workflows, and the reliability questions that appear when AI moves from demo to deployment in gambling.
From first principles in ethics to practical claims, limitations, and sharper judgement.
- ► Where AI is already being used in ethics today — and where optimisation meets ethical lines.
- ► The sharper operational lens is on risk scoring, consent, and harm.
- ► Key themes including ethics, artificial intelligence, ai trends, law.
Built for readers who want the claims around ethics translated, tested, and relieved of their marketing costume.
Who this book is for
- Curious readers who want a grounded view of The House Always Knows without the applause soundtrack.
- Readers who want the bigger arguments around ethics translated into plain English and tested against how the systems behave in practice.
- Anyone who wants clear context on where AI is already being used in ethics today — and where optimisation meets ethical lines before they trust the louder claims.
- Readers looking for sharper judgement on the sharper operational lens is on risk scoring, consent, and harm rather than recycled buzzwords.
Key themes
- Ethics
- Artificial Intelligence
- AI Trends
- Law
What you’ll learn
- Where AI is already being used in ethics today — and where optimisation meets ethical lines.
- The sharper operational lens is on risk scoring, consent, and harm.
- Key themes including ethics, artificial intelligence, ai trends, law.
- The limits, risks, and awkward questions worth asking before you sign off on the sales pitch.
Audience fit
Written for policy readers, educators, sceptics, and anyone thinking about AI's social consequences who need a clearer read on what AI can and cannot do in gambling, without wading through technical theatre.
Deeper overview
Examines AI's role in gambling, from personalized gaming to addiction risks, addressing ethical concerns and regulation. It looks at where AI is already earning its keep in gambling, where the claims run ahead of the evidence, and what sensible adoption actually looks like.
Why this title is useful in practice
In practice, The House Always Knows: AI, Gambling, and the Ethics of Personalized Gaming is most useful when the real issue is the distance between broad AI claims in ethics and what the systems can actually justify. It is written for a clear, no-hype briefing on AI in gambling for policy readers, educators, sceptics, and anyone thinking about AI's social consequences, and it tackles questions such as where AI is already being used in ethics today — and where optimisation meets ethical lines., which makes it more useful than a generic explainer when someone has to decide what happens next in an actual workflow, classroom, policy setting, or team.
Problem framing: where this topic gets messy
Ethics is one of those areas where the argument gets noisy very quickly: claims versus evidence, fluency versus substance, novelty versus context. This title cuts through that din and looks at what AI is actually doing in ethics, where it helps, and where it starts creating fresh headaches. It keeps coming back to where AI is already being used in ethics today — and where optimisation meets ethical lines.
Practical outcomes
You should finish it with the jargon around ethics translated, the stronger claims stress-tested, and a better map of where to dig deeper.
- Understand why ethics matters now and what the evidence actually says.
- Assess whether ethics is applicable to your context before committing resources.
- Ask the right governance and implementation questions before adoption decisions become expensive.
Chapter-level signals
Where AI is already being used in ethics today — and where optim
Where AI is already being used in ethics today — and where optimisation meets ethical lines.
The sharper operational lens is on risk scoring, consent, and ha
The sharper operational lens is on risk scoring, consent, and harm.
Key themes including ethics, artificial intelligence, ai trends
Key themes including ethics, artificial intelligence, ai trends, law.
What makes this title distinct
The House Always Knows: AI, Gambling, and the Ethics of Personalized Gaming keeps the applause to a minimum and asks what the systems actually do, what they break, and what they are being oversold to solve in ethics.
AI in gambling is one of those areas where AI can help, but only if the claims survive contact with autonomy, fairness, consent, and social trust. That is where this book keeps its attention.
FAQ
What does this book explain about AI in ethics?
Where AI is already being used in ethics today — and where optimisation meets ethical lines.
Who gets the most value from this ethics guide?
A clear, no-hype briefing on AI in gambling for policy readers, educators, sceptics, and anyone thinking about AI's social consequences.
How detailed is the coverage?
It runs to 327 pages and focuses on It maps the practical applications, the operational pinch points, the decision workflows, and the reliability questions that appear when AI moves from demo to deployment in gambling.
Where can I get the eBook?
Available as an eBook via Amazon using the buy link on this page.
Keep exploring the Jonathan Harris AI library
Use the links below to carry on browsing the wider catalogue, the glossary, comparisons, podcast coverage, or a related guide.