All Narratives (356)

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Themes
  • Privacy
  • Accountability
  • Transparency and Explainability
  • Human Control of Technology
  • Professional Responsibility
  • Promotion of Human Values
  • Fairness and Non-discrimination
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Technologies
  • AI
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  • Immersive Technology
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  • 10 min
  • Slate
  • 2021
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How a Dead Professor Is Teaching a University Art History Class

Using the tale of Art History Professor François-Marc Gagnon, whose video lectures were used to instruct students even after his death, this article raises questions about how technologies such as digital memory and data streaming for education in the time of coronavirus may ultimately undervalue the work of educators.

  • Slate
  • 2021
  • 5 min
  • Indie Wire
  • 2021
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How Black Storytellers Are Using XR and Afro-Futurism to Explore Ancestral Identity

New virtual exhibits displayed through Web XR, or Extended Reality available over the network of internet browsers, allow Black artists and creators to present ancestral knowledge and stories while providing a new basis on which AI could be trained. This use of AI leads to an imagination free of colonial or racist constructs that may otherwise be present in digital media.

  • Indie Wire
  • 2021
  • 10 min
  • The Atlantic
  • 2014
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How Self-Tracking Apps Exclude Women

When the Apple Health app first released, it lacked one crucial component: the ability to track menstrual cycles. This exclusion of women from accessible design of technology is not the exception but rather the rule. This results from problems inherent to the gender imbalance in technology workplaces, especially at the level of design. Communities such as the Quantified Self offer spaces to help combat this exclusive culture.

  • The Atlantic
  • 2014
  • 5 min
  • New York Times
  • 2020
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A Case for Facial Recognition

Decisions on whether or not law enforcement should be trusted with facial recognition are tricky, as is argued by Detroit city official James Tate. On one hand, the combination of the bias latent in the technology itself and the human bias of those who use it sometimes leads to over-policing of certain communities. On the other hand, with the correct guardrails, it can be an effective tool in getting justice in cases of violent crime. This article details the ongoing debate about how much facial recognition technology use is proper in Detroit.

  • New York Times
  • 2020
  • 7 min
  • Amnesty International
  • 2021
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AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL CALLS FOR BAN ON THE USE OF FACIAL RECOGNITION TECHNOLOGY FOR MASS SURVEILLANCE

Amnesty International released a statement detailing its opposition of widespread use of facial recognition technology for mass surveillance purposes based on its misuse and unfair impacts over Black communities and the chilling effect which it would create on peaceful protest.

  • Amnesty International
  • 2021
  • 13 min
  • Danielle Citron
  • 2019
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How deepfakes undermine truth and threaten democracy

The use of deepfake technology to manipulate video and audio for malicious purposes — whether it’s to stoke violence or defame politicians and journalists — is becoming a real threat. As these tools become more accessible and their products more realistic, how will they shape what we believe about the world? In a portentous talk, law professor Danielle Citron reveals how deepfakes magnify our distrust — and suggests approaches to safeguarding the truth.
Discussion Questions:

What are some of the possible uses for video and audio deepfakes?
What is trust? How do we normally verify information we receive?
How does this type of technology erode trust in existing systems of accountability in society?
Can you think of any possible positive uses of this technology?

  • Danielle Citron
  • 2019
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