Algorithms selectively favoring certain groups or demographics.
Algorithmic Bias (23)
Find narratives by ethical themes or by technologies.
FILTERreset filters-
- 5 min
- MIT Technology Review
- 2019
Introduction to how bias is introduced in algorithms during the data preparation stage, which involves selecting which attributes you want the algorithm to consider. Underlines the difficult nature of ameliorating bias in machine learning, given that algorithms are not always perfectly attuned to human social contexts.
- MIT Technology Review
- 2019
-
- 5 min
- MIT Technology Review
- 2019
This is how AI bias really happens—and why it’s so hard to fix
Introduction to how bias is introduced in algorithms during the data preparation stage, which involves selecting which attributes you want the algorithm to consider. Underlines the difficult nature of ameliorating bias in machine learning, given that algorithms are not always perfectly attuned to human social contexts.
How can the “portability trap” described in the article be avoided? Who should be involved in making decisions about framing problems that AI are meant to solve?
-
- 5 min
- Wired
- 2019
Monster Match, a game funded by Mozilla, shows how dating app algorithms are reinforcing bias through combining personal and mass aggregated data to systematically hide a vast number of profiles from user sight, effectively caging users into narrow preferences.
- Wired
- 2019
-
- 5 min
- Wired
- 2019
This dating app exposes the monstrous bias of algorithms
Monster Match, a game funded by Mozilla, shows how dating app algorithms are reinforcing bias through combining personal and mass aggregated data to systematically hide a vast number of profiles from user sight, effectively caging users into narrow preferences.
What are some inexplicit ways in which algorithms reinforce biases? Are machine learning algorithms equipped to handle the multiple confounding variables at play in things like dating preferences? Does online dating unquestionably give people more agency in finding a partner?
-
- 5 min
- Wall Street Journal
- 2019
Incorporation of ethical practices and outside perspectives in AI companies for bias prevention is beneficial, and becoming more popular. Spawns from a need for consistent human oversight in algorithms.
- Wall Street Journal
- 2019
-
- 5 min
- Wall Street Journal
- 2019
Investors Urge AI Startups to Inject Early Dose of Ethics
Incorporation of ethical practices and outside perspectives in AI companies for bias prevention is beneficial, and becoming more popular. Spawns from a need for consistent human oversight in algorithms.
How do we have an ethical guardrail around AI? How should tech companies approach gathering outside perspectives on algorithms?
-
- 5 min
- Wired
- 2019
Axon’s novel use of an ethics committee led to a decision to not use facial recognition programs on the body cameras which they provide to police department, on the basis of latent racial bias and privacy concerns. While this is a beneficial step, companies and government offices at multiple levels debate over when and how facial recognition should be deployed and limited.
- Wired
- 2019
-
- 5 min
- Wired
- 2019
Taser User Says It Wont Use Biometrics In BodyCams
Axon’s novel use of an ethics committee led to a decision to not use facial recognition programs on the body cameras which they provide to police department, on the basis of latent racial bias and privacy concerns. While this is a beneficial step, companies and government offices at multiple levels debate over when and how facial recognition should be deployed and limited.
Should facial recognition ever be used in police body cameras, even if it does theoretically evolve to eliminate bias? How can citizens and governments have more power in limiting facial recognition and enforcing a more widespread use of ethics boards?
-
- 40 min
- New York Times
- 2021
As facial recognition technology becomes more prominent in everyday life, used by players such as law enforcement officials and private actors to identify faces by comparing them with databases, AI ethicists/experts such as Joy Buolamwini push back against the many forms of bias that these technologies show, specifically racial and gender bias. Governments often use such technologies callously or irresponsibly, and lack of regulation on the private companies which sell these products could lead society into a post-privacy era.
- New York Times
- 2021
She’s Taking Jeff Bezos to Task
As facial recognition technology becomes more prominent in everyday life, used by players such as law enforcement officials and private actors to identify faces by comparing them with databases, AI ethicists/experts such as Joy Buolamwini push back against the many forms of bias that these technologies show, specifically racial and gender bias. Governments often use such technologies callously or irresponsibly, and lack of regulation on the private companies which sell these products could lead society into a post-privacy era.
Do you envision an FDA-style approach to technology regulation, particularly for facial recognition, being effective? Can large tech companies be incentivized to make truly ethical decisions on how their technology is created or deployed as long as the profit motive exists? What would this look like? What changes to the technology workforces, such as who designs software products or who chooses data sets, need to be made for technology’s impact to become more equal across populations?