LFI Course Materials 4/Week ten

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Week 10: AI and algorithms and privacy

Overview

Much is made of the coming artificially intelligent future, where automation takes away menial labor and self-driving electric cars get us off the internal combustion engine. But that fantasy ignores the reality of the AI infrastructures currently being built, infrastructures that exacerbate existing social problems and create whole new concerns. Artificial intelligence is built through enormous datasets, which are often created from the wealth of information collected about us without our consent. Processing all of this data is incredibly resource-intensive. Furthermore, lots of AI is used for even greater privacy-violating purposes, like facial recognition and predictive policing. This week, we're joined by Varoon Mathur, technology fellow at AI Now Institute, to talk about the privacy, labor, and ecological implications of artificial intelligence, how AI and related technologies are being used during the current crisis in what Naomi Klein has called the "screen new deal" to create a high-tech dystopia, what power players and political ideologies are at work to shape this reality, and what we can do to fight it.

Readings

Guest lecturer

Varoon Mathur, technology fellow at AI Now Institute

Discussion

  • Discuss the unique impacts AI has on labor, data privacy, and planetary resources.
  • What do you make of the multiple connections between the AI industry and individuals with reactionary politics?
  • How can we begin to address these issues? What are the implications for library programs and services? For example, we often assist our patrons who've just received holiday gadgets. How can we incorporate these critiques into those services? How can we broaden the critique so that we're not just telling people not to plug in their Echo device?

Tasks

  • Lecture, discussion forum, final project checkins with Alison