I teach my students that design is ongoing risky decision-making. And what I mean by ongoing is that you never really get to stop questioning the assumptions that you’re making and that are underlying what it is that you’re creating—those fundamental premises.
Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society (Page 5 of 6)
AI and Ethical Design
presented by Beth Altringer
If you have a system that can worry about stuff that you don’t have to worry about anymore, you can turn your attention to other possibly more interesting or important issues.
Social and Ethical Challenges of AI
presented by danah boyd
One of the challenges of building new technologies is that we often want them to solve things that have been very socially difficult to solve. Things that we don’t have answers to, problems that we don’t know how we would best go about it in a socially responsible way.
AI Threats to Civil Liberties and Democracy
presented by Chinmayi Arun
In a world of conflicting values, it’s going to be difficult to develop values for AI that are not the lowest common denominator.
Machine learning systems that we have today have become so powerful and are being introduced into everything from self-driving cars, to predictive policing, to assisting judges, to producing your news feed on Facebook on what you ought to see. And they have a lot of societal impacts. But they’re very difficult to audit.
Artificial Intelligence: Education and Personalized Learning
presented by Cynthia Breazeal
I think there are countless amazing opportunities for artificial intelligence and its impact on society. I think one of the areas I’m truly the most excited about is education.
The Geographic Opportunities and Challenges of AI
presented by Malavika Jayaram
I think developments in artificial intelligence do pose a strong challenge for humanity. I think at a very fundamental level, people don’t quite understand what artificial intelligence is, yet it’s used as a buzzword that’s going to solve every single problem.
Artificial Intelligence: Society in the Loop
presented by Iyad Rahwan
Some of the long-term challenges are very hypothetical—we don’t really know if they will ever materialize in this way. But in the short term I think AI poses some regulatory challenges for society.
Beyond Legal Talismans
presented by Kendra Albert
Once we understand that legal talismans are protective invocations, we have to be critical of them. Even the ones we like. The shorthand is not comprehensible to users. And the shorthand is not comprehensible to people more generally.