We often cling to the idea that artificially intelligent systems are neutral arbiters, despite knowing that these systems can only be as good as the parameters and data sets that they are trained with—and that those inputs are saturated with pre-existing biases, blind spots, and historical baggage. Which is why AI has the potential to quietly entrench inequality, behind a veneer of computational objectivity.
But what changes when instead of hoping or striving for a neutral AI that doesn’t perpetuate our biases, we imagine AI that counters them in pursuit of social justice? Future Tense Fiction, with support from the Hewlett Foundation and Google, commissioned a series of three speculative stories that explore that very question, looking at how AI might transform understandings of personhood, governance, and the redress of past racial injustice. Join Future Tense and ASU’s Center for Science and Imagination to hear about these explorations.
This event is free and open to everyone – register today!
Speakers:
Holli Mintzer, @hollimichele
Author of “Legal Salvage”
Tochi Onyebuchi, @TochiTrueStory
Author of “How to Pay Reparations: a Documentary”
Yudhanjaya Wijeratne, @yudhanjaya
Author of “The State Machine”
Moderator:
Ed Finn, @zonal
Director, Center for Science and the Imagination, Arizona State University
Follow the conversation online using #AlgorithmicJustice and by following @FutureTenseNow. Co-hosted with Future Tense.