People shouldn’t pay such a high price for calling out AI harms
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This week everyone is talking about AI. The White House just unveiled a new executive order that aims to promote safe, secure, and trustworthy AI systems. It's the most far-reaching bit of AI regulation the US has produced yet, and my colleague Tate Ryan-Mosley and I have highlighted three things you need to know about it.Read them here.
The G7 has just agreed a (voluntary) code of conduct that AI companies should abide by, as governments seek to minimize the harms and risks created by AI systems. And later this week, the UK will be full of AI movers and shakers attending the government's AI Safety Summit, an effort to come up with global rules on AI safety.
In all, these events suggest that the narrative pushed by Silicon Valley about the existential risk" posed by AI seems to be increasingly dominant in public discourse.
This is concerning, because focusing on fixing hypothetical harms that may emerge in the future takes attention from the very real harms AI is causing today.Existing AI systems that cause demonstrated harms are more dangerous than hypothetical sentient' AI systems because they are real," writes Joy Buolamwini, a renowned AI researcher and activist, in her new memoir Unmasking AI: My Mission to Protect What Is Human in a World of Machines.Read more of her thoughts in an excerpt from her book, out tomorrow.
I had the pleasure oftalking with Buolamwiniabout her life story and what concerns her in AI today. Buolamwini is an influential voice in the field. Her research on bias in facial recognition systems made companies such as IBM, Google, and Microsoft change their systems and back away from selling their technology to law enforcement.
Now, Buolamwini has a new target in sight. She is calling for a radical rethink of how AI systems are built, starting with more ethical, consensual data collection practices. What concerns me is we're giving so many companies a free pass, or we're applauding the innovation while turning our head [away from the harms]," Buolamwini told me.Read my interview with her.
While Buolamwini's story is in many ways an inspirational tale, it is also a warning.Buolamwini has been calling out AI harms for the better part of a decade, and she has done some impressive things to bring the topic to the public consciousness. What really struck me was the toll speaking up has taken on her. In the book, she describes having to check herself into the emergency room for severe exhaustion after trying to do too many things at once-pursuing advocacy, founding her nonprofit organization the Algorithmic Justice League, attending congressional hearings, and writing her PhD dissertation at MIT.
She is not alone. Buolamwini's experience tracks with a piece I wrote almost exactly a year ago about howresponsible AI has a burnout problem.
Partly thanks to researchers like Buolamwini, tech companies face more public scrutiny over their AI systems. Companies realized they needed responsible AI teams to ensure that their products are developed in a way that mitigates any potential harm. These teams evaluate how our lives, societies, and political systems are affected by the way these systems are designed, developed, and deployed.
But people who point out problems caused by AI systems often face aggressive criticism online, as well as pushback from their employers. Buolamwini described having to fend off public attacks on her research from one of the most powerful technology companies in the world: Amazon.
When Buolamwini was first starting out, she had to convince people that AI was worth worrying about. Now, people are more aware that AI systems can be biased and harmful. That's the good news.
The bad news is that speaking up against powerful technology companies still carries risks. That is a shame. The voices trying toshift the Overton windowon what kinds of risks are being discussed and regulated are growing louder than ever and have captured the attention of lawmakers, such as the UK's prime minister,Rishi Sunak. If the culture around AI actively silences other voices, that comes at a price to us all.
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