Buon pomeriggio,

vi sottopongo il postprint di un mio articolo che è stato accettato da "Ethics 
& Politics",

Do AI systems have politics? Predictive optimisation as a move away from the 
rule of law, liberalism and democracy.

Questo è l'abstract:

In predictive optimisation systems, machine learning is used to predict future 
outcomes of interest about individuals, and these predictions are used to make 
decisions about them. Despite being based on pseudoscience, not working and 
unfixably harmful, predictive optimisation systems are still used by private 
companies and by governments. As they are based on the assimilation of people 
to things, predictive optimisation systems have inherent political properties 
that cannot be altered by any technical design choice: the initial choice about 
whether or not to adopt them is therefore decisive, as Langdon Winner wrote 
about inherently political technologies. The adoption of predictive 
optimisation systems is incompatible with liberalism and the rule of law 
because it results in people not being recognised as self-determining subjects, 
not being equal before the law, not being able to predict which law will be 
applied to them, all being under surveillance as ‘suspects’ and being able or 
unable to exercise their rights in ways that depend not on their status as 
citizens, but on their contingent economic, social, emotional, health or 
religious status. Under the rule of law, these systems should simply be banned.

Qui il testo completo:
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10229060

Vi sarò grata di qualsiasi osservazione.

Un saluto,
Daniela
_______________________________________________
nexa mailing list
nexa@server-nexa.polito.it
https://server-nexa.polito.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nexa

Reply via email to