Facial Recognition Failures Are Locking People Out of Unemployment Systems
ID.me's CEO says unemployment fraud is costing taxpayers $400 billion, but his own company is denying claims because of problems with its tech, users say.
At a Duke administrative law conference (yes, this is how I spend my Saturdays). Cass Sunstein says the **most pressing issue** in law / public administration is (1) to reduce the impact of cognitive bias and (2) eliminate noise. For the record I absolutely disagree … (1/n)— Jenna Burrell, PhD (@jennaburrell) February 12, 2022
Salesforce empowered an AI ethics team to keep it honest. Dealing with third-party apps is trickier.
Kathy Baxter and her product design ethics team at Salesforce have a lot of sway over when tech is ready to ship and when it’s not. But there are lots of technologies living on the Salesforce platform beyond their control.
Update (October 22): Earlier this month, SpotSpotter filed a lawsuit alleging that the Vice report linked below contains false and defamatory statements.Court documents recently reviewed by VICE have revealed that ShotSpotter, a company that makes and sells audio gunshot detection to cities and...
Joe Rogan argued for saying the N-word: “Don’t you think by not saying it, it becomes this ridiculously charged magic word?”Rogan predicted people would get in trouble for saying “the N-word,” just like they do for wearing “hoop earrings, braids, and dreadlocks.” #SpotifyKnew pic.twitter.com/CAhTWtTpHn— PatriotTakes 🇺🇸 (@patriottakes) February 6, 2022
absolutely horrifying: amazon’s algorithm identified a product that people were using to commit suicide. it then started to recommend additional products that made the suicide easier to executte. https://t.co/eKX4z8FOt7 pic.twitter.com/BpbvLhjoTO— maxwell (@maxwellstrachan) February 4, 2022
So The British Journal of Photography sold out its twitter account with 250000 followers into a NFT marketing account called 'art3'.They started a new account for photography. Which has 836 followers.And in doing so destroyed their reputation and reach. pic.twitter.com/KDI0HpT2fW— duckrabbit (@duckrabbitblog) February 2, 2022
Got a letter, the Police were to prosecute me for speeding! on a date I was home in a place I have never been. Called, all sorted out, but when they checked the vid it was a silver van, I have a blue Skoda. A quick look at the vehicle data would have flagged this immediately?— LinkoVitch (@Link2076) February 3, 2022
This video is just… so very good. #DataPrivacy #SurveillanceCapitalism #surveillance via @worldsayer https://t.co/J9bFj2cgbJ— Per Axbom (@axbom) January 31, 2022
In 1999, I asked David Gerrold to write a "future of computing" prediction for the magazine where I was Technology Editor. Here's what he wrote. https://t.co/UAMM0Pm4W6
I took (most of) January off from writing to take a step back and observe. Writing week in and out, as I did last year, keeps one pretty close to the subject — maybe even too close. And what I no...
Machine Learning lives in an uncanny valley btw Science and Engineering.It's the worst of both worlds.We don't care about understanding, just making things "work" (bad science).We don't care if things work in the real world, just on contrived benchmarks (bad engineering).— David Krueger (@DavidSKrueger) January 29, 2022
Fingerprinting is bad. It's a term that refers to building up enough metadata about a user that you can essentially figure out who they are. JavaScript has
In interviews with AI experts, IEEE Spectrum has uncovered six real-world AI worst-case scenarios that are far more mundane than those sci-fi robot apocalypses depicted in the movies. But they’re no less dystopian. And most don’t require a malevolent dictator to bring them to full fruition.