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Opinion | Use A.I. to Reinvigorate Democracy — Not Replace It
Opinion | Use A.I. to Reinvigorate Democracy — Not Replace It
(Opponents tend to use the same arguments, but select the other valence. This is what causes hallucinations. Seems to beg the alignment issue, and will sacrifice a lot of models along the way. Again the issue of tech evolution, if not posthuman existentialism. How to think about throwing a lot more voices at society? Could be like cluster analysis if not cellular automata. Or wandering through the chaos in Future Games. Would appear to appeal to human nature, but at the same time that is undergoing fast-track genetic editing advances. Recruit the new demographics. Born of tragedy as in classic narrative. Or is it Luv wondering what she would look like in the Shoulder of Orion outfit?)
·nytimes.com·
Opinion | Use A.I. to Reinvigorate Democracy — Not Replace It
Pan, C. A., Yakhmi, S., Iyer, T. P., Strasnick, E., Zhang, A. X., & Bernstein, M. S. (2022). Comparing the perceived legitimacy of content moderation processes: Contractors, algorithms, expert panels, and digital juries. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction, 6(CSCW1), 1-31.
Pan, C. A., Yakhmi, S., Iyer, T. P., Strasnick, E., Zhang, A. X., & Bernstein, M. S. (2022). Comparing the perceived legitimacy of content moderation processes: Contractors, algorithms, expert panels, and digital juries. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction, 6(CSCW1), 1-31.
Digital juries.
·dl.acm.org·
Pan, C. A., Yakhmi, S., Iyer, T. P., Strasnick, E., Zhang, A. X., & Bernstein, M. S. (2022). Comparing the perceived legitimacy of content moderation processes: Contractors, algorithms, expert panels, and digital juries. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction, 6(CSCW1), 1-31.