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 afrofuturism


How Afrofuturism can help us imagine futures worth living in Lonny Avi Brooks and Reynaldo Anderson

The Guardian

The digital age sings a seductive song of progress, yet a deliberate erasure echoes within its circuits. We stand at a crossroads, where technology, particularly the promise of artificial intelligence, threatens both to illuminate and to obliterate. Whose perspectives will shape, and whose will be erased from, the future we build? AI, in particular, has become the latest battleground in a culture war that oscillates between unchecked techno-optimism and dystopian fear. We are told, on one hand, that AI will save us โ€“ from disease, inefficiency, ignorance โ€“ on the other, that it will replace us, dominate us, erase us.


Welcome to Janelle Monรกe's Dreamworld

WIRED

There's an old story about Octavia Butler that I often return to: A young man once asked the visionary science fiction novelist the answer to ending all the suffering in the world. "There isn't one," Butler replied. "So we're doomed?" he asked, confused. Then she delivered the words that would remake my understanding of the future: "There's no single answer that will solve all of our future problems. Instead there are thousands of answers--at least. You can be one of them if you choose to be." Black futurist artists are often regarded as prophets, and expected, unfairly, to foretell the path that will lead us to a brighter tomorrow.


These Were Our Favorite Tech Stories ... :: Human Robots#

#artificialintelligence

This time last year we were commemorating the end of a decade and looking ahead to the next one. Enter the year that felt like a decade all by itself: 2020. News written in January, the before-times, feels hopelessly out of touch with all that came after. Stories published in the early days of the pandemic are, for the most part, similarly naive. The yearโ€™s news cycle was swift and brutal, ping-ponging from pandemic to extreme social and political tension, whipsawing economies, and natural disasters. Hope. Despair. Loneliness. Grief. Grit. More hope. Another lockdown. Itโ€™s been a hell of a year. Though 2020 was dominated by big, hairy societal change, science and technology took significant steps forward. Researchers singularly focused on the pandemic and collaborated on solutions to a degree never before seen. New technologies converged to deliver vaccines in record time. The dark side of tech, from biased algorithms to the threat of omnipresent surveillance and corporate control of artificial intelligence, continued to rear its head. Meanwhile, AI showed uncanny command of language, joined Reddit threads, and made inroads into some of scienceโ€™s grandest challenges. Mars rockets flew for the first time, and a private company delivered astronauts to the International Space Station. Deprived of night life, concerts, and festivals, millions traveled to virtual worlds instead. Anonymous jet packs flew over LA. Mysterious monoliths appeared and disappeared worldwide. It was all, you know, very 2020. For this yearโ€™s (in-no-way-all-encompassing) list of fascinating stories in tech and science, we tried to select those that werenโ€™t totally dated by the news, but rose above it in some way. So, without further ado: This yearโ€™s picks. How Science Beat the Virus Ed Yong | The Atlantic โ€œMuch like famous initiatives such as the Manhattan Project and the Apollo program, epidemics focus the energies of large groups of scientists. โ€ฆBut โ€˜nothing in history was even close to the level of pivoting thatโ€™s happening right now,โ€™ Madhukar Pai of McGill University told me. โ€ฆ No other disease has been scrutinized so intensely, by so much combined intellect, in so brief a time.โ€ โ€˜It Will Change Everythingโ€™: DeepMindโ€™s AI Makes Gigantic Leap in Solving Protein Structures Ewen Callaway | Nature โ€œIn some cases, AlphaFoldโ€™s structure predictions were indistinguishable from those determined using โ€˜gold standardโ€™ experimental methods such as X-ray crystallography and, in recent years, cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM). AlphaFold might not obviate the need for these laborious and expensive methodsโ€”yetโ€”say scientists, but the AI will make it possible to study living things in new ways.โ€ OpenAIโ€™s Latest Breakthrough Is Astonishingly Powerful, But Still Fighting Its Flaws James Vincent | The Verge โ€œWhat makes GPT-3 amazing, they say, is not that it can tell you that the capital of Paraguay is Asunciรณn (it is) or that 466 times 23.5 is 10,987 (itโ€™s not), but that itโ€™s capable of answering both questions and many more beside simply because it was trained on more data for longer than other programs. If thereโ€™s one thing we know that the world is creating more and more of, itโ€™s data and computing power, which means GPT-3โ€™s descendants are only going to get more clever.โ€ Artificial General Intelligence: Are We Close, and Does It Even Make Sense to Try? Will Douglas Heaven | MIT Technology Review โ€œA machine that could think like a person has been the guiding vision of AI research since the earliest daysโ€”and remains its most divisive idea. โ€ฆSo why is AGI controversial? Why does it matter? And is it a reckless, misleading dreamโ€”or the ultimate goal?โ€ The Dark Side of Big Techโ€™s Funding for AI Research Tom Simonite | Wired โ€œTimnit Gebruโ€™s exit from Google is a powerful reminder of how thoroughly companies dominate the field, with the biggest computers and the most resources. โ€ฆ[Meredith] Whittaker of AI Now says properly probing the societal effects of AI is fundamentally incompatible with corporate labs. โ€˜That kind of research that looks at the power and politics of AI is and must be inherently adversarial to the firms that are profiting from this technology.โ€™iโ€ Weโ€™re Not Prepared for the End of Mooreโ€™s Law David Rotman | MIT Technology Review โ€œQuantum computing, carbon nanotube transistors, even spintronics, are enticing possibilitiesโ€”but none are obvious replacements for the promise that Gordon Moore first saw in a simple integrated circuit. We need the research investments now to find out, though. Because one prediction is pretty much certain to come true: weโ€™re always going to want more computing power.โ€ Inside the Race to Build the Best Quantum Computer on Earth Gideon Lichfield | MIT Technology Review โ€œRegardless of whether you agree with Googleโ€™s position [on โ€˜quantum supremacyโ€™] or IBMโ€™s, the next goal is clear, Oliver says: to build a quantum computer that can do something useful. โ€ฆThe trouble is that itโ€™s nearly impossible to predict what the first useful task will be, or how big a computer will be needed to perform it.โ€ The Secretive Company That Might End Privacy as We Know It Kashmir Hill | The New York Times โ€œSearching someone by face could become as easy as Googling a name. Strangers would be able to listen in on sensitive conversations, take photos of the participants and know personal secrets. Someone walking down the street would be immediately identifiableโ€”and his or her home address would be only a few clicks away. It would herald the end of public anonymity.โ€ Wrongfully Accused by an Algorithm Kashmir Hill | The New York Times โ€œMr. Williams knew that he had not committed the crime in question. What he could not have known, as he sat in the interrogation room, is that his case may be the first known account of an American being wrongfully arrested based on a flawed match from a facial recognition algorithm, according to experts on technology and the law.โ€ Predictive Policing Algorithms Are Racist. They Need to Be Dismantled. Will Douglas Heaven | MIT Technology Review โ€œA number of studies have shown that these tools perpetuate systemic racism, and yet we still know very little about how they work, who is using them, and for what purpose. All of this needs to change before a proper reckoning can take pace. Luckily, the tide may be turning.โ€ The Panopticon Is Already Here Ross Andersen | The Atlantic โ€œArtificial intelligence has applications in nearly every human domain, from the instant translation of spoken language to early viral-outbreak detection. But Xi [Jinping] also wants to use AIโ€™s awesome analytical powers to push China to the cutting edge of surveillance. He wants to build an all-seeing digital system of social control, patrolled by precog algorithms that identify potential dissenters in real time.โ€ The Case For Cities That Arenโ€™t Dystopian Surveillance States Cory Doctorow | The Guardian โ€œImagine a human-centered smart city that knows everything it can about things. It knows how many seats are free on every bus, it knows how busy every road is, it knows where there are short-hire bikes available and where there are potholes. โ€ฆWhat it doesnโ€™t know is anything about individuals in the city.โ€ The Modern World Has Finally Become Too Complex for Any of Us to Understand Tim Maughan | OneZero โ€œOne of the dominant themes of the last few years is that nothing makes sense. โ€ฆI am here to tell you that the reason so much of the world seems incomprehensible is that it is incomprehensible. From social media to the global economy to supply chains, our lives rest precariously on systems that have become so complex, and we have yielded so much of it to technologies and autonomous actors that no one totally comprehends it all.โ€ The Conscience of Silicon Valley Zach Baron | GQ โ€œWhat I really hoped to do, I said, was to talk about the future and how to live in it. This year feels like a crossroads; I do not need to explain what I mean by this. โ€ฆI want to destroy my computer, through which I now work and โ€˜have drinksโ€™ and stare at blurry simulations of my parents sometimes; I want to kneel down and pray to it like a god. I want someoneโ€”I want Jaron Lanierโ€”to tell me where weโ€™re going, and whether itโ€™s going to be okay when we get there. Lanier just nodded. All right, then.โ€ Yes to Tech Optimism. And Pessimism. Shira Ovide | The New York Times โ€œTechnology is not something that exists in a bubble; it is a phenomenon that changes how we live or how our world works in ways that help and hurt. That calls for more humility and bridges across the optimism-pessimism divide from people who make technology, those of us who write about it, government officials and the public. We need to think on the bright side. And we need to consider the horribles.โ€ How Afrofuturism Can Help the World Mend C. Brandon Ogbunu | Wired โ€œโ€ฆ[W. E. B. DuBoisโ€™] โ€˜The Cometโ€™ helped lay the foundation for a paradigm known as Afrofuturism. A century later, as a comet carrying disease and social unrest has upended the world, Afrofuturism may be more relevant than ever. Its vision can help guide us out of the rubble, and help us to consider universes of better alternatives.โ€ Wikipedia Is the Last Best Place on the Internet Richard Cooke | Wired โ€œMore than an encyclopedia, Wikipedia has become a community, a library, a constitution, an experiment, a political manifestoโ€”the closest thing there is to an online public square. It is one of the few remaining places that retains the faintly utopian glow of the early World Wide Web.โ€ Can Genetic Engineering Bring Back the American Chestnut? Gabriel Popkin | The New York Times Magazine โ€œThe geneticistsโ€™ research forces conservationists to confront, in a new and sometimes discomfiting way, the prospect that repairing the natural world does not necessarily mean returning to an unblemished Eden. It may instead mean embracing a role that weโ€™ve already assumed: engineers of everything, including nature.โ€ At the Limits of Thought David C. Krakauer | Aeon โ€œA schism is emerging in the scientific enterprise. On the one side is the human mind, the source of every story, theory, and explanation that our species holds dear. On the other stand the machines, whose algorithms possess astonishing predictive power but whose inner workings remain radically opaque to human observers.โ€ Is the Internet Conscious? If It Were, How Would We Know? Meghan Oโ€™Gieblyn | Wired โ€œDoes the internet behave like a creature with an internal life? Does it manifest the fruits of consciousness? There are certainly moments when it seems to. Google can anticipate what youโ€™re going to type before you fully articulate it to yourself. Facebook ads can intuit that a woman is pregnant before she tells her family and friends. It is easy, in such moments, to conclude that youโ€™re in the presence of another mindโ€”though given the human tendency to anthropomorphize, we should be wary of quick conclusions.โ€ The Internet Is an Amnesia Machine Simon Pitt | OneZero โ€œThere was a time when I didnโ€™t know what a Baby Yoda was. Then there was a time I couldnโ€™t go online without reading about Baby Yoda. And now, Baby Yoda is a distant, shrugging memory. Soon there will be a generation of people who missed the whole thing and for whom Baby Yoda is as meaningless as it was for me a year ago.โ€ Digital Pregnancy Tests Are Almost as Powerful as the Original IBM PC Tom Warren | The Verge โ€œEach test, which costs less than $5, includes a processor, RAM, a button cell battery, and a tiny LCD screen to display the result. โ€ฆFoone speculates that this device is โ€˜probably faster at number crunching and basic I/O than the CPU used in the original IBM PC.โ€™ IBMโ€™s original PC was based on Intelโ€™s 8088 microprocessor, an 8-bit chip that operated at 5Mhz. The difference here is that this is a pregnancy test you pee on and then throw away.โ€ The Party Goes on in Massive Online Worlds Cecilia Dโ€™Anastasio | Wired โ€œWeโ€™re more stand-outside types than the types to cast a flashy glamour spell and chat up the nearest cat girl. But, hey, itโ€™s Final Fantasy XIV online, and where my body sat in New York, the epicenter of Americaโ€™s Covid-19 outbreak, there certainly werenโ€™t any parties.โ€ The Facebook Groups Where People Pretend the Pandemic Isnโ€™t Happening Kaitlyn Tiffany | The Atlantic โ€œLosing track of a friend in a packed bar or screaming to be heard over a live band is not something thatโ€™s happening much in the real world at the moment, but it happens all the time in the 2,100-person Facebook group โ€˜a group where we all pretend weโ€™re in the same venue.โ€™ So does losing shoes and Juul pods, and shouting matches over which bands are the saddest, and therefore the greatest.โ€ Did You Fly a Jetpack Over Los Angeles This Weekend? Because the FBI Is Looking for You Tom McKay | Gizmodo โ€œDid you fly a jetpack over Los Angeles at approximately 3,000 feet on Sunday? Some kind of tiny helicopter? Maybe a lawn chair with balloons tied to it? If the answer to any of the above questions is โ€˜yes,โ€™ you should probably lay low for a while (by which I mean cool it on the single-occupant flying machine). Thatโ€™s because passing airline pilots spotted you, and now itโ€™s this whole thing with the FBI and the Federal Aviation Administration, both of which are investigating.โ€ Image Credit: Thomas Kinto / Unsplash Continue reading โ†’


Afrofuturism: Why black science fiction 'can't be ignored'

BBC News

Science fiction has long been criticised for its lack of racial diversity and inclusion. It's rare to see a lead character who isn't white. One study of the top 100 highest-grossing films in the US showed that just eight of those 100 movies had a non-white protagonist, as of 2014. Six of those eight were Will Smith, according to diversity-focused book publisher Lee and Low Books. The long-term exclusion of people of colour from science fiction offers up an interesting paradox.


Black Panther is a wake-up call for video games

The Guardian

Like Hollywood, the games industry is facing a moment of self-reflection. For too long it has told the same stories, centring on the same white, male heroes. Game creators are finally examining the lack of diversity in their stories, but so far, representation of black people has been timid and predictable. With the number of women in the UK industry at just 14% and BAME representation at 4%, the narrative gatekeepers in games are primarily white men. If they are to find a broader range of stories, they need to rethink their representations of black people.