artificial intelligence white
Is The Future Of Artificial Intelligence White?
It appears everywhere you go; artificial intelligence (AI) seems to be the only two words on everyone's lips. From the rise in AI-powered chatbots to the new era of computer-generated art, it's hard to turn a blind eye to – what could be – the future of technology. However, according to a new report by Slate, AI still has a long way to go before it is considered an adequate extension of human intelligence. Slate journalist, Heather Tal Murphy, investigated AI's inability to create hands and found something even more disturbing. Long-standing rumors that AI will replace designers – ultimately making them obsolete – came to a halt after social media discovered the program's inability to create realistic hands.
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > The Future (0.40)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Issues > Social & Ethical Issues (0.40)
- Information Technology > Communications > Social Media (0.38)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Neural Networks > Deep Learning (0.34)
Is Artificial Intelligence White?
The "whiteness" of artificial intelligence (AI) removes people of colour from the way humanity thinks about its technology-enhanced future, researchers argue. University of Cambridge experts suggest current portrayals and stereotypes about AI risk creating a "racially homogenous" workforce of aspiring technologists, creating machines with bias baked into their algorithms. The scientists say cultural depictions of AI as white need to be challenged, as they do not offer a "post-racial" future but rather one from which people of colour are simply erased. In their paper, "The Whiteness of AI" published in the journal, Philosophy and Technology, Leverhulme CFI Executive Director, Stephen Cave and Dr Kanta Dihal offer insights into the ways in which portrayals of AI stem from, and perpetuate, racial inequalities. Cave and Dihal cite research showing that people perceive race in AI, not only in human-like robots, but also in abstracted and disembodied AI.