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The Race-Science Blogger Cited by The New York Times

The Atlantic - Technology

Lasker, the Times explained, was the "intermediary" who tipped off the publication about Mamdani's application, which was included in a larger hack of Columbia's computer systems. After the Times published its story, Lasker celebrated on X. "I break-uh dah news," he wrote to his more than 260,000 followers. On both X and Substack, where he also has a large following, Lasker is best-known for compiling charts on the "Black-White IQ gap" and otherwise linking race to real-world outcomes. He seems convinced that any differences are the result of biology, and has shot down other possible explanations. He has suggested that crime is genetic.


An Algorithm That 'Predicts' Criminality Based on a Face Sparks a Furor

#artificialintelligence

In early May, a press release from Harrisburg University claimed that two professors and a graduate student had developed a facial-recognition program that could predict whether someone would be a criminal. The release said the paper would be published in a collection by Springer Nature, a big academic publisher. With "80 percent accuracy and with no racial bias," the paper, A Deep Neural Network Model to Predict Criminality Using Image Processing, claimed its algorithm could predict "if someone is a criminal based solely on a picture of their face." The press release has since been deleted from the university website. Tuesday, more than 1,000 machine-learning researchers, sociologists, historians, and ethicists released a public letter condemning the paper, and Springer Nature confirmed on Twitter it will not publish the research.


An Algorithm That 'Predicts' Criminality Based on a Face Sparks a Furor

WIRED

In early May, a press release from Harrisburg University claimed that two professors and a graduate student had developed a facial-recognition program that could predict whether someone would be a criminal. The release said the paper would be published in a collection by Springer Nature, a big academic publisher. With "80 percent accuracy and with no racial bias," the paper, A Deep Neural Network Model to Predict Criminality Using Image Processing, claimed its algorithm could predict "if someone is a criminal based solely on a picture of their face." The press release has since been deleted from the university website. Tuesday, more than 1,000 machine-learning researchers, sociologists, historians, and ethicists released a public letter condemning the paper, and Springer Nature confirmed on Twitter it will not publish the research.