Ethics and Governance of AI (Fall 2019)

  • John Bowers (Harvard Law School, Berkman Klein Center)

This reading group will pursue a cross-disciplinary investigation of the development and deployment of the opaque complex adaptive systems that are increasingly in public and private use. We will explore the proliferation of algorithmic decision making, autonomous systems, and machine learning and explanation; the search for balance between regulation and innovation; and the effects of AI on the dissemination of information, along with questions related to individual rights, discrimination, and architectures of control.

6 Day 6: What are Algorithms Good For, Anyway? 6 Day 6: What are Algorithms Good For, Anyway?

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6.1. “The Hidden Costs of Automated Thinking” by Jonathan Zittrain (The New Yorker, 2019)

“The Hidden Costs of Automated Thinking” by Jonathan Zittrain (The New Yorker, 2019)
H2O

Ethics and Governance of AI (Fall 2019)

John Bowers

This free and open casebook is Creative Commons licensed. Learn more

Table of contents

  1. 1

    Day 1: Talking about AI

  2. 2

    Day 2: Fairness

  3. 3

    Day 3: Interpretability and Explainability

  4. 4

    Day 4: COMPAS

  5. 5

    Day 5: Debating Risk Assessment

  6. 6

    Day 6: What are Algorithms Good For, Anyway?

    1. 6.1

      “The Hidden Costs of Automated Thinking” by Jonathan Zittrain (The New Yorker, 2019)

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