Bilić, Paško. «Search
Algorithms, Hidden Labour and Information Control». Big
Data & Society 3, fasc. 1 (giugno 2016): 1–9. https://doi.org/10.1177/2053951716652159.
Casilli, Antonio. «Il
paradosso dell’IA: il lavoro nascosto per creare un futuro
senza lavoro». Micromega, 20 novembre 2024. https://www.micromega.net/paradosso-ia-il-lavoro-nascosto-per-creare-un-futuro-senza-lavoro/.
———. Schiavi del clic.
Perché lavoriamo tutti per il nuovo capitalismo?
Tradotto da Raffaele Alberto Ventura. Milano: Feltrinelli,
2020.
Hegarty, Tom. «Huge Ruling
in Kenyan Court Threatens Global Model of Outsourced Content
Moderation – and Says That Facebook Is the “True Employer” of
Its Key Safety Workers». Foxglove, 6 giugno 2023. https://www.foxglove.org.uk/2023/06/06/kenyan-court-ruling-outsourced-content-moderation-facebook/.
Irani, Lilly. «The Hidden
Faces of Automation». XRDS: Crossroads, The ACM Magazine
for Students 23, fasc. 2 (15 dicembre 2016): 34–37. https://doi.org/10.1145/3014390.
Lana, Maurizio. «Automi
di ieri e sistemi di Intelligenza Artificiale di oggi:
umani, troppo umani». Billet. Leggere, scrivere e far
di conto. Informatica Umanistica e Cultura Digitale: il
blog dell’ AIUCD. (blog), 5 luglio 2023. https://infouma.hypotheses.org/1981.
Lu, Yiwen, e Cade Metz.
«Cruise’s Driverless Taxi Service in San Francisco Is
Suspended». The New York Times, 24 ottobre 2023, sez.
Technology. https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/24/technology/cruise-driverless-san-francisco-suspended.html.
Marcus, Gary. «24 Seriously
Embarrassing Hours for AI». Substack newsletter. The road
to AI we can trust (blog), 18 gennaio 2023. https://garymarcus.substack.com/p/24-seriously-embarrassing-hours-for?utm_medium=email.
Marvit, Moshe Z. «How
Crowdworkers Became the Ghosts in the Digital Machine». The
Nation, 5 febbraio 2014. https://www.thenation.com/article/archive/how-crowdworkers-became-ghosts-digital-machine/.
Miceli, Milagros, Paola
Tubaro, Antonio A Casilli, Thomas Le Bonniec, Camilla Salim
Wagner, e Laurenz Sachenbacher. «Who Trains the Data for
European Artificial Intelligence?» Report of the European
Microworkers Communication and Outreach Initiative (EnCOre,
2023-2024). European Parliament; The Left, 2024. https://hal.science/hal-04662589v1.
Perrigo, Billy. «Inside
Facebook’s African Sweatshop». Time, 17 febbraio 2022.
https://time.com/6147458/facebook-africa-content-moderation-employee-treatment/.
———. «OpenAI Used Kenyan
Workers on Less Than $2 Per Hour to Make ChatGPT Less Toxic».
Time, 18 gennaio 2023. https://time.com/6247678/openai-chatgpt-kenya-workers/.
Posada, Julian. «Family
Units». Logic(s) Magazine, 25 dicembre 2021. https://logicmag.io/beacons/family-units/.
Tan, Rebecca, e Regine
Cabato. «Behind the AI Boom, an Army of Overseas Workers in
‘Digital Sweatshops’». Washington Post, 28 agosto
2023. https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/08/28/scale-ai-remotasks-philippines-artificial-intelligence/.
Sono d’accordo sulle premesse sull’imperialismo e sul capitalismo
digitale.
Non capisco molto invece altre affermazioni e le conclusioni.
Non mi pare il caso di assimilare l’attività di annotazione
di dati degli africani ad altre pratiche dannose come
l’esportazione di pesticidi:
"The exploitation of cognitive labor is characteristic of
informational capitalism but derives from, and is co-extensive
with, industrial capitalism’s systems for labor exploitation….
Consider product liability laws in the United States, which
emerged from mass torts or from regulators: products like banned
pesticides that cannot be sold or used in the United States are
exported to other markets…
Informational capitalism is currently governed by a similarly
permissive legal order—if the United States and EU regulate to
protect their populations, harmful AI products will continue to
be developed and inflicted on the people of other states.”
Quali siano questi cosiddetti “harmful AI products” non mi è
chiaro.
La digitalizzazione offre invece delle opportunità ai paesi
emergenti: un recente incontro di ISOC Society sul tema A
Billion More People will Transform the the Internet”
(
https://youtu.be/_Cog9HRBZlY), illustrava gli esempi di nuovi
lavori che vengono svolti in Nigeria, da persone con buone
competenze informatiche, che lavorano per aziende occidentali.
L’esperienza porta costoro a imparare come impiantare nuove
aziende locali, con diversi esempi di giovani che costruiscono
servizi di connettività locale e di una start-up che offre la
gestione dele cartelle sanitarie ad ospedali che curano oltre
300 mila pazienti.
Poi si aggiungono critiche su dati obsoleti, che è una
questione a sua volta obsoleta.
Conclusioni:
To avoid future problems, the discourse about AI regulation
needs to expand its currently myopic view of risk and who is at
risk to cover the labor harms as well as data and algorithmic
injustices that will certainly result from global AI systems.
Mah, “certainly result” mi pare un’affermazione eccessiva.
Nessuno sa come sarà il futuro.
— Beppe
From:
"J.C. DE MARTIN" <juancarlos.demartin@polito.it>
To:
Nexa <nexa@server-nexa.polito.it>
Subject:
[nexa] Arun, "Transnational AI and Corporate
Imperialism"
Message-ID:
<8f87f003-c928-4709-bab6-cfd14af1c01c@polito.it>
Content-Type:
text/plain; charset="utf-8"; Format="flowed"
*Transnational
AI and Corporate Imperialism*
//
/Chinmayi
Arun/
*Introduction*
**
When
I first had coffee with Facebook’s head of public policy
in India,
she
was using a shared workspace. Before joining Facebook,
she had led
the
policy practice of one of India’s most powerful law
firms and was on
friendly
terms with judges, ministers, and other influential
people. It
was
surprising to find her in a small office in a shared
workspace, with
just
one administrative assistant for support. In a couple of
years, she
moved
to a suite with a beautiful view in one of Delhi’s
finest luxury
hotels,
acquired an expanding team of seasoned lawyers and
policy
professionals.
Within five years, the public policy team had grown to
be
so
large that it had its own plush office in the heart of
Delhi. This
expansion
of influence within Delhi mirrored the expansion of
Meta’s
(previously
Facebook) influence in India. If it was difficult to be
in
an
Indian city without relying heavily on Big Tech’s
products, it was
impossible
to work on technology policy in Delhi without being
swept
into
currents of change created by Big Tech.^1
People
across the world are grappling with a few global
technology
companies
’ domination of their public spheres and increasingly of
other
spheres
of social, economic, and political engagement. In her
essay on
the
“algorithmic colonization of Africa,” Abeba Birhane
pointed out that
most
of Africa’s digital infrastructure is owned and
controlled by major
Western
technology companies, and she further questioned how
relevant
artificial
intelligence (AI) tools from the West are in other
contexts.^2
[...]
continua
qui:
https://carnegieendowment.org/research/2024/10/transnational-ai-and-corporate-imperialism
<https://carnegieendowment.org/research/2024/10/transnational-ai-and-corporate-imperialism>
manutenzione della felicità comune
michela murgia
Maurizio Lana
Università del Piemonte Orientale
Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici
Piazza Roma 36 - 13100 Vercelli