O'Neill: "How algorithms rule our working lives"
E' un estratto del libro, appena uscito, "Weapons of Math Distruction" (v. https://mathbabe.org/), sui cui non mi pronuncio, non avendolo ancora letto. juan carlos *----------- How algorithms rule our working lives* /Employers are turning to mathematically modelled ways of sifting through job applications. Even when wrong, their verdicts seem beyond dispute – and they tend to punish the poor/ by Cathy O'Neil Thursday 1 September 2016 06.00 BST A few years ago, a young man named Kyle Behm took a leave from his studies at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. He was suffering from bipolar disorder and needed time to get treatment. A year and a half later, Kyle was healthy enough to return to his studies at a different university. Around that time, he learned from a friend about a part-time job. It was just a minimum-wage job at a Kroger supermarket, but it seemed like a sure thing. His friend, who was leaving the job, could vouch for him. For a high-achieving student like Kyle, the application looked like a formality. But Kyle didn’t get called in for an interview. When he inquired, his friend explained to him that he had been “red-lighted” by the personality test he’d taken when he applied for the job. The test was part of an employee selection program developed by Kronos, a workforce management company based outside Boston. When Kyle told his father, Roland, an attorney, what had happened, his father asked him what kind of questions had appeared on the test. Kyle said that they were very much like the “five factor model” test, which he’d been given at the hospital. That test grades people for extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, neuroticism, and openness to ideas. […] Continua qui: https://www.theguardian.com/science/2016/sep/01/how-algorithms-rule-our-work...
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J.C. DE MARTIN