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Average rating3.3
The hidden costs of artificial intelligence, from natural resources and labor to privacy and freedom What happens when artificial intelligence saturates political life and depletes the planet? How is AI shaping our understanding of ourselves and our societies? In this book Kate Crawford reveals how this planetary network is fueling a shift toward undemocratic governance and increased inequality. Drawing on more than a decade of research, award-winning science, and technology, Crawford reveals how AI is a technology of extraction: from the energy and minerals needed to build and sustain its infrastructure, to the exploited workers behind "automated" services, to the data AI collects from us. Rather than taking a narrow focus on code and algorithms, Crawford offers us a political and a material perspective on what it takes to make artificial intelligence and where it goes wrong. While technical systems present a veneer of objectivity, they are always systems of power. This is an urgent account of what is at stake as technology companies use artificial intelligence to reshape the world.
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Super interesting and important view on how our planet, workforce and society are impacted while we're marching towards a future that will contain more and more computation. There are so many invisible aspects to computation/the-cloud/A.I. that are glanced over while we drool over all the good it can do.
I especially enjoyed the chapters on mining of the previous metals it takes to build the A.I. infrastructure, the chapter on labor about how A.I. driven workplace management treats humans as machines. While the middle of the book had more well-known A.I.-warnings with a focus on where the data comes from and all the ways we wrongfully classify it, it ends really strong with a chapter on the power dynamics that are encoded into A.I., that reinforce existing exploitative and unbalanced power structures. A whole chapter dedicated to emotion-recognition felt a bit too detailed and narrow for this scope. But it wouldn't be an ‘atlas' if it wouldn't contain all the avenues.