467 lines
25 KiB
Markdown
467 lines
25 KiB
Markdown
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# Code is political, algorithms are weapons of math destruction [^1]
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We hear a lot about them, but we never see them. What are these algorithms?
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These invisible and tantalizing creatures that slip into our minds and inhabit
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our pockets. What are their intentions?
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Formally speaking, an algorithm is nothing more than an inoffensive series of
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operations fed by data to produce a result. Nevertheless, they automate the
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resolution of a set of complex problems [^2] and that is how some of them
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become high level Artificial Intelligence, thanks to companies that stuff them
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with data, kindly provided by us for free.
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## A bestiary [^3] of algorithms
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There is no comparison for knowing what they eat and identifying and better
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understanding their role in a society of informaticized humans. They were not
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born of an electrical spark at the bottom of a sulphurous sea of data. Their
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progenitors are the human beings who write the lines of code that produce a
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programme that carries within it a political and social project dictated by a
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public or private sponsor.
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Algorithms are never “neutral” or impartial. They focus on carrying out the
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mission assigned to them, usually by western males from the higher classes,
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cradled by capitalism.
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It is also important to mention that a stupid algorithm fed with lots of good
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data will be more successful than the famous artificial intelligence, even if
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the latter has sharper claws. How can we not cite those American ogres, the
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GAFAM (Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon and Microsoft) or BATX, their
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alter-egos on the other side of the Pacific (the Chinese giants: Baidu,
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Alibaba, Tencent and Xiaomi). Their metabolism is based on the collection,
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with our help, of the maximum amount of data about our smallest acts and
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gestures, “increasing” our day-to-day with a large number of mobile apps and
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connected objects which are supposedly meant to make our lives easier.
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### Algorithms that eat our personal data
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The resulting algorithms are polymorphous. They have grown, observing us from
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afar, spying on our activities online, and the places we frequent most. They
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then rose above our interactions in order to better determine who had
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authority, ignoring the logic of popular voting and classifications based on
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merit.
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Then, in a third moment, they entered our digital intimacy, analysing the
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quality and frequency of our exchanges in order to assess our reputation and
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trace our affinities.
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Finally, they hide from view in order to better predict the tiniest of our
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desires, in order to be able to shape them.
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| | **To one side** | **Above** | **Within** | **Below** |
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| --- | --- | --- | ---| --- |
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| **Example** | Audience measurement, Google Analytics, advertising tabs | Google PageRank, Digg, Wikipedia | Number of friends on Facebook, Retweets on Twitter, notes and opinions | Recommendations on Amazon, behaviour based advertising |
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| **Data** | Visits | Relationships | Likes | Tracking |
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| **Population** | Representative samples | Votes census, communities | Social networks, affinities, declarative | Implicit individual behaviours |
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| **Type of calculation** | Vote | Classification by merit | Benchmark |
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| Principle | Popularity | Authority | Reputation | Prediction | Machine Learning |
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*According to Domenique Cardon in “À quoi rêvent les algorithmes”.* [^4]
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These different generations of algorithms still live together, side by side,
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and are easily recognisable in that they very efficiently provide us with many
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services. They try to make us pay our “digital dividend” [^5] because they
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discretize our existence, cutting it into the finest possible slices, in order
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to extract all monetizable information [^6].
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Every State breeds a terrifying ogre that works in surveillance. The
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interests of this ogre frequently mix with those of its friends the commercial
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ogres, as it shamelessly raids their stores, with their approval [^7]. Its
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insatiable appetite leads it to stalk those places with the most data traffic.
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It is assumed that it should be able to find a terrorist in a haystack,
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although it often suffers from myopia and obesity, proving more efficient at
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stealing political and industrial secrets than at trapping the bad guys before
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they take action.
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### Algorithms that eat public data
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The different administrative strata of the forces of order also cultivate
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flowering gardens of many-flavoured data: biometric, fiscal, environmental,
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urban, professional, or even linked to health.
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Apparently neutral and objective, the public algorithmic creatures
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would be the solution to inequalities in treatment in the face of the
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arbitrations of some civil servants. Nevertheless, they can turn entire
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families into Kafkaesque insects hanging from the typewriter in the film
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*Brazil* [^8]. In fact, it is they who determine which school our child
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should go to, whether you can benefit from social subsidies, what jobs you can
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apply for, and if your menstrual cycle is ripe to procreate.
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The traders in personal data kindly offer to help public bodies to digitalise
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and clone the most beautiful plants in the public garden, be they cultural
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flowers or medicinal herbs. Like the traders, the forces of order pass from
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observations to predictions, and not only to optimise garbage collection, but
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also send police forces to where there is the highest possibility that a crime
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will be committed, thanks to their algo-dogs, PredPol CompStat or HunchLab
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[^9].
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### Algorithms that eat money
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Thomas Peterffy is a financier who dedicated himself to replacing the brokers
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and their manual operations with automated machines. In 1987, on seeing that
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the number of orders placed by Peterffy was surprisingly high, those in charge
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of the markets sent an inspector, who, where he expected to find a room filled
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with white men shouting and sweating, found nothing more than an IBM computer
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connected to a singe official Nasdaq terminal [^10]. So it was that in 1987,
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algorithms were launched onto the financial markets.
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These days, algo-trading is everywhere, and the serene, algorithmic blinking
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of the information networks has replaced the hysterical traders. However,
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even these digital financial creatures have allowed themselves to been
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overtaken by high-frequency algo-traders, which move at the speed of light.
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They build routes to arrive at the sale faster than the others [^11], making
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profits with every operation. They currently find refuge in the many “dark
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pools” that the banks have been able to create thanks to the paradoxical
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relaxing of regulations. In the lucrative comfort sometimes seen in the
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“Flash Crashes” [^12], the diversity of algorithmic species increases (Blast,
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Stealth, Sniffer, Iceberg, Shark, Sumo,... [^13]) on a par with the complexity
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of their strategies, making the “markets” more and more illegible and
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uncontrollable, even though the assumption is that they are regulated by the
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stroke of invisible hands.
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Evidently, this all impacts on what we call “the real economy”, that is to
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say, people's lives. For example, when Syrian pirates compromise the White
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House's Twitter Account and post an alarmist tweet that is immediately read by
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the algo-trader robots, causing the stock market to fall 136 billion dollars
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in just 3 minutes [^14].
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A new algorithmic creature has emerged in the finance jungle, in the form of a
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worm that duplicates in all the receiving computers and gets fatter as it is
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used, devouring, as it passes, an impressive amount of electricity [^15]. It
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is called a “blockchain” [^16] and it has made itself known through “Bitcoin”,
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the first dematerialised crypto-currency to pass through a central banking
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body attached to a State. Today bitcoin is worth 28 billion dollars [^17].
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Luckily, initiatives like Ethereum [^18] have allowed the worms to mutate so
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that not only do they register transactions, but they also drive databases and
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“intelligent” applications (“smart contracts”). This encourages projects such
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as DAO [^19] (Decentralized Autonomous Organisation), a decentralised
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investment fund with no directors, where everyone participates in decision
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making as a function of the capital they hold. This fund quickly found itself
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surrounded by different investors, to the tune of 150 billion dollars.
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Nevertheless, a malicious joker managed to get away with a third of it, by
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exploiting a fault (they call it a feature) in the code, irreparably marked on
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the body of a DAO hosted by Ethereum. Will it be necessary to cut out the
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rings of the sick worm? Or kill it to create a new one? The latter is the
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solution that was adopted to enable investors recover their money, following
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many “political” discussions, despite the fact that they work from the
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libertarian principal that “the code makes the law”. This raises important
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legal questions, particularly for defining responsibility in a distributed
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network [^20] or imagining forms of governance for this “code” that, in some
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domains, is replacing the law in the U.S.
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There are other algorithmic creatures that are fans of money and which seek to
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replace the work of human beings, maximising productivity and costs and thus
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contributing to a greater concentration of capital. The major companies
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understand this well, so Foxcom announces the replacement of almost all their
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employees with a million robots [^21] or the law firm BakerHostetler contracts
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ROSS, an artificial intelligence, to faster study complex legal files [^22].
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The “death of work” has been declared [^23], however it seems that the
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economic and social regime will barely be able to sustain it in the (near)
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future.
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### Algorithms that eat human brains
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The final family to be identified in our bestiary of algorithms are those
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whose will is to fill the human brain, and those who, on the contrary,
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ultimately aspire to replace it. Artificial Intelligences must be fed with
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data in order to be able to replace humans in a wide range of processes. This
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is something Google does with its reCAPTCHA [^24] project, those illegible
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images that we are asked to decipher and transcribe to show the server that we
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are not robots, but rather humans, passing the Turing test in reverse [^25].
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The great innovation with reCAPTCHA is that the fruit of your responses goes
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directly to feed artificial intelligence and the evolution of Google
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programmes: deciphering text to improve the digitalization of books,
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identifying house numbers to refine mapping, and now identifying images
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containing animals or road signs, to make car autopilots less myopic. The
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accumulated results are becoming more and more relevant, and they represent
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millions of hours of human labour [^26].
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In terms of the algorithm that contributes to feeding our brains, this is,
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like it's friend the personal data collector, becoming ever more elaborate and
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subtle. We feed its brain daily with the aid of a search engine that shows us
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where to find the right place, the most precise information, the most
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emblematic video. At the beginning of 2017, in 92.8% of cases that search
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engine was Google. This makes it a cultural dictator in a totally new
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hegemonic position (and what are the competition doing?!). Not appearing
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within the first results pages is like not existing. Yet the Google search
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algorithm is a jealously guarded industrial secret and can only be countered
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by the right to be forgotten [^27].
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From the surrealist experience of the researchers in the laboratory that is
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Facebook [^28], who conducted experiments in 2010 on 61 million users, during
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the U.S. congressional elections, it is known that controlling political
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messages has a direct influence on the people who are made unwitting guinea
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pigs, as well as that of their friends, and friends of friends.
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From false news reports that have crushed the truth on the social networks,
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ultimately swell the ranks of post-truth. What political line do the
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algorithms that govern content on our “walls” take? Incorporating solutions
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to problems of incitement to hatred and harassment on these platforms too
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quickly will place the algorithms and their controllers in the official
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position of controlling the morals of a large part of society.
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One might think that to faster reach the point of technological singularity
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[^29], our digital creatures are crouching in the shadows and plot to make us
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servile.
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Algorithmic governance [^30] would be a new mode of governing behaviour, fruit
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of shifts in our relationship with the other, with the group, with the world,
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with the very sense of the things that have, thanks to or despite the digital
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turn, fundamental repercussions on the way norms are created, and with them,
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obedience [^31].
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When an algorithm eats from the human brain, this can also lead to the
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clinical death of the human in question. This can be said of the algorithms
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that predefine the victims of killer drones, even if they are piloted by men
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and women. How do the algorithms of a driverless car chose the lesser evil/or
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number of deaths, when they are involved in an accident that cannot be
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avoided? Cyber war flies low over our occupied networks, each country
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sharpening its algorithms to be more and more insidiously lethal than the
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enemy.
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## How do we know if an algorithm is bad or good?
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Is a bad algorithm one which turns video surveillance cameras into an army of
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blood-thirsty botnets that come down in droves to strangle the servers? Is a
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good algorithm one which reminds me of my friends' birthdays? Setting the
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criteria is not so simple, because we have to consider interdependence between
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algorithms, the data they use and the intentions behind them. Nevertheless,
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it can be hoped that a good algorithm will comply with the following:
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- it should be “auditable” and therefore consist of open and documented source
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code;
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- it should be “open” and therefore only feed on sets of “open data”, that are
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complete and “harvestable” by others, which means access should be
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discriminated and should be paid for certain commercial uses;
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- it should be “loyal and fair” without the capacity to create discrimination
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or injustice (social [^32], gender-based [^33], etc.) nor to damage human
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beings [^34];
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- it should be “transparent” [^35] and capable of conducting systematic audits
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of its own operations and evolution (if it has learning or predictive
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capabilities) and be capable of subjecting itself to citizen's control;
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- it should be “modifiable” and ready to respond to complaints that could
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require changes to the function of the algorithm.
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In this search for algorithmic morality it is also necessary to mention the
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“ports”, the APIs (standing for Application Public Interfaces), which permit
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these digital creatures to hunt data from other servers and services, or to
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place containers, or lay bait... these APIs can be considered a patent-pending
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for industry, a new form of patenting anti-open-source software. These ports
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can be opened or closed at the strategic discretion of the owner, or tolls can
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be implemented when an algorithm's traffic becomes abundant, if such
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monetarization becomes opportune.
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In the public sphere and civil society, we can imagine that the above
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mentioned criteria of openness, transparency, accountability and modifiability
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might be respected some day. This is harder to imagine in the lucrative,
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private sphere, where data and the algorithms that consume it are being
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considered “the oil of the future” [^36].
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Thus a group of American researchers and some “giants” of the digital world
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have tried to formulate the “principles for responsible algorithms” [^37] and
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they have met to start an encounter about the ethics of artificial
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intelligence [^38]. This is a good way to say to politicians and concerned
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citizens that that the private sector can “anticipate and administrate” this
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complexity with positive results, so there really is no need to legislate.
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Nevertheless, the issue is not to demand transparency for the code of the
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algorithms, but rather for their aims. As these are not limited to commercial
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communication, it is necessary to deploy the law as a means of coercion [^39].
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We can seek comfort in the participatory debate taking place in France about
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the “Law of the digital republic” which has led to the obligation of
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transparency regarding all algorithms used by the forces of order [^40], or
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even INRIA's “TransAlgo” initiative [^41] which aspires to assess the
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accountability and transparency of information robots.
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## Sovereign Algorithmic Futurutopias
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So, how do we pass from an algorithmic beast we must suffer to a pet that we
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feed? Let us compost some earthworms to draw the biotechnological
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ramifications that drive men and technology to live in silicon harmony. How
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can we take our destinies back into our own hands, retake our mental autonomy,
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our technological sovereignty which today is driven by algorithms in a space
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of social control.
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Code is a political objective, as in this “numerical” world filled with
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algo-bots that invade our realities. As political objects, we can therefore
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attack with the classic weapons: militancy, lobbying and awareness raising
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with the political power, attempts to influence and deepen regulatory
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processes, and valuing initiatives that contribute to autonomy and happiness
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for human kind. It is equally important to demand a more important rôle for
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civil society in the regulation and norms of the Internet, and the adoption of
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standards for network technology [^42], taking the equivalent of an article of
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a country's constitution as an example.
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At an individual level, it is necessary, without a doubt, to “de-googlise” the
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Internet [^43]. That means, as the Framasoft association proposes, to support
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hosting of autonomous, transparent, open, neutral services based on solidarity
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(see, for example, the KITTENS initiative [^44]), or self-hosting [^45] in an
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unambitious mini-server. It is also possible to camouflage oneself using
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end-to-end encryption, although this is not always adaptable nor possible to
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adopt (PGP and emails); and depending on the situation there may be resources
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to create interference, trying to hide the “true” data within fictitious but
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credible data, which a friendly algorithm can provide in abundance.
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From the point of view of public power, there is work to be done, the road to
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ethical transparency is open, they just need to be firmly pushed down it. Of
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course, these days you need a strange haircut and makeup [^46] to escape the
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facial recognition systems [^47]. Biometric files and the linking of public
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databases and the digital derivatives of the state of emergency, which is now
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permanent, invite us to not put all our bytes in one basket.
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It is also possible to take part in feeding garbage to these “algo-AI”, just
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like the Twitter users who managed to turn Microsoft's AI TAY sexist, racist
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and pro-Hitler in less than a day [^48].
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We could imagine instead raising little “algo-ponies” that would exclaim, with
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a wave of their multi-coloured manes, against a background of green fields of
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data, that “friendship is magic!”.
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Cheesiness aside, it is perhaps necessary to propose a digital intermediary, a
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“proxy” between us, our data and the public and private actors that host them.
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This intermediary could comfortably host Eliza [^49], my strictly personal AI
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that feeds on my activities and preferences to help me better share data and
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content, anonymously, giving them to public bodies as a matter of general
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interest, encrypting them or hiding them to escape with my friends who did not
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manage to get out of the commercial social networks. Distributed in
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everyone's pocket, personal AIs could become symbiotic, in agreement with
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their tutors, to tell micro fictions to humanity in the political and cultural
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context, with a view to building harmonious realities where algorithms,
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humans, nature and the inorganic world can cohabit peacefully.
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[^1] This title refers to the book by Cathy O’Neil: *Weapons of Math
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Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens
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Democracy*. Crown, 6th September 2016.
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[^2] In this Isaac Asimov futuristic novel, the United States has converted to
|
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|
an "electronic democracy" where the computer Multivac selects a single
|
|||
|
person to answer a number of questions. Multivac will then use the
|
|||
|
answers and other data to determine what the results of an election would
|
|||
|
be, avoiding the need for an actual election to be
|
|||
|
held. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franchise_%28short_story%29
|
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|
|
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|
[^3] https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bestiaire
|
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|
|
|||
|
[^4] Cardon, Dominique. A quoi rêvent les algorithmes. Nos vies à l’heure: Nos
|
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|
vies à l’heure des big data. Le Seuil, 2015.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^5] Morozov, Evgeny, and Pascale Haas. *Le mirage numérique: Pour une
|
|||
|
politique du Big Data*. Les Prairies Ordinaires, 2015.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^6] http://centenaire-shannon.cnrs.fr/chapter/la-theorie-de-information
|
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|
|
|||
|
[^7] https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/PRISM_%28programme_de_surveillance%29
|
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|
|
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|
[^8] Terry Gilliam: Brazil (1985) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0088846/
|
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|
|
|||
|
[^9] Cathy O’Neil. Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases
|
|||
|
Inequality and Threatens Democracy. Crown, 6 septembre 2016
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^10] Some days later, he stipulated that the orders should come from the
|
|||
|
keyboard of the termanal and gave Peterfly a week to disconnect from
|
|||
|
IBM. In this time, Peterfly contracted engineers to build a camera-eye to
|
|||
|
read the screen, send the information to the IBM brain where
|
|||
|
electromagnetic hands could take the orders and transmit them to the
|
|||
|
terminal via the keyboard.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^11] Sniper In Mahwah - Anthropology, market structure & the nature of
|
|||
|
exchanges. https://sniperinmahwah.wordpress.com/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^12] The Flash Crash of 6th May 2010 analysed by Nanex :
|
|||
|
http://www.nanex.net/20100506/FlashCrashAnalysis_Intro.html et
|
|||
|
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E1xqSZy9_4I
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^13] Laumonier Alexandre. 5/6. Zones Sensibles Editions, 2014.
|
|||
|
http://www.zonessensibles.org/livres/6-5/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^14]
|
|||
|
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2013/04/23/syrian-hackersclaim-ap-hack-that-tipped-stock-market-by-136-billion-is-it-terrorism/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^15] This creature is so costly (a single operation requires as much
|
|||
|
electricity as an average American home uses in a day and a half), that it
|
|||
|
is principally based in China and is currently very slow.
|
|||
|
http://motherboard.vice.com/read/bitcoin-is-unsustainable
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^16] https://marmelab.com/blog/2016/04/28/blockchain-for-web-developers-thetheory.html
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^17] Capitalisation and everyday movements of crypto-currencies
|
|||
|
http://coinmarketcap.com/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^18] https://www.ethereum.org/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^19] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_DAO_%28organization%29
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^20] *Ethereum: Freenet or Skynet?* Primavera De Filippi, Berkman Center
|
|||
|
Fellow. https://cyber.harvard.edu/events/luncheon/2014/04/difilippi
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^21] http://www.theverge.com/2016/12/30/14128870/foxconn-robots-automation-appleiphone-china-manufacturing
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^22] https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/innovations/wp/2016/05/16/meet-ross-thenewly-hired-legal-robot/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^23] Bernard Stiegler. *La Société automatique. L'avenir du travail.* Fayard, 2015.
|
|||
|
http://www.philomag.com/les-livres/fiche-de-lecture/la-societe-automatique-1lavenir-du-travail-11454
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^24] https://www.google.com/recaptcha/intro/index.html
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^25] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turing_test
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^26] http://www.bizjournals.com/boston/blog/techflash/2015/01/massachusettswomans-lawsuit-accuses-google-of.html
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^27]
|
|||
|
https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/legal-removal-request?complaint_type=rtbf
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^28] A 61-million-person experiment in social influence and political mobilization
|
|||
|
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3834737/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^29] https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singularit%C3%A9_technologique
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^30] Antoinette Rouvroy and Thomas Berns. "Gouvernementalité algorithmique et
|
|||
|
perspectives d'émancipation: Le disparate comme condition d'individuation
|
|||
|
par la relation?" Politics of algoritms. Web-metrics. *RESEAUX*, Vol.31,
|
|||
|
n.177, pp. 163-196 (2013) Available at:
|
|||
|
http://works.bepress.com/antoinette_rouvroy/47/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^31] ifapa.me is a collective dedicated to research and subvert the effects
|
|||
|
of mathematization and quantification of daily life in necrocapitalist
|
|||
|
societies. http://www.ifapa.me/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^32] https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/big-data-may-be-reinforcing-racialbias-in-the-criminal-justice-system/2017/02/10/d63de518-ee3a-11e6-9973c5efb7ccfb0d_story.html?utm_term=.b7f5ab5df1f9
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^33] http://www.genderit.org/feminist-talk/algorithmic-discrimination-andfeminist-politics
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^34] https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trois_lois_de_la_robotique
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^35] http://internetactu.blog.lemonde.fr/2017/01/21/peut-on-armer-la-transparencede-linformation/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^36] Documentary “Le secret des 7 soeurs”
|
|||
|
http://secretdes7soeurs.blogspot.fr/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^37] http://www.fatml.org/resources/principles-for-accountable-algorithms
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^38] http://www.lemonde.fr/pixels/article/2016/09/28/intelligence-artificielleles-geants-du-web-lancent-un-partenariat-sur-l-ethique_5005123_4408996.html
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^39] http://www.internetactu.net/2016/03/16/algorithmes-et-responsabilites/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^40] https://www.service-public.fr/particuliers/actualites/A11502
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^41] https://www-direction.inria.fr/actualite/actualites-inria/transalgo
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^42] The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) http://www.ietf.org/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^43] http://degooglisons-internet.org/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^44] http://chatons.org/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^45] http://yunohost.org/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^46] https://cvdazzle.com/
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^47] http://www.lemonde.fr/pixels/article/2016/10/19/inquietudes-autour-de-lareconnaissance-faciale-aux-etats-unis_5016364_4408996.html
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^48] https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2016/mar/24/tay-microsofts-ai-chatbotgets-a-crash-course-in-racism-from-twitter
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[^49] http://elizagen.org
|
|||
|
|