this post was submitted on 12 Aug 2023
25 points (62.9% liked)

Technology

59300 readers
4818 users here now

This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.


Our Rules


  1. Follow the lemmy.world rules.
  2. Only tech related content.
  3. Be excellent to each another!
  4. Mod approved content bots can post up to 10 articles per day.
  5. Threads asking for personal tech support may be deleted.
  6. Politics threads may be removed.
  7. No memes allowed as posts, OK to post as comments.
  8. Only approved bots from the list below, to ask if your bot can be added please contact us.
  9. Check for duplicates before posting, duplicates may be removed

Approved Bots


founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

Today the risks of artificial intelligence are clear — but the warning signs have been there all along

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] Jonna@lemmy.world 11 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You mean the women whose degrees and careers were working on AI and who published informed critiques and who were fired for not retracting their criticism?

[–] Peanutbjelly@sopuli.xyz 14 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

long response,

TLDR: it's not what they're saying, but how they're saying it. while i don't disbelieve the possibility of shitty actors doing shitty things which resulted in these claims, i do disagree with the emphasis used while addressing the issue.

also this is more of an open letter answering your question, so my statements and questions are open and not directed towards you personally.

firstly, I definitely agree with a lot of the article. the person responsible for cops using this technology for arrests needs to be put down hard. i think there needs to be very strict conditions showing how the system mitigates bias before such use is even potentially ethical.

the primary reason i think articles like this earn a lot of friction is that much of the framing has been towards entirely defining their and other people's personalities and lives and actions purely by their demographic. personally i despise the trend, and have grown an appreciation for things like VR socialization for this reason, where you are yourself and what you choose to be. it feels much less likely for others to dismiss your opinion, insult you, or attack you purely due to your demographic.

this type of trend would explain why many would find it credible when "Google AI head Jeff Dean acknowledged that the paper “surveyed valid concerns about LLMs,” but claimed it “ignored too much relevant research.”

frankly, i believe much in how these people are addressing the issue itself encourages "the exacerbation of racism and sexism." which they claim, and i hope believe to be against. i think encouraging people to define themselves and others by demographic above all else is harmful and segregationist. those i am familiar with in the field are very eager to ensure a solution to the problem of bias, without instigating or encouraging a culture focused on people defining themselves purely by their demographic.

note the phrase "they’re either wealthy enough to get out of it, or white enough to get out of it, or male enough to get out of it,”

this is the kind of race/gender-war inciting garbage i'm talking about. just casually slipping "white" and "male" with "wealthy" is probably going to set off many peasants of the demographic. i'm also generally intolerant of the idea that blatant bigotry is A-OK when it's "punching up" against the "bad demographic."

i'm pretty sure every bigot thinks their target is the "bad demographic."

i remember waiting outside of a library as a child, being beaten until my eyes were swollen shut by people i didn't know due to this rhetoric. afterwards they claimed i used a slur and i was the one blamed for the incident. i was a poor child from an abusive and unloving home who just wanted to read a book and escape. i said nothing to these older kids, because i had no ambition to experience the treatment of strangers. i could say a lot for my privileged foster children friends also growing up being neglected and abused on a regular basis. i'm sure they have no issue accepting their privilege. although usually the response to this sarcastic point is to completely erase their personal experience or tragedy by saying "but they probably still had it better because of their demographic." i'll note that personal experience is far too variable to justifiably make such a claim.

"punching up" isn't defensible when it leads to children being attacked for no fault of their own other than the body they were born into. especially when the things that directly encourage this antagonistic mindset do not actually improve anything. there are many other personal anecdotes i could make on the topic, but i think the occurrence itself as i've presented should be obviously indefensible. unless you are a hateful monster.

i guarantee being lumped in with the asshole "elite" families that have come from privilege is a distressing experience for many not-so-privileged members of the demographic. denounced as the evil bad, enemy of progress and good, by the original sin of the body they were born into. regardless of any action, thought, intention or experience they've ever held. the less reasonable actors in the demographic will probably not find a poetic way to voice this dissatisfaction. probably furthering the cycle of shitty experiences by the innocents on either side.

we won't even get into the neurotic requirements of addressing microaggressions.

why can't we deal with the issues of bias and demographics without actively encouraging the exacerbation of racism and sexism? weren't they calling that the existential threat in the article?

again, to say openly to everyone, your experience is not everyone else's experience. your local community and experiences are not always relatable to the experience of everyone else. there is a weirdly high dimensional and abstracted nature to the experiences and interpretations of these concepts. there are billions of individuals, and almost as many different and differently sized groups of every kind. bad actors and shitty people exist on every side, and will take the leeway they are given to be abusive or hateful to whomever they see as "the enemy."

we are all human, we should all define ourselves as human, and work to mitigate the evil that is prejudice and hate without also directly encouraging it. is that really an unreasonable request?

that's my two cents anywho. please don't label me with things i disagree with or find abhorrent purely because you want to defend segregationist rhetoric.

also, fuck the rich.

[–] Jonna@lemmy.world -3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Please show me where I made any accusations to you. I think you doth protest too much.

Being color blind (or which ever) won't fight racism. If we don't acknowledge the difference we end up ignoring the problem. And yes, who they are matters because their experience isn't something you or I could provide. It isn't necessarily a fault of ours that we can never know thier experience; we just aren't treated like they are.

Yes, fuck the rich. But the working class that must fight the rich is a diverse working class.

[–] Peanutbjelly@sopuli.xyz 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I never said you made an accusation. I stated multiple times it was more of an open letter, and not personally directed at you.

I also said that dealing with the bias issue is still important. Being aware of existing discrimination and bad actors is important, especially in certain communities. Being hyper colour focused definitely will not fight racism either, and treating every single social environment as identical is absurd. I've seen no evidence that allowing or encouraging this specific behavior has any general benefits in addressing societal biases and issues. I've given direct examples of how this rhetoric can harm innocent people and encourage a reciprocal negativity and bigotry.

This world is large, and defining people's entire reality by such an absurd metric as their skin colour is not ethical. It might seem justifiable to you in your personal community. You might be underestimating the diversity of communities and experiences. Every bigot out there would also feel their prejudiced focus is justifiable, regardless of what innocent people are hurt by it. I don't understand how people could believe it should be universally applicable and excusable. You could work to fix the injustices of society without being blatantly racist and inflammatory in your methods. Again, I gave a personal example of the harm of such rhetoric that should be universally indefensible. For the argument on gender, I've been told directly by a boss that I wouldn't have been hired if they'd been in charge when I started, because they don't hire men. Is that justifiable? Is it a non issue that this behavior is encouraged as "punching up"? I've seen my and others' experiences denied and dismissed purely due to the body they were born into.

Why is such a hateful rhetoric globally applicable when a much more obvious and universal method for judging privilege is class and wealth? Why is it seen as more important when deciding how to treat or act towards a person?

I wish we could live in a world without race, because humanity has proven itself so stupid that it can't see beyond things like skin colour, and they will always find justification for their personal brand of hateful and assumptive actions and beliefs. In every and any group of people, because funny enough we are all human beings, and human beings are apparently fucking awful.

[–] JoBo@feddit.uk -4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

where you are yourself and what you choose to be

Yeah, this is what we all thought when the internet was shiny and new. Turned out that everyone was assumed to be a straight white man and if you made it clear you were not, you'd get harassed.

I didn't get through all of your post because this starting point is so fucking naive. Sorry.

[–] Peanutbjelly@sopuli.xyz 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Well that's unfortunate. It is an anecdotal experience that is representative of my personal preference, and the shared experience of others I know inside of the communities which I personally associate with within the medium.

I actively state later that any group of humans will have bad actors and bad habits. i also state how individual experience varies at a scale beyond reasonable comprehension. My personal group within the medium is almost entirely LGBT and one of the most accepting and open communities that I've witnessed within any medium. They see each other more by personality than what they were born into, which I appreciate more than anything.

But you are determined towards your preconceived notions and felt the need to chime in without actually understanding what you were responding to.

My friend in naivety, I hope you continue to let others know how much you aren't actually engaging in a conversation.

[–] JoBo@feddit.uk -5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You're speaking from a position of abject ignorance. Listen more, chat less mindless shit.

[–] Peanutbjelly@sopuli.xyz 6 points 1 year ago

and you are an omniscient being of pure knowledge and understanding. i'm glad you've understood my whole philosophy and knowledge basis by not actively engaging with anything i've conveyed. it's even better you claim i'm speaking from a position of abject ignorance. the irony is palpable. i hope one day you can listen more and chat less mindless shit.