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Session Overview
Session
Closing Plenary & Lunch: Keynote Address by Ranjit Singh: "The Ordinary Ethics of Putting People First "
Time:
Tuesday, 29/Oct/2024:
12:45pm - 2:30pm

Location: Imperial Ballroom 4, 6, 8, Third Floor


Ranjit Singh is a senior researcher at Data & Society, conducting qualitative research for the Algorithmic Impact Methods Lab.

Putting people first is a mindset; it is also a commitment to human-centered design. Designing, however, is only the beginning. This commitment must span across the lifecycle of any system from deploying and using to maintaining and decommissioning it. In this talk, I will begin by outlining the differences between ethical concerns around artificial intelligence (AI) in the global north and the global south. While global north concerns tend to focus on AI as a tool with keywords like bias, fairness, accountability, transparency, explainable AI, and human-centered design, global south concerns are oriented towards AI as an everyday experience with keywords like dignity, labor, extraction, colonialism, sovereignty, and solidarity. I will show that the thread that binds these concerns together is the commitment to putting people first across the lifecycle of an AI-based system. Approaching these concerns together requires us to critically reflect on the making and management of the agency that we are collectively granting to computational systems in organizing everyday life from curated social media content and chatbot-based customer service to automated government and financial services. Most people find themselves at the receiving end of computational systems, but they still have agency. Their struggles become moments when they exercise their agency in ordinary decision-making to overcome computational agency. By illustrating the ordinary ethics of navigating these moments, I argue that the process of becoming subject to AI is not a given; it is rather an active process of ongoing negotiations over how to put people first.




 
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