Disruptive
or defective?
Towards ethical tech innovation
Presented by @fox
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Technology is redefining our world—its
economics, culture, society and democracy.
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“We demonstrated that the Web had failed instead
of served humanity. The increasing centralisation,
has ended up producing a large-scale emergent
phenomenon which is anti-human.”
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Technology negatively affects mental health.
Source: Is social media bad for you? The evidence and the unknowns
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Technology is a megaphone for harassment.
Source: Twitter Has a Serious Harassment and Abuse Problem but Doesn’t Seem to Want to Cure It
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Technology treats personal data as currency.
Source: Uber concealed massive hack that exposed data of 57m users and drivers
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Technology fosters unfairness and exclusion.
Source: Tech Leavers by Kapor Center
78% of employees report some form of unfair treatment.
1 out of 10 women are subject to unwanted sexual attention.
Women of colour are twice as likely to experience stereotyping.
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Humans are paying the price for (un)intended
consequences of rapid advancement.
We are facing a crisis.
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“A dangerous form of magical thinking often
accompanies new technological developments, a
curious assurance that a revolution in our tools
inevitably wipes the slate of the past clean.”
Virginia Eubanks, Automating Inequality
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Ethical principles defend and systematise
moral, righteous conduct.
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Human rights
and democracy
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Algorithms create filter bubbles, preventing
us from seeing disagreeable content. It’s
harder to make informed choices as citizens.
Source: Your filter bubble is destroying democracy
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Tech ought to support and improve the civic
processes on which democratic societies
depend.
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• Respects and extends human rights
• Serves and support democracy
• Fights against the spread of misinformation
• Encourages civic engagement
Ethical technology:
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Well-being
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Tech-saturated world decreases our
cognitive capacity and fosters anxiety,
depression and stress.
Source: The Future of Well-Being in a Tech-Saturated World
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Technology should be a mindful, quiet
companion to our lives rather than an
overbearing disruptor, hijacking attention.
Reference: Calm Tech and Centre for Humane Technology
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Ethical technology:
• Requires minimum attention
• Informs and create calm
• Works in the background
• Respects societal norms
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Security and safety
№3
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Data breaches might have catastrophic
consequences; from identity theft to doxxing
or swatting.
Source: My Three Years in Identity Theft Hell
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Ethical technology:
• Responds promptly to crisis
• Eliminates single points of failure
• Invests in cryptography and security
• Protects the most vulnerable
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Responsibility
and accountability
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It’s humans who put artificial intelligence in
place, and it’s humans who should take
ownership for its systemic flaws.
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Source: Able, Allowed, Should: Navigating Modern Tech Ethics by Margaret Gould Stewart
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Ethical technology:
• Is aware of diverse social and cultural norms
• Creates policies for algorithmic accountability
• Collaborates with lawmakers to advance
regulations
• Complies with national and international
guidelines
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Data protection
and privacy
№5
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Data can be used to enhance user experience,
but it can also be easily weaponised.
Source: Facial recognition software is not ready for use by law enforcement
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Sensitive data should be easily modifiable,
restricted, exported and deleted.
Don’t collect it. Don’t store it. Don’t keep it.
Source: Haunted by Data by Maciej Cegłowski
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Ethical technology:
• Only collects data necessary for operation
• Gives full control of data, including permanent
and swift deletion
• Allows anonymity
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Transparency
№6
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Lack of transparency increases the magnitude
of harm and lowers accountability.
Black boxes cannot be challenged.
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Ethical technology:
• Responsibly discloses abuse of software
• Establishes clear rules for reporting
and accountability
• Has mission and value statements
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Misuse and
bias awareness
№7
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Algorithms are thoughtless.
Software doesn’t learn. We teach it.
Source: How Machines Learn to Be Racist
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“Technologies and their design do not
dictate racial ideologies; rather, they reflect
the current climate.”
Safiya Umoja Noble, Algorithms of Oppression
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Ethical technology:
• Is aware and combat unconscious bias
• Tests for misuse and malice
• Fights against harmful societal inequalities
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Diversity
and inclusion
№8
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Diverse teams are more creative, performant
and welcoming.
Source: Why Diverse Teams Are Smarter
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Technological redlining, reinforcing oppressive
social relationships and enacting racial profiling,
cannot exist in the ethical world.
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“When automated decision-making tools are not
built to explicitly dismantle structural inequities,
their speed and scale intensify them.”
Virginia Eubanks, Automating Inequality
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Ethical technology:
• Is inclusive of all people
• Prioritises diverse teams and organisations
• Prevents technological redlining
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Tools and resources
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Recommended reading
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Canvases, workshops and applications
Source: How to practice ethical design?
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Manifestos and pledges
Source: Ethical Design Manifesto by ind.ie
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“We demonstrated that the Web had failed instead
of served humanity. The increasing centralisation,
has ended up producing a large-scale emergent
phenomenon which is anti-human.”
Sir Tim Berners-Lee
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The shift towards more humane technology is
happening, but it needs your help.
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We all are responsible for what the Web has
become today and will become tomorrow.
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“Should we build this?” has to become
the ethical foundation for our work.
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The Web is ought to enhance our lives and
fulfil our dreams, rather than crush hopes,
magnify fears and deepen our divisions.
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Let’s build a more welcoming Web, together.
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Thank you
Questions and feedback: in person or [email protected].
Slides: https://speakerdeck.com/fox/disruptive-or-defective-towards-ethical-tech-innovation