For those in and around London at the end of March, this event may be of 
interest. Hope to see you there!
-Zeena


*** MONOPOLIES OF INTELLIGENCE: QUESTIONING THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF AI ***

A panel discussion with Mercedes Bunz, Nick Srnicek, Leif Weatherby

WHEN: 28 March 2019 at 16:00-18:00. Reception to follow.
WHERE: King’s College London, Bush House Lecture Theatre 3 (BH(NE) 0.01)

Artificial Intelligence systems are being applied to many areas of human life. 
While AI is heavily debated - hyped as our future saviour or feared for their 
biases - the political economy of AI is rarely being discussed. With this panel 
discussion framed by short statements, the Department of Digital Humanities at 
King's College London aims to change this and also welcome the department's 
current Willard McCarty Fellow Leif Weatherby (NYU). Please join us. Register 
at 
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/monopolies-of-intelligence-questioning-the-political-economy-of-ai-tickets-58280723212.

In the Clouds - Nick Srnicek (Digital Humanities, KCL)
We live in an age dominated by tech giants. Yet for all the attention paid to 
them, discussions of artificial intelligence have focused on ethical issues 
around bias and political issues around surveillance. The properly political 
economic questions have been left aside, or reduced to a simple ‘robots taking 
our jobs’ narrative. This talk will aim to uncover the political economy of 
artificial intelligence, with a particular focus on how the technological 
conditions of AI either facilitate or delineate possibilities for the greater 
concentration of capital and power.

Data as Capital – Leif Weatherby (German, NYU and KCL's Willard McCarty Fellow)
A recent report from MIT announces the arrival of a new metaphysical player in 
the game of business: data capital. This form of wealth forms represents a 
shift in the relationship between capital and society. Data capital has now 
driven the market capitalization of the largest platform companies above the 
"unicorn" value of 1 trillion USD, creating something like intelligent 
monopolies. But capital as data has to be interpreted to be useful, an 
operation most often carried out by algorithms called "neural nets." The data 
is exascale, beyond any human imagination - yet parsed, categorized, 
interpreted. I propose to call this activity at the heart of modern enterprise 
"artificial semiotics" in order to analyse how data has altered the structure 
of capital in the present.

On Distributed Intelligence – Mercedes Bunz (Digital Humanities, KCL)
Recent advances of AI have resulted in a fundamental shift in programming. 
However, the conditions of algorithmic production as well as the interfaces to 
use those programs and new capabilities have largely stayed the same. AI 
applications are currently mostly black box systems in which systems trained on 
data are making decisions for users and not with users. By analysing examples 
of image recognition regarding medical images, this talk will show that this 
constellation is dangerous and difficult. Automated decision-making in the 
medical sector transfers medical knowledge and agency from our medical 
institutions to technology companies without the necessary checks and balances. 
At the same time, machine learning has great potential to assist with medical 
decision making. In her talk, Mercedes will discuss two aspects of machine 
learning –data sets and interfaces – as entry points that could be used to make 
machine intelligence more accessible, collaborative, and distributed – against 
monopolies of intelligence.

***
Biographies

Mercedes Bunz is Senior Lecturer in Digital Society at the Department of 
Digital Humanities, King's College London. Her research explores how digital 
technology transforms knowledge and with it power; a question she explores 
currently specifically regarding medical knowledge with a Wellcome Trust Seed 
grant. Recent publications: The Internet of Things(Polity 2017) co-published 
with Professor Graham Meikle, and the small Open Access publication 
Communication with Finn Brunton (University of Minnesota Press 2019), on how 
contemporary communication puts us humans not only in conversation with one 
another but also with our machinery.

Nick Srnicek is Lecturer in Digital Economy at King's College London. He is the 
author of Platform Capitalism (Polity, 2016) and Inventing the Future(Verso, 
2015 with Alex Williams). With Helen Hester, he is currently writing After Work 
(Verso, 2020).

Leif Weatherby is Associate Professor of German at NYU, co-founder of the 
Digital Theory Lab, and Willard McCarty fellow of the Department of Digital 
Humanities at King’s College London. His research focuses on philosophies of 
technology - especially the digital - Romanticism and Idealism, and political 
economy. His book, Transplanting the Metaphysical Organ: German Romanticism 
between Leibniz and Marx, tracks an early techno-philosophy in the doctrine he 
calls "Romantic organology." His ongoing work on the relationship between 
cybernetics and German Idealism has been supported by the National Endowment 
for the Humanities and the Alexander von Humboldt association. His writing has 
appeared in venues like SubStance, Grey Room, and the Los Angeles Review of 
Books.
-- 
Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable from any major commercial 
search engine. Violations of list guidelines will get you moderated: 
https://lists.ghserv.net/mailman/listinfo/lt. Unsubscribe, change to digest 
mode, or change password by emailing [email protected].

Reply via email to