Computers can’t be racist. In fact, they can’t be accused of any sort of state-of-mind for the simple reason that they don’t have minds.
But remember the first rule of information processing: garbage in, garbage out. For instance, feed a computer with the wrong information about your credit history, it’s unlikely to give you the right credit rating.
As Laura Hudson points out in a salutary briefing for FiveThirtyEight, loan approvals are just one of the things that computers are ‘deciding’ these days:
“Rather than relying on human judgment alone, organizations are increasingly asking algorithms to weigh in on questions that have profound social ramifications, like whether to recruit someone for a job, give them a loan, identify them as a suspect in a crime, send them to prison or grant them parole.”
If the alternative is a parole board composed of potentially racist human beings, a prisoner may prefer to take his (or her) chances with a fully computerised points-based system. But if the points are being totted up on the basis of data produced by a structurally-biased criminal justice system, then the prisoner could be worse off:
“Black people are arrested more often than whites, even when they commit crimes at the same rates. Black people are also sentenced more harshly and are more likely to searched or arrested during a traffic stop. That’s context that could be lost on an algorithm (or an engineer) taking those numbers at face value…”
A flesh-and-blood parole board might be using information derived from the same source, but there’s at least a chance that its members will exercise some wisdom in their interpretation of the data. A computer, though, once programmed, is set in its ways:
“Biased data can create feedback loops that function like a sort of algorithmic confirmation bias, where the system finds what it expects to find rather than what is objectively there.”
Compounding the issue is that people tend to believe what their silicon pals tell them. Indeed, a variation on ‘garbage in, garbage out’ is ‘garbage in, gospel out’.
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