When Government Rules by Software, Citizens Are Left in the Dark(wired.com)
wired.com
When Government Rules by Software, Citizens Are Left in the Dark
https://www.wired.com/story/when-government-rules-by-software-citizens-are-left-in-the-dark
31 comments
To be fair the very article details that conditions of his arrest (evading police in a car he drove during a shooting) would have resulted in the same sentencing under Wisconsin law. He also had prior sex offense convictions. This wasn't a guy with a clean record being persecuted for the sake of corporate profit.
I don't like the idea of being tried and sentenced by an unaccountable algorithm any more than you do, but when using examples like these, we also have to accept that if someone's gonna do the crime, they gotta do the time.
I don't like the idea of being tried and sentenced by an unaccountable algorithm any more than you do, but when using examples like these, we also have to accept that if someone's gonna do the crime, they gotta do the time.
Regardless of if the person performed the crime or how clear it was that they did it, being able to review the algorithm should be their right just as much as it would seem to be if it was a questionable arrest.
In the US I believe there is a Constitutional Right to meet your accuser in Court, I'm not a lawyer, but I wonder if that factors in...
Agreed. The "what if it's me" response ought to be felt by everybody. And algorithms used in criminal justice cases should be open and reviewable.
I made my comment above because it's easy to read "6 years...algorithmic sentencing...unaccountable" and miss the fact that this sentencing was given to a dangerous man with multiple prior convictions.
I made my comment above because it's easy to read "6 years...algorithmic sentencing...unaccountable" and miss the fact that this sentencing was given to a dangerous man with multiple prior convictions.
Right, but the fact that he was deserving of the punishment doesn't change anything; he still has a right to know the rules for what sentenced him.
Technically, the rules were already there. Absent the algorithm, regular sentencing guidelines would have given him 6 years either way.
Indeed. Any other than complete transparency in matters like this just weakens the verdict. IMO, at least.
Ultimately it seems like the software issue is just a symptom of the greater problem that is our criminal justice system.
I think software could play a helpful role in all aspects of our government, but having closed source, proprietary algorithms play a hand in someone's life hardly seems like justice to me.
This needs to be stopped immediately, and some serious debate needs to go into how software can assist everyone in assessing the facts and making a judgement, instead of just increasing the speed they can process people.
I think software could play a helpful role in all aspects of our government, but having closed source, proprietary algorithms play a hand in someone's life hardly seems like justice to me.
This needs to be stopped immediately, and some serious debate needs to go into how software can assist everyone in assessing the facts and making a judgement, instead of just increasing the speed they can process people.
Captain Jean-Luc Picard: I don't know how to communicate this, or even if it is possible. But the question of justice has concerned me greatly of late. And I say to any creature who may be listening, there can be no justice so long as laws are absolute. Even life itself is an exercise in exceptions.
I am equally concerned by the application of secret simulation models by organizations like the Congressional Budget Office for fiscal policy decision making. Our legislators rely on models that even they do not have access to when writing spending and tax laws.
The CBO estimations compared to the actuals speak for themselves.
I find it hilarious when venture capitalists cite CBO forecasts on twitter when, in the real world, if you brought that kind of data into a startup pitch it would get laughed out of the room.
https://www.forbes.com/forbes/welcome/?toURL=https://www.for...
^I don't mean to pick on the ACA either this applies to virtually all CBO estimations.
I find it hilarious when venture capitalists cite CBO forecasts on twitter when, in the real world, if you brought that kind of data into a startup pitch it would get laughed out of the room.
https://www.forbes.com/forbes/welcome/?toURL=https://www.for...
^I don't mean to pick on the ACA either this applies to virtually all CBO estimations.
Because it turns out that the modeling the CBO has to do is WAY harder than what your typical startup has to worry about.
The first part of this comment may be off topic for this specific article. The Aadhaar (unique ID) program in India is a bungling mess of hardware and software that has excluded millions of people from their legally entitled welfare benefits, helped leak more personal and sensitive information than ever before and is being touted by the government (and its supporters) as India moving into the "developed world club." The central biometrics database and the entire system have never been audited in all these years of its existence. There have been no security related tests done. There are no strict policies for third party agents to follow (just a bunch of loose guidelines, including nonsensical ones like "Windows XP is a supported OS").
Governments are eager to use technology as if it were a magic wand that could cure all the ills around, without understanding what the technology is about, what its limitations are, how it could be misused, the issues that arise on misuse, etc. Technology is just a tool. It can be lousy or good, and in either case it can be put to use in different ways that have detrimental effects on an entire country (or state). Governments need to be competent and capable agents first and foremost, and that's missing in many places. The gullibility of some governments and government agencies are taken advantage of by others.
Governments are eager to use technology as if it were a magic wand that could cure all the ills around, without understanding what the technology is about, what its limitations are, how it could be misused, the issues that arise on misuse, etc. Technology is just a tool. It can be lousy or good, and in either case it can be put to use in different ways that have detrimental effects on an entire country (or state). Governments need to be competent and capable agents first and foremost, and that's missing in many places. The gullibility of some governments and government agencies are taken advantage of by others.
Seriously, letting software blackboxes decide upon the freedom of humans? Has the US gone... totally bonkers now?
What happened to the right to fair process? How can that be ensured AT ALL?
What happened to the right to fair process? How can that be ensured AT ALL?
I feel the worst casualty of our partisan political divisions is the abandonment of both sides of the promotion of broad and equal application of laws and processes to all stripes. Right vs left seems to demand unique treatments (often promoting different outcomes on the application of the same law), and it definitely spills out to elite vs proles in terms of who is prosecuted for what crimes as well as how sentences are considered and carried out.
Of course, when government rules by human judgment, citizens are left in the dark. Software doesn't change anything here.
Judges are elected or at the worst appointed by someone who is elected.
This is far from a panacea; see the inability of successive governments in many democracies to change voting systems or large scale education/healthcare reform.
Elected officials, while a good way of ensuring no-one truly vile gets into power, also ensure no-one truly inspired gets into power
Edit: Just to note, I support democracy (it should go without saying) but we should all see that it isn't infallible
Elected officials, while a good way of ensuring no-one truly vile gets into power, also ensure no-one truly inspired gets into power
Edit: Just to note, I support democracy (it should go without saying) but we should all see that it isn't infallible
This is absolutely insane. Why can't government develop their own in-house solutions? Create jobs and have full access. The law should demand that these algorithms and all information about these systems be revealed publicly or these systems should not be used. I don't want some random code from some random for-profit company deciding my fate or anyone's fate. I don't even understand how this is legal or constitutional. I'd bet serious money all these systems are in violation of multiple laws, especially discrimination laws. What a fucked up technology. If this is what people talk about when saying they are afraid of AI, then yes, I'm absolutely fucking terrified. Fuck this "AI". It has no place in our society. Fuck these companies that develop it too, making money off of people's suffering.
I'm surprised the article makes no mention of this book which covers the exact topic extensively, and which has (AFAICT) received a lot of exposure and publicity.
https://weaponsofmathdestructionbook.com/
https://weaponsofmathdestructionbook.com/
Misleading headline: the algorithm has been made public and it is included in the article as a PDF link.
The algorithm, yes, but not the process of building the algorithm:
> Goodman argues the foundation should disclose more information about its dataset and how it was analyzed to design PSA, as well as the results of any validation tests performed to tune the risk scores it assigns people. That information would help governments and citizens understand PSA’s strengths and weaknesses, and compare it with competing pretrial risk-assessment software.
> Goodman argues the foundation should disclose more information about its dataset and how it was analyzed to design PSA, as well as the results of any validation tests performed to tune the risk scores it assigns people. That information would help governments and citizens understand PSA’s strengths and weaknesses, and compare it with competing pretrial risk-assessment software.
Bernard Steigler has been writing about this:
https://iainmait.land/pdf/Rouvroy-Stiegler.pdf
[deleted]
They used to scream "child porn" and everyone would bow down. Then it was TERRORISM. And everyone complained about profiling. This at least had a smaller footprint. Now they just scream "White Privilege" and no one cares about profiling. Because evil white men deserve it.
Would you please stop posting ideological rants to HN? We ban accounts that use this site for ideological battle. That's a violation of https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/01/us/politics/sent-to-priso...