Call & Times

Analysts fear dystopia creeping into tech debate

- By MATT O’BRIEN AP Technology Writer

We may remember 2018 as the year when technology’s dystopian potential became clear, from Facebook’s role enabling the harvesting of our personal data for election interferen­ce to a seemingly unending series of revelation­s about the dark side of Silicon Valley’s connect-everything ethos.

The list is long: High-tech tools for immigratio­n crackdowns. Fears of smartphone addiction. YouTube algorithms that steer youths into extremism. An experiment in gene-edited babies .

Doorbells and concert venues that can pinpoint individual faces and alert police. Repurposin­g genealogy websites to hunt for crime suspects based on a relative’s DNA. Automated systems that keep tabs of workers’ movements and habits. Electric cars in Shanghai transmitti­ng their every movement to the government.

It’s been enough to exhaust even the most imaginativ­e sci-fi visionarie­s.

“It doesn’t so much feel like we’re living in the future now, as that we’re living in a retro-future,” novelist William Gibson wrote this month on Twitter. “A dark, goofy ‘90s retro-future.”

More awaits us in 2019, as surveillan­ce and data-collection efforts ramp up and artificial intelligen­ce systems start sounding more human, reading facial expression­s and generating fake video images so realistic that it will be harder to detect malicious distortion­s of the truth.

But there are also countermea­sures afoot in Congress and state government — and even among tech-firm employees who are more active about ensuring their work is put to positive ends.

The “leave them alone” approach of the early internet era won’t work anymore, said Rep. David Cicilline, a Rhode Island Democrat poised to take the helm of the House’s antitrust subcommitt­ee.

“We’re seeing now some of the consequenc­es of the abuses that can occur in these platforms if they remain unregulate­d without meaningful oversight or enforcemen­t,” Cicilline said.

“Something that was heartening this year was that accompanyi­ng this parade of scandals was a growing public awareness that there’s an accountabi­lity crisis in tech,” said Meredith Whittaker, a co-founder of New York University’s AI Now Institute for studying the social implicatio­ns of artificial intelligen­ce.

The group has compiled a long list of what made 2018 so ominous, though many are examples of the public simply becoming newly aware of problems that have built up for years. Among the most troubling cases was the revelation in March that political data-mining firm Cambridge Analytica swept up personal informatio­n of millions of Facebook users for the purpose of manipulati­ng national elections.

“It really helped wake up people to the fact that these systems are actually touching the core of our lives and shaping our social institutio­ns,” Whittaker said.

That was on top of other Facebook disasters, including its role in fomenting violence in Myanmar, major data breaches and ongoing concerns about its hosting of fake accounts for Russian propaganda .

It wasn’t just Facebook. Google attracted concern about its continuous surveillan­ce of users after The Associated Press reported that it was tracking people’s movements whether they like it or not.

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