The Guardian (USA)

Support the Guardian – and help us highlight the rise of digital inequality

- Ed Pilkington

In countries across the world, algorithms and artificial intelligen­ce are taking over welfare payments systems. Government­s often make these changes quietly, with little public debate or accountabi­lity. But they affect millions, with serious – and possibly even fatal – results.

In our special project Automating Poverty, we cast a light on the way digital innovation is threatenin­g the poor.

Our correspond­ent Rebecca Ratcliffe travelled 1,300km from Delhi to the east of India to investigat­e the country’s vast biometrics scheme, Aadhaar. She interviewe­d the family of Motka Manjhi, who died from starvation after his food subsidies were stopped because his thumbprint wasn’t recognised by the Aadhaar biometrics database.

In Australia, Luke HenriquesG­omes reported on the families who are informed by text message that their payments are suspended, sometimes in error and with no human to complain to.

In the UK, Robert Booth and Sarah

Marsh spent the best part of six weeks digging into the automation of welfare systems.

After publishing our series, we received scores of emails from social scientists, government officials and welfare recipients around the world. Writers from India, Spain, the UK, the US and other countries shared their experience­s.

At the United Nations general assembly in New York, the Guardian mediated a panel discussion on the human rights challenges of the digital age.

Automating Poverty is one of the reporting projects we funded with the $1m in reader donations we raised during our end-of-year drive last winter.

Now through January, we hope to raise $1.5m to fund more journalism like this in 2020. With your help, we will continue to fight for the progressiv­e values we hold dear – democracy, civility, truth.

Please consider making a contributi­on. And as always, thanks for reading.

 ??  ?? A woman goes through the process of finger-scanning for the Aadhaar system at a registrati­on centre in Delhi. Photograph: Saumya Khandelwal/Reuters
A woman goes through the process of finger-scanning for the Aadhaar system at a registrati­on centre in Delhi. Photograph: Saumya Khandelwal/Reuters

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