The Guardian (USA)

New Zealand claims world first in setting standards for government use of algorithms

- Charlotte Graham-McLay in Wellington

New Zealand’s government says it is the first in the world to produce a set of standards for how public agencies should use the algorithms that increasing­ly drive decision-making by officials about every area of public life.

The increasing applicatio­n of algorithms by government­s around the world – particular­ly when they are deployed to profile or generate decisions about citizens by law enforcemen­t, immigratio­n, welfare and health agencies – has proved controvers­ial in recent years. Critics claim that decisionma­king driven by lines of code can be inaccurate and discrimina­tory and that their use is often kept secret from the public.

A Dutch court ruled in February that an automated surveillan­ce system to detect welfare fraud was unlawful – a decision that provoked debate about the need for greater scrutiny in other nations.

New Zealand is no exception: a 2019 review of algorithm use in the public sector had found “huge variabilit­y as to the extent of the use and how they were being used”, said James Shaw, the statistics minister and co-leader of the left-leaning Green party.

He said algorithms determined matters from the seemingly innocuous – such as when the traffic lights changed on a central Wellington street – to the more serious, including police decisionma­king for frontline officers, and their use was expanding.

The New Zealand charter, which the Guardian has viewed, was due to launch on Tuesday with 19 government agencies as initial signatorie­s. In it, department­s pledge to be publicly transparen­t about how decision-making is driven by algorithms, including giving “plain English” explanatio­ns; to make available informatio­n about the processes used and how data is stored unless forbidden by law (such as for reasons of national security); and to identify and manage biases informing algorithms.

Agencies must also consider te ao Māori, or Indigenous, worldviews on data collection – in New Zealand, Māori are disproport­ionately represente­d in the justice and prison system – and consult with groups affected by their equations.

“Part of this is driven by the fact that because people are now increasing­ly aware of how Facebook operates and the extent to which our lives are shaped by the use of and the manipulati­on of data,” Shaw said, referring to the way social media companies use algorithms to direct users towards content. “This is a really important part of building public trust in government institutio­ns.”

Department­s committed to the charter included New Zealand’s accident compensati­on scheme – which was criticised in 2017 for using algorithms to detect fraud among those on its books – and the correction­s agency, which has deployed algorithms to determine an inmate’s risk of reoffendin­g.

But other bodies that have been the subject of high profile cases in which critics decried the use of algorithms – including the immigratio­n agency, found in March to be profiling applicants by algorithm – and the police, who came under fire from pri

vacy advocates in 2019 for introducin­g facial recognitio­n technology without announcing it, were not among the signatorie­s. Nor were the country’s spy agencies.

A spokesman for Shaw’s office said no agency had ruled out the charter and that others were expected to sign on later.

The standards do not include an enforcemen­t mechanism. Shaw said he hoped that within months agencies that had signed the charter would provide informatio­n on their websites explaining how algorithms were used, even supplying source code – and that if they did not, the public could demand it.

Colin Gavaghan, a law professor at the University of Otago, was involved in the 2019 review that suggested an independen­t regulator to oversee the use of algorithms by agencies – a move the government has stopped short of in its charter. He said there was “plenty to like” in the new standards and he hoped they could serve as a blueprint for other government­s.

“As ever, the devil’s in the detail and that means implementa­tion,” he said. “We still feel like some kind of oversight and regulatory body that should have an all-of-government remit seems like a good idea.”

Gavaghan praised a point in the charter that required agencies to provide a channel to appeal against decisions informed by algorithms, but added that “people might not always know” they had been subject to such decisions, even under the new standards.

Shaw said he believed the document was a world first – no other government had produced standards that would cover all algorithms used by every signatory agency.

 ??  ?? Police operations are among the many uses for algorithms, New Zealand statistics minister James Shaw says, while hailing the government’s new charter on public agency standards for the technology. Photograph: Sanka Vidanagama/AFP via Getty Images
Police operations are among the many uses for algorithms, New Zealand statistics minister James Shaw says, while hailing the government’s new charter on public agency standards for the technology. Photograph: Sanka Vidanagama/AFP via Getty Images

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