Humane automation: the political economy of working with -- rather than against -- machines
- đ¤ Speaker: Professor Frank Pasquale (University of Maryland)
- đ Date & Time: Thursday 25 May 2017, 17:00 - 18:30
- đ Venue: Room SG2, Alison Richard Building, Sidgwick Site, 7 West Road, Cambridge, CB3 9DT
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We are being told a simple story about the future of work: if a machine can record and imitate what you do, you will be replaced by it. Christened a âfourth industrial revolution,â a narrative of mass unemployment is now gripping policymakers. It envisions human workers rendered superfluous by ever-more-powerful software, robots, and predictive analytics.
Substituting robots for workers may seem like an impossibly grandiose ambition. But its main problem is not impracticalityârather, it is not nearly grand enough. It is a vision of society built on a narrow consumerism. We donât exist simply to be served. We want to serve others, to make a contribution, and to find some meaning in our daily activities.
Another approach is possibleâindeed, plausible. It is a future of robots and software complementing work, to make it better. I call technology that improves workersâ skills and opportunities âhumane automation,â to be distinguished from other forms of technical advance that are indifferent toâor undermineâworkersâ skills and wages. Fortunately, forms of humane automation are already taking root in many fields. As consumers and citizens, we can encourage this more inclusive and sustainable path. Enlightened policymakers and professionals can also re-channel the flow of commerce to respect, rather than replace, human initiative.
About the Speaker
Frank Pasquale, JD, MPhil is an expert on the law and policy of big data, predictive analytics, artificial intelligence, and algorithms. He has advised government and business leaders on the health care, internet, and finance industries, including the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the U.S. House Judiciary Committee, the Federal Trade Commission, the Council of Institutional Investors, the Capitol Forum, and the European Commission. He has spoken on his book, The Black Box Society (Harvard University Press, 2015) at academic and policy venues around the world, including law, computer science, humanities, and social science departments. His work has recently been translated into Chinese, French, German, Korean, Hungarian, and Serbian, and he is routinely quoted in global media outlets. He has been recognised as one of the ten most-cited health law scholars in the United States. His current book project is tentatively titled âLaws of Robotics: Revitalizing the Professions in an Era of Automation” (under contract to Harvard University Press).
He is a currently a Visiting Fellow on the Technology and Democracy Project in CRASSH , an affiliate fellow at the Yale Information Society Project, and a fellow at the New Economy Law Center. He has served as a visiting fellow at Princetonâs Center for Information Technology Policy.
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Series This talk is part of the Technology and Democracy Events series.
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Professor Frank Pasquale (University of Maryland)
Thursday 25 May 2017, 17:00-18:30