Google tells its scientists to be more positive about AI
Researchers aren’t pleased with extra rounds of reviews
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Googlehas asked its researchers to “strike a positive tone” and subject their research on “sensitive topics”, such asArtificial Intelligence (AI), to additional reviews, new reports have claimed.
Asking for an extra round of inspection is supposedly part of new controls implemented by the search giant for papers on certain topics.
If true, they aren’t going to winGoogleany brownie points, which drew a lot of flak earlier this month for allegedly firing Dr. Timnit Gebru, the co-lead of Google’s Ethical AI team, after supposeddisagreements with her work.
Concern or censorship?
Reports now cite researchers and internal documents that show that in at least three cases senior managers have requested authors to refrain from casting its technology in a negative light.
The report quotes one such document as saying “Advances in technology and the growing complexity of our external environment are increasingly leading to situations where seemingly inoffensive projects raise ethical, reputational, regulatory or legal issues.”
In another alleged internal correspondence, a senior Google manager reviewing a study on content recommendation technology shortly before publication is quoted as asking authors to “take great care to strike a positive tone.”
The leaked documents, whose authenticity can’t be verified byTechRadar Pro, spell out some of the “sensitive” topics as “the oil industry, China, Iran, Israel, COVID-19, home security, insurance, location data, religion, self-driving vehicles, telecoms and systems that recommend or personalize web content.”
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The reports also quote senior Google AI researcher Margaret Mitchell as saying that this sort of interference could be seen as a form of censorship:
“If we are researching the appropriate thing given our expertise, and we are not permitted to publish that on grounds that are not in line with high-quality peer review, then we’re getting into a serious problem of censorship.”
Via:Reuters
With almost two decades of writing and reporting on Linux, Mayank Sharma would like everyone to think he’sTechRadar Pro’sexpert on the topic. Of course, he’s just as interested in other computing topics, particularly cybersecurity, cloud, containers, and coding.
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