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Responsibility, Recourse, and Redress: A Focus on the Three R’s of AI Ethics

Gardner, Allison

Authors

Allison Gardner



Abstract

In August 2020, students took to the streets of London in a mass protest over their A-level results (that determine entry to university), chanting “F*ck the algorithm.” Their A-level grades had been determined by an algorithm that depended on past school performance, a system of teacher ratings, and for smaller student groups, the use of Centre Assessed Grades. Commendably Ofqual (the U.K. Government Office of Qualifications and Examinations Regulation) were transparent in their use of the algorithm so that affected stakeholders were informed of the algorithm’s existence and the key details of how it was developed. The design of the data set produced an algorithm with biased outputs, which hardcoded preexisting educational, policy, and societal biases. Due to the large numbers of students, the single “results day” output and the wider interests of schools, teachers, parents, and universities, the unfairness of the outcome was magnified. Add to this that the students were, by definition, academically proficient individuals, many of whom derived from privileged and supportive backgrounds, which meant that they had the awareness and capacity to challenge. Hence, the impact of this biased algorithm was not received silently and so it was hard to deny, deflect, and dismiss. However, this is not always the case, and many systems are deployed with similar biases and harmful outcomes but the impact is dissipated over time and individuals, and therefore not so immediately obvious and easy to challenge. This is particularly the case when the people impacted do not have the advantages that enabled the A-level students to challenge.

Citation

Gardner, A. (in press). Responsibility, Recourse, and Redress: A Focus on the Three R’s of AI Ethics. IEEE Technology and Society Magazine, 41(2), 84-89. https://doi.org/10.1109/mts.2022.3173342

Journal Article Type Commentary
Acceptance Date Jun 14, 2022
Online Publication Date Jun 14, 2022
Deposit Date Feb 5, 2024
Journal IEEE Technology and Society Magazine
Print ISSN 0278-0097
Publisher Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 41
Issue 2
Pages 84-89
DOI https://doi.org/10.1109/mts.2022.3173342
Keywords General Social Sciences, General Engineering


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