Luxemburg Lecture with Frank Pasquale and AlgorithmWatch, May 11, 7 pm in Berlin
Coming Thursday (May 11th) we will discuss the question of how to hold algorithms accountable with Frank Pasquale, one of the leading scholars on algorithmic accountability and professor of law at the University of Maryland and author of “The Black Box society. The Secret Algorithms that Control Money and Information”. Please join us at 7 pm at the Salon of Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung at Franz-Mehring-Platz 1, 10243 Berlin.
The infancy of the internet has long passed. Cyberspace is no longer an escape from the “real world”. It affects the “real world” by adding a code layer to almost anything. Online corporations are setting the rules that determine who is hired or receives a credit at which rate, where to drive and how to deliver care work. Databases – private or state-run – collect, combine and recombine data to produce profiles. Those algorithms, working for Google, Walmart, Deliveroo or state institutions are impenetrable to outside observers. Complex mathematics calculates outcomes that infuence people‘s lives. But such processes are not only highly elaborate most often they are also protected by trade secrecy.
You want to know why a decision was made? You probably don’t have the right to know. You feel there is wrong information about you? You won’t have the chance to make a plea to change that information. This has given rise to a movement for algorithmic accountability. It’s an urgent and global cause. The challenge is not technical, but mostly political. One important part is to create law that empowers people to see and challenge what the algorithms are saying about us. Therefore algorithmic accountability requires the skills of theorists and practitioners, lawyers, social scientists, journalists and others.