FILE PHOTO: Sen. Ron Wyden speaks during a markup on the"Tax Cuts and Jobs Act" on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., November 15, 2017. REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein
The bill, entitled the Algorithmic Accountability Act of 2019, would grant new power to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission and force companies to study if race, gender or other biases underpin their technology. The rules would apply to companies with annual revenue above $50 million as well as to data brokers and businesses with over a million consumers’ data.
The press release cited as examples a Reuters report that Amazon.com Inc had scrapped an automated recruiting engine it had found to be biased against women, and U.S. charges that Facebook Inc let advertisers discriminate by race in alleged violation of the Fair Housing Act. “To hold algorithms to a higher standard than human decisions implies that automated decisions are inherently less trustworthy or more dangerous than human ones, which is not the case,” said Daniel Castro, vice president of the Information Technology & Innovation Foundation, a Washington-based non-profit that includes industry representatives on its board.
Algorithms against discrimination by race and gender should be eliminated, but also against religious affiliation and political affiliation.
akis_matoulas
Make Russia great again.
Against that anti-conservative bias that we all know isn’t real?
thing is that you cant fight a computer PROGRAM. its doing what its DESIGNED TO DO. so we need to change the BIAS of the PERSON BEHIND THE PROGRAM.
hooshmandk
If they stop doing bad things then bad stuff shows up when you Google them.
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