Current:Home > NewsAI industry is influencing the world. Mozilla adviser Abeba Birhane is challenging its core values -Infinite Edge Capital
AI industry is influencing the world. Mozilla adviser Abeba Birhane is challenging its core values
View
Date:2025-04-16 19:35:56
“Scaling up” is a catchphrase in the artificial intelligence industry as tech companies rush to improve their AI systems with ever-bigger sets of internet data.
It’s also a red flag for Mozilla’s Abeba Birhane, an AI expert who for years has challenged the values and practices of her field and the influence it’s having on the world.
Her latest research finds that scaling up on online data used to train popular AI image-generator tools is disproportionately resulting in racist outputs, especially against Black men.
Birhane is a senior adviser in AI accountability at the Mozilla Foundation, the nonprofit parent organization of the free software company that runs the Firefox web browser. Raised in Ethiopia and living in Ireland, she’s also an adjunct assistant professor at Trinity College Dublin.
Her interview with The Associated Press has been edited for length and clarity.
Q: How did you get started in the AI field?
A: I’m a cognitive scientist by training. Cog sci doesn’t have its own department wherever you are studying it. So where I studied, it was under computer science. I was placed in a lab full of machine learners. They were doing so much amazing stuff and nobody was paying attention to the data. I found that very amusing and also very interesting because I thought data was one of the most important components to the success of your model. But I found it weird that people don’t pay that much attention or time asking, ‘What’s in my dataset?’ That’s how I got interested in this space. And then eventually, I started doing audits of large scale datasets.
Q: Can you talk about your work on the ethical foundations of AI?
A: Everybody has a view about what machine learning is about. So machine learners — people from the AI community — tell you that it doesn’t have a value. It’s just maths, it’s objective, it’s neutral and so on. Whereas scholars in the social sciences tell you that, just like any technology, machine learning encodes the values of those that are fueling it. So what we did was we systematically studied a hundred of the most influential machine learning papers to actually find out what the field cares about and to do it in a very rigorous way.
A: And one of those values was scaling up?
Q: Scale is considered the holy grail of success. You have researchers coming from big companies like DeepMind, Google and Meta, claiming that scale beats noise and scale cancels noise. The idea is that as you scale up, everything in your dataset should kind of even out, should kind of balance itself out. And you should end up with something like a normal distribution or something closer to the ground truth. That’s the idea.
Q: But your research has explored how scaling up can lead to harm. What are some of them?
A: At least when it comes to hateful content or toxicity and so on, scaling these datasets also scales the problems that they contain. More specifically, in the context of our study, scaling datasets also scales up hateful content in the dataset. We measured the amount of hateful content in two datasets. Hateful content, targeted content and aggressive content increased as the dataset was scaled from 400 million to 2 billion. That was a very conclusive finding that shows that scaling laws don’t really hold up when it comes to training data. (In another paper) we found that darker-skinned women, and men in particular, tend to be allocated the labels of suspicious person or criminal at a much higher rate.
Q: How hopeful or confident are you that the AI industry will make the changes you’ve proposed?
A: These are not just pure mathematical, technical outputs. They’re also tools that shape society, that influence society. The recommendations are that we also incentivize and pay attention to values such as justice, fairness, privacy and so on. My honest answer is that I have zero confidence that the industry will take our recommendations. They have never taken any recommendations like this that actually encourage them to take these societal issues seriously. They probably never will. Corporations and big companies tend to act when it’s legally required. We need a very strong, enforceable regulation. They also react to public outrage and public awareness. If it gets to a state where their reputation is damaged, they tend to make change.
veryGood! (9824)
Related
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Vivienne Westwood, influential punk fashion maverick, dies at 81
- These Trader Joe’s cookies may contain rocks. See the products under recall
- Former Tennessee police officer sues after department rescinds job offer because he has HIV
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Anyone who used Facebook in the last 16 years can now get settlement money. Here's how.
- Black Friday in July Tech Deals: Major Markdowns on Macbook, AirPods, Beats, AirTag, Roku, Bose, and More
- Three found dead at campsite were members of Colorado Springs family who planned to live ‘off grid’
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- 2022 Books We Love: Realistic Fiction
Ranking
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Whitney Houston's voice is the best part of 'I Wanna Dance With Somebody'
- Man who killed three people in small South Dakota town sentenced to life in prison
- Famed Danish restaurant Noma will close by 2024 to make way for a test kitchen
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Why an iPhone alert is credited with saving a man who drove off a 400-foot cliff
- New Twitter logo: Elon Musk drops bird for black-and-white 'X' as company rebrands
- Remembering the artists, filmmakers, actors and writers we lost in 2022
Recommendation
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
Indonesian ferry capsizes, leaving at least 15 people dead and 19 others missing
Finding (and losing) yourself backcountry snowboarding
Officials identify remains found at Indiana farm in 1983 as Chicago teen slain by late serial killer
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
IRS says its agents will no longer make unannounced visits at taxpayers' doors
Banc of California to buy troubled PacWest Bancorp, which came close to failing earlier this year
'Visualizing the Virgin' shows Mary in the Middle Ages