Digital Activism (8)

Application of digital technologies to further citizens manifestations and public participation. Sometimes it may be related to resistance movements.

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Find narratives by ethical themes or by technologies.

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Themes
  • Privacy
  • Accountability
  • Transparency and Explainability
  • Human Control of Technology
  • Professional Responsibility
  • Promotion of Human Values
  • Fairness and Non-discrimination
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Technologies
  • AI
  • Big Data
  • Bioinformatics
  • Blockchain
  • Immersive Technology
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  • Year
    • 1916 - 1966
    • 1968 - 2018
    • 2019 - 2069
  • Duration
  • 5 min
  • Wired
  • 2019
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How Facial Recognition is fighting child sex trafficking

Non-profit companies such as Thorn and the Canadian Centre for Child Protection are using existing software, particularly facial recognition algorithms, to discover ways to become more proactive in fighting child pornography and human trafficking on the dark web.

  • Wired
  • 2019
  • 7 min
  • Vice
  • 2021
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How Musicians and Sex Workers Beat Facial Recognition in New Orleans

In New Orleans, a city known for its history of racist policing, grassroots activists turned to precedent from other states to ban police use of surveillance and facial recognition technology through both public and private cameras.

  • Vice
  • 2021
  • 14 min
  • Kinolab
  • 2014
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Decryption and Machine Thinking

In the midst of World War II, mathematics prodigy Alan Turing is hired by the British government to help decode Enigma, the code used by Germans in their encrypted messages. Turing builds an expensive machine meant to help decipher the code in a mathematical manner, but the lack of speedy results incites the anger of his fellow coders and the British government. After later being arrested for public indecency, Turing discusses with the officer the basis for the modern “Turing Test,” or how to tell if one is interacting with a human or a machine. Turing argues that although machines think differently than humans, it should still be considered a form of thinking. His work displayed in this film became a basis of the modern computer.

  • Kinolab
  • 2014
  • 8 min
  • Kinolab
  • 1984
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Robotic Impostors

Rotwang, a reclusive inventor, invents a robot to replace his love Hel whom he lost to Joh Frederson. He claims that it has everything it needs to replace her except for a soul. Joh Frederson takes advantage of the robot’s design as an artificial companion to imitate Maria’s likeness, essentially creating a copy of her. The purpose of this is to infiltrate the working class and use Maria, who the workers admire, as a tool to further Joh Frederson’s agenda to suppress a laborer’s manifestation. The workers have unknowlingly placed so much trust into the robot version of Maria that they refuse to listen to Grot as a fellow worker, destroying the Heart Machine as Joh intended.

  • Kinolab
  • 1984
  • 7 min
  • Wired
  • 2021
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This Site Published Every Face From Parler’s Capitol Riot Videos

An anonymous college student created a website titled “Faces of the Riot,” a virtual wall containing over 6,000 face images of insurrectionists present at the riot at the Capitol on January 6th, 2021. The ultimate goal of the creator’s site, which used facial recognition algorithms to crawl through videos posted to the right-wing social media site Parler, is to hopefully have viewers identify any criminals that they recognize to the proper authorities. While the creator put safeguards for privacy in place, such as using “facial detection” rather than “facial recognition”, and their intentions are supposedly positive, some argue that the implications on privacy and the widespread integration of this technique could be negative.

  • Wired
  • 2021
  • 10 min
  • The New Yorker
  • 2020
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The Second Act of Social Media Activism

This article contextualizes the BLM uprisings of 2020 in a larger trend of using social media and other digital platforms to promote activist causes. A comparison between the benefits of in-person, on-the-ground activism and activism which takes place through social media is considered.

  • The New Yorker
  • 2020
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