Computational Power

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A01=Massimo Durante
Abstract Profile
AI System
algorithmic governance
Algorithmic Procedure
Artificial Agents
Artificial intelligence
Author_Massimo Durante
Autonomous Artificial Agent
Big Tech
Category=JHB
Category=UBJ
computational decision-making in society
Computational Power
Computational systems
Counterfactual Explanation
Current Information Societies
data ethics
Data Subject
Digital Governance
Digital ICTs
digital inequality
Digital Revolution
Driverless Cars
Epistemic Responsibility
epistemology of technology
eq_bestseller
eq_computing
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fake News
GDPR
Google Spain
Human intelligence
ICT systems
Implicit Thesis
information society studies
Luciano Floridi
Machine-learning mechanisms
Multi-agent Systems
Personal Data
Semantic Engines
Semantic Information
social impact of automation
Social Media Companies

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367566234
  • Weight: 520g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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We delegate more and more decisions and tasks to artificial agents, machine-learning mechanisms, and algorithmic procedures or, in other words, to computational systems. Not that we are driven by powerful ambitions of colonizing the Moon, replacing humans with legions of androids, creating sci-fi scenarios à la Matrix or masterminding some sort of Person of Interest-like Machine. No, the current digital revolution based on computational power is chiefly an everyday revolution.

It is therefore that much more profound, unnoticed and widespread, for it affects our customary habits and routines and alters the very texture of our day-to-day lives. This opens a precise line of inquiry, which constitutes the basic thesis of the present text: our computational power is exercised by trying to adapt not just the world but also our representation of reality to how computationally based ICTs work. The impact of this technology is such that it does not leave things as they are: it changes the nature of agents, habits, objects and institutions and hence it subverts the existing order, without necessarily generating a new one.

I argue that this power is often not distributed in an egalitarian manner but, on the contrary, is likely to result in concentrations of wealth, in dominant positions or in unjust competitive advantages. This opens up a struggle, with respect to which the task of reaffirming the fundamental values, the guiding principles, the priorities and the rules of the game, which can transform, or attempt to transform, a fierce confrontation between enemies in a fair competition between opponents rests on us.

Massimo Durante is Professor in Philosophy of Law and Legal Informatics at the Department of Law, University of Turin, Italy. He is coordinator of the Turin Unit of Research for the Law, Science and Technology Joint Doctorate: Rights of the Internet of Everything. His current research concerns issues of law and technology and digital governance from a legal, ethical, and epistemological perspective.

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