The supply chain of AI: Rethinking algorithmic harms and resistance

The supply chain of AI: Rethinking algorithmic harms and resistance

Ana Valdivia investigates how datafication and algorithmic systems are transforming political, social and ecological worlds

By Camilla Power

Date and time

Tuesday, April 30 · 6:30 - 8:30pm GMT+1

Location

UCL Anthropology

14 Taviton Street #University College London London WC1H 0BW United Kingdom

About this event

Ana Valdivia is a Departmental Research Lecturer in Artificial Intelligence (AI), Government & Policy at the Oxford Internet Institute (OII). In her current research, Ana aims to examine the political and environmental impact of AI by understanding its life cycle from mineral extractivism, data centres and electronic waste dumps. She is also interested in analysing algorithmic resistance and oppression through a feminist lens. She will be speaking LIVE in the Daryll Forde Room, 2nd Floor, UCL Anthropology building. You can also join on ZOOM (ID 384 186 2174 passcode Wawilak)

Ana writes: "Artificial Intelligence (AI) has woven into a supply chain of capital, resources and human labour that has been neglected in debates about the social impact of this technology. While the literature on critical AI studies have focused on algorithmic bias and opacity, the global production line that fosters AI innovation have drawn little attention. Building on Tsing’s concept of supply chain capitalism, this paper offers a journey through mines, semiconductor manufacturers, data centres, technological firms, data labelling factories and e-waste dumps by illustrating the complex, diverse, opaque and global structure of the supply chain of AI. Then, the paper moves into illuminating a case study drawn from six months of fieldwork on data centres in Mexico, Spain, UK and Chile, revealing that algorithmic harms go beyond code pitfalls. A close examination into the supply chain capitalism of AI reveals that other types of eco-political frictions are arising, particularly in the context of fundamental and environmental rights. This demands a broader and critical perspective on AI studies by considering the entire capitalist production line of its industry—from mineral extractivism to e-waste dumps—and its environmental and political consequences."

Everybody is welcome to join. There is plenty of room LIVE and on ZOOM (doesn't matter about eventbrite tickets!) Just turn up!


Organized by

For many years Senior Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of East London, Dr. Camilla Power is a feminist activist and founding member of the Radical Anthropology Group at University College London. Trained under Leslie Aiello at UCL, her research is focused on human evolution and the emergence of symbolic culture. Her 'Female Cosmetic Coalitions' (FCC) theory of the origins of art and culture has been widely acclaimed.    

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