Online DatabiteDecember 8 2020

Governing an Algorithm in the Wild

David Robinson in conversation with Alex Rosenblat

Databite No. 140
Tuesday, December 8, 2020
3 - 4 p.m. ET

On Tuesday, December 8 from 3 – 4 p.m. ET,  join us for a conversation with Scientist and Researcher David Robinson and Data & Society Senior Researcher Alex Rosenblat on algorithmic governance.

Algorithms make a wide range of morally important decisions, and many people now argue that members of the public should be more directly involved in deciding the moral tradeoffs that such systems entail. But most ideas for public or stakeholder involvement are still on the drawing board, and there are few real stories of public deliberation over the design of a morally important algorithm. This talk explores one such story.

On December 4, 2014, the algorithm that allocates kidneys for transplant in the United States was replaced, following more than a decade of debate and planning. The development process was highly transparent and participatory, faced hard ethical questions explicitly, and incorporated elements of simulation and auditing that scholars often recommend. Scientist and researcher David Robinson will describe how this story played out — including a twist ending — and will draw out four broader lessons to inform the design of participation strategies for other high stakes algorithms. The talk will be hosted by Data & Society Senior Researcher, Alex Rosenblat.

Closed captioning provided. Please email [email protected] with any other accessibility at least 72 hours prior to the event. Documentation, including video, transcript, and resources, will be available on our website afterwards.

About Databites

Data & Society’s “Databites” speaker series presents timely conversations about the purpose and power of technology, bridging our interdisciplinary research with broader public conversations about the societal implications of data and automation.