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[Commlist] Call for Interventions and Contributions: Shifting AI Controversies
Thu Oct 05 08:20:10 GMT 2023
Call for Interventions and Contributions: Shifting AI Controversies
On behalf of the international research project Shaping 21st Century AI,
the Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society (HIIG) and
the ZeMKI, University of Bremen, in cooperation with the research group
“Politics of Digitalization” at the Berlin Social Science Center (WZB),
invite to an international conference on the topic of AI controversies.
The conference will hold keynotes, panels and interventions on the topic
of AI controversies. Abstracts should be submitted no later than 30
October 2023.
CONFERENCE
Shifting AI Controversies
Prompts, Provocations & Problematisations for Society-Centered AI
29 & 30 January 2024
Berlin Social Science Center (WZB), Germany
https://www.hiig.de/en/cfc-shifting-ai-controversies/
<https://www.hiig.de/en/cfc-shifting-ai-controversies/>
Controversies about AI abound, especially since ChatGPT took over the
Internet by storm, becoming the most popular applications in the Web’s
history within only a few months. The current excitement about the
perils and prospects of general purpose AI applications like ChatGPT is
only the most recent wave of public interest in the long history of
“artificial intelligence” (AI). With its metaphysical imaginaries of
human-machine symbiosis, anthropomorphic robots and machine thinking,
arguably oversized scientific claims and technological developments in
this field have always raised concerns. What the current debate makes
much more visible than previous attention cycles, though, is that
contemporary AI companies and scientists dominate not only the discourse
promoting AI’s prospects but also that on AI’s perils. From engineers at
OpenAI to research pioneer Geoffrey Hinton, technologists and
industry-based scientists increasingly articulate warnings that AI might
cause serious and fundamental damage to societies. With this move, the
already dominant players are now also occupying the space of public
critique, yielding the risk that activism, social science, critical
journalism and the arts are pushed even further to the margins of public
and expert debates. Are we currently having the public controversies on
AI that we should have, or is AI panic derailing us from actual and
relevant concerns? How do we get to the controversies that we need and
to the exploration and articulation of society-centered AI?
Read the full call
text:https://www.hiig.de/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Shifting-AI-Controversies.pdf
<https://www.hiig.de/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Shifting-AI-Controversies.pdf>
Submission
We welcome contributions from scholars of diverse disciplines as well as
interventions from civil society, practitioners and developers. Your
submissions should engage with the questions and provocations posed in
the complete call for contributions.
Extended abstracts of approximately 4,000 to 6,000 characters in length
(excl. references) should be submitted no later than 30 October 2023 via
the link below. Speakers will be notified by 16 November 2023.
https://www.hiig.de/en/cfc-shifting-ai-controversies/
<https://www.hiig.de/en/cfc-shifting-ai-controversies/>
Contact
Christian Katzenbach, (katzenbach /at/ uni-bremen.de)
Lena Henkes, (lena.henkes /at/ hiig.de)
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