We’re back, after a long and restful break, with a brand new season of Technically Human! In our first episode of the season, I am joined by a guest cohost, Dr. Morgan Ames, for a conversation with Janet Haven, Executive Director of Data and Society. We talk about the movement to root data and AI practices in human values, the future of automation, and the pressing needs—and challenges—of data governance.
Janet Haven is the executive director of Data & Society. She has worked at the intersection of technology policy, governance, and accountability for more than twenty years, both domestically and internationally. Janet is a member of the National Artificial Intelligence Advisory Committee (NAIAC), which advises President Biden and the National AI Initiative Office on a range of issues related to artificial intelligence. She also acts as an advisor to the Trust and Safety Foundation, and has brought her expertise in non-profit governance to bear through varied board memberships. She writes and speaks regularly on matters related to technology and society, federal AI research and development, and AI governance and policy.
Before joining D&S, Janet spent more than a decade at the Open Society Foundations. There, she oversaw funding strategies and worldwide grant-making related to technology, human rights, and governance, and played a substantial role in shaping the emerging international field focused on technology and accountability.
Data & Society is an independent nonprofit research organization rooted in the belief that empirical evidence should directly inform the development and governance of new technologies — and that these technologies can and must be grounded in equity and human dignity. Recognizing that the concentrated, profit-driven power of corporations and tech platforms will not steer us toward a just future, our work foregrounds the power of the people and communities most impacted by technological change. Their work studies the social implications of data, automation, and AI, producing original research to ground informed public debate about emerging technology.
Dr. Morgan Ames is an adjunct professor in the School of Information and interim associate director of research for the Center for Science, Technology, Medicine and Society (CSTMS) at the University of California, Berkeley, where she teaches in Data Science and administers the Designated Emphasis in Science and Technology Studies. She is also affiliated with the Algorithmic Fairness and Opacity Working Group (AFOG), the Center for Science, Technology, Society and Policy (CTSP), and the Berkeley Institute of Data Science (BIDS).
East Meets West: The place of Asia in the technological imagination
*From the Archives*: Tech, democracy, human rights, and the urgent crisis in Sudan
Compliance and Governance in the Age of Tech
Returning the Power of AI to the People
Indigeneity in the Digital Age
Technology and Genocide: What the Holocaust can tell us about perils of technological utopianism
Instituting Integrity: The rise of the integrity worker collective
How We Breathe: how technology is changing approaches to ventilation
Technically Human Rights: How technologies are changing the state of human rights
The Global Technological Imaginary: Sci-Fi, Tech, and the Ethics of Representation
Zoom Fatigue: Distance Learning and Social Engagement in the Age of Social Distancing
Data Feminism
The Threshold: Leading in the Age of AI
The Ethics of the Blockchain
Digital Democracy: How Tech Shapes Democratic Participation and Social Justice
Computing Women: Gender Disparity in STEM Education
Human First AI
Science for the 21st Century: Understanding Systems Biology
The Diversity Challenge: Race, gender, and how the histories of medicine and technology got made
The Ethic of Life
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