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Stefaan Verhulst

Article by Roeland Beerten, Johannes Jütting and Stefaan G. Verhulst in Le Monde: “Les statistiques officielles – fondement d’une gouvernance fondée sur des faits – sont aujourd’hui prises entre deux feux : la politique et la défiance du public. Dans certains pays, les agences sont marginalisées ; dans d’autres, les citoyens doutent de leur utilité. Si les systèmes statistiques ne parviennent pas à refléter les réalités vécues, s’ils ne fournissent que de simples moyennes abstraites, ils risquent de devenir une victime de plus de la crise de confiance démocratique.

« L’inflation est maîtrisée. » « Le PIB [produit intérieur brut] progresse. » « Nos villes sont sûres. » Ces affirmations, répétées à longueur de communiqués, suscitent désormais plus de méfiance que d’adhésion. Car pour de nombreux citoyens, les factures s’envolent, les économies s’amenuisent et l’avenir des générations futures s’obscurcit. Quand les chiffres contredisent l’expérience vécue, la confiance dans les experts s’effondre.

Depuis des décennies, les offices statistiques décrivent le monde à coups d’agrégats : PIB, chômage, inflation. Ces indicateurs sont utiles, mais leur logique gomme les écarts : le macro prime sur le micro, la moyenne efface la marge. Dire que « l’économie croît » n’a guère de sens pour celui qui voit son pouvoir d’achat s’éroder. D’où la montée d’une exaspération, que l’on pourrait résumer ainsi : « On ne mange pas du PIB. »..(More)”.

« Quand les chiffres contredisent l’expérience vécue, la confiance dans les experts s’effondre »

Blog by Anna Colom, Marta Poblet, and Stefaan Verhulst: “Independent and public interest media have for long been considered a key public good for societies, a pillar of democracy and accountable governance. Well funded public media systems have been found to consistently correlate with ‘healthy democracies’. However, the struggle for public interest media as a resilient sustainable public good is a long-standing one. Decades-long market fragmentation, the digital transformations turning the public sphere into multimodal networked spheres, and more recently, the entering into the mainstream of generative AI (GenAI) systems, and General Purpose AI more broadly, have kept public interest and independent media in a constant state of survival and reinvention.

The current trends in AI development -particularly large GenAI models- risk creating a vicious cycle for journalism and public interest media. These models are trained on high-quality journalistic content but the methods for capturing the data have been associated with exploitative and extractive practices of web scraping, routinely disregarding property rights, licensing, quality, (mis)representation and bias as GenAI models often use these data without providing provenance, context or integrity. Once deployed, they often draw audiences away from the very outlets that produced this content by providing AI-generated summaries and news-like outputs directly to users. As a result, media organisations lose readership, along with the advertising and subscription revenue that sustains independent reporting. With fewer resources, their ability to produce quality journalism declines, which in turn reduces the availability of trustworthy content. This cycle threatens not only the financial viability of public-interest media but also the integrity of the AI systems that depend on their work, and ultimately, the integrity of the available knowledge to the public…(More)”.

Strengthening Public Interest Media in the Age of GenAI

Article by Anjana Ahuja: “…The Genuinely Hard Problems scheme, designed to expose bright young minds each week to the world’s biggest unanswered questions, might usefully chart a course for other institutions to follow. According to Logan McCarty, a Harvard science lecturer and dean of education who is organising the classes with the scheme’s creator, neurobiology professor Jeff Lichtman, the internet and AI have lessened the need for ambitious thinkers to acquire specialised technical skills and internalise vast quantities of information…

Specialist knowledge can now be digitally retrieved in seconds; AI can mine data, construct hypotheses and design experiments. On top of that, a slender scholarly lens can obscure a wider perspective. Today, some of the biggest problems facing humanity, such as climate change and energy scarcity, tend to sprawl across disciplines rather than sit snugly within academic departments.

The primary task of scientists, the Harvard educators believe, is asking the right questions, because AI can answer even difficult queries if they are well-posed; being fearless and willing to fail, with no area of science off-limits; and doing research that is meaningful and has impact, rather than chasing quick wins…(More)”.

For scientists, the right questions are often the hardest

Book by Susan C. Stokes: “Democracies around the world are getting swept up in a wave of democratic erosion. Since the beginning of the twenty-first century, two dozen presidents and prime ministers have attacked their countries’ democratic institutions, violating political norms, aggrandizing their own powers, and often trying to overstay their terms in office.

The Backsliders offers the first general explanation for this wave. Drawing on a wealth of original research, Susan Stokes shows that increasing income inequality, a legacy of late twentieth-century globalization, left some countries especially at risk of backsliding toward autocracy. Left-behind voters were drawn to right-wing ethnonationalist leaders in countries like the United States, India, and Brazil, and to left-wing populist ones in countries like Venezuela, Mexico, and South Africa.

Unlike military leaders who abruptly kill democracies in coups, elected leaders who erode them gradually must maintain some level of public support. They do so by encouraging polarization among citizens and also by trash-talking their democracies: claiming that the institutions they attack are corrupt and incompetent. They tell voters that these institutions should be torn down and replaced by ones under the executive’s control. The Backsliders describes how journalists, judges, NGOs, and opposition leaders can put the brakes on democratic erosion, and how voters can do so through political engagement and the power of the ballot box…(More)”.

The Backsliders: Why Leaders Undermine Their Own Democracies

Report by Careful Industries: “…discusses what we learnt about how local communities and everyday publics make sense of data-intensive and AI-based technologies in their everyday environments.

Through engagements with participants in four locations across the UK and at one site in Australia, our research found that there is a persistent perception that government discourse on the societal benefits of AI is disconnected from the needs of local communities in the urban environments where AI innovation takes place.

The report reflects on future opportunities for public participation in AI governance and offers recommendations aiming to grow public trust and deliver better outcomes…(More)”.

AI in the street: Lessons from everyday encounters with AI innovation

European Union: “The strategy identifies three priority areas for action based on:

  1. Scaling up access to data for AI to ensure our businesses have access to high-quality data needed for innovation
  2. Streamlining data rules to give legal certainty to businesses and reduce compliance costs
  3. Safeguarding the EU’s data sovereignty to strengthen our global position on international data flows

Scaling up access to data for AI

Flagship initiatives to address data bottlenecks:

  • Launch the first data labs to scale up data availability and create links between data spaces and AI ecosystems – they will pool both private and public resources to make high-quality sectoral data available to companies, including SMEs, and researchers using AI and provide relevant data services for AI-driven innovation
  • Scale up common European data spaces, supported by ongoing EU investment of around EUR 100 million, creating new data spaces across key sectors, including a defence data space.
  • Explore horizontal enablers to boost the entire data economy. In particular, expanding high-value datasets under the Open Data Directive, making 30 million digitised cultural objects available for AI training, boosting the use of synthetic data and the EU’s production output…(More)”.
European Data Union Strategy

Paper by Itziar Moreno and Gorka Espiau: “This paper explores the concept of adaptive governance as a critical approach to addressing complex societal challenges. These multifaceted issues, often termed “wicked problems“, require experimental and collaborative solutions beyond the capacity of traditional governance systems. The paper identifies core capabilities of adaptive governance such as ecosystem visualisation, real-time listening to social perceptions, collective deliberation, and co-creation through experimentation portfolios. Additionally, it highlights the transformative potential of high-performance computing and artificial intelligence (AI) in managing complex societal data and enhancing anticipatory governance…(More)”.

Adaptive governance: new technological infrastructures to address complex societal challenges

Paper by Anne Mollen: “The widespread adoption of generative artificial intelligence (AI) has led to struggles on a global scale by individual and collective actors trying to secure their autonomy with reference to generative AI. There are several examples of how generative AI impacts the ability of individuals and collectives to self-govern and exercise their free will: for instance, training data copyright violations, cultural misrepresentations, precarious working conditions of data workers, and the environmental and social justice implications of generative AI development. Based on discussions from various fields, including machine learning, AI ethics, and critical data studies, this article presents how current struggles in generative AI relate to matters of autonomy, sovereignty, and self-determination. It specifically reflects on autonomy in relation to generative AI training data, accountability, and market concentration as well as social and environmental justice. Given that these struggles over autonomy significantly relate to the materiality of generative AI, the article proposes digital self-determination and an infrastructural perspective as an analytical concept for a multi-actor, process-oriented, and situated contextual analysis of how autonomy implications manifest in generative AI infrastructures…(More)”.

Struggling with generative AI: Digital self-determination along infrastructures of automation

An excerpt from You Must Become an Algorithmic Problem on the internet’s social contract by Jose Marichal: “In our increasingly digital world, algorithmic models take every typed word or gesture (likes), eye movement, or swipe and breaks them down into either a node (thing) or an edge (attribute), which is placed into a database. This age of incessant collecting and analysing of our digital life is what I call an algorithmic age. In the algorithmic age, the priority is to create products that can predict our future behaviour. Prior to the 2010s, prediction was important, but understanding ourselves and other humans was the priority. We have moved into a regime where data is collected not simply to understand humans for marketing or surveillance purposes, but to create artificial replicas of human thought.

Research and lived experiences increasingly show that most people are not ‘swimming against the data tide’. They are content to accept a world of algorithmic classification despite its obvious harms because it gives them a (false) promise of comfort and security. We continue to be glued to our devices, increasingly using social media platforms as the foundation of our information diets. A 2024 Pew study found that 86 percent of users got their news from digital devices, and a growing number (54 percent) sometimes or often get their news from social media platforms. On social media sites popular with young people, 40 percent of Instagram users and 52 percent of TikTok users regularly get their news from each platform (St Aubin and Liedke 2024a). If we are under the throes of algorithmic overlords, we are not acting like it.

For this reason, we should think of our relationship to algorithms through the lens of contract theory. The concept of a social contract is a core element of political theory. Political theorists have used it to justify why individuals should form allegiances to a particular political system. It is a thought experiment designed to illustrate a relationship, one that cannot possibly be universal in practice since individuals have different reasons for their allegiance to a state. Nonetheless, it is one that provides legitimacy for state power. The three most prominent applications of contract theory come from Locke, Rousseau, and Hobbes, who posit that rational actors will willingly give up their theoretical position in a ‘state of nature’ either for protection of the self (Hobbes 1967 [1651]) or for an increased preservation of rights (Locke 1996). In Rousseau’s (1920 [1762]) case, leaving the state of nature is a fact and the only way to restore a sense of meaning and an escape from the judgement and status consciousness of modernity is to submit to your political community – the general will. In each case, the social contract justifies adherence to a political system. The system will either protect your physical person (Hobbes 1967 [1651]), preserve your natural rights (Locke 1996 [1689]), or provide you with meaning (Rousseau 1920 [1762])…(More)”

Breaking the Algorithmic Contract

Book by César A. Hidalgo: “We all understand that knowledge shapes the fate of business and the growth of nations, but few of us are aware of the principles that govern its motion. The Infinite Alphabet unravels the laws describing the growth and diffusion of knowledge by taking you from a failed attempt to build a city of knowledge in Ecuador to the growth of China’s innovation economy. Through dozens of stories, you will learn why aircraft manufacturers in Italy began manufacturing scooters after the Second World War and how migrants like Samuel Slater shaped the industrial fabric of the United States.

Knowledge is the secret to the wealth of nations. But to understand it, we must accept that it is not a single thing, but an ever-growing tapestry of unique ideas, experiences and received wisdom. An Infinite Alphabet that we are only beginning to fathom.

César A. Hidalgo, a world-renowned scholar for his work on economic complexity, will walk you through the “three laws” and the many principles that govern how knowledge grows, moves, and decays. By the end of this journey, you will understand why knowledge grows exponentially in the electronics industry and what mechanisms govern its diffusion across geographic borders, social networks, and professional boundaries.

Together these principles will teach you how knowledge shapes the world…(More)”.

The Infinite Alphabet

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