Événements

Algorithmic Discrimination: Reasons & Consequences

ewb-gesellschaft

Philo-Workshop with Yasaman Yousefi & Nora Schleich

Algorithms influence what we see online, how we interact socially, and how we perceive activities or political phenomena.

Artificial Intelligence (AI) relies on algorithms, but not all algorithms are the same. Essentially, an algorithm is a set of instructions guiding a computer to solve problems. In AI, some algorithms enable systems to “learn” and evolve new behaviors.

Algorithms are designed to achieve specific goals, complete tasks, or follow methods. For example, social media platforms use algorithms to predict your interests and determine what content you see most often.

Two key factors shape their impact:

  1. Human intention defines how an algorithm operates.
  2. The data used to train algorithms heavily influences their outcomes.

This raises ethical concerns:

Algorithms can manipulate users by repeatedly promoting certain information, a tactic often seen on social media, in online shopping, or political campaigns. Worse, biases in the data can lead to discriminatory outcomes—amplifying societal inequalities in areas like hiring, loans, or law enforcement.

Many users are unaware of how these systems work or that their design often serves economic or political interests rather than individual well-being.

Addressing the ethics of algorithmic manipulation and discrimination is essential to ensure transparency and fairness in their use. We’d be happy to welcome you to the discussion!

Yasaman Yousefi is a last-year PhD candidate in Law, Science, and Technology (LAST-JD) from the University of Bologna, in collaboration with the University of Luxembourg. She will soon defend her doctoral dissertation The Quest for AI Fairness: Ethical, Legal, and Technical Solutions. Her research takes an interdisciplinary approach to fairness in algorithmic decision-making, bridging ethical, legal, and technical perspectives. Yasaman is now starting a postdoctoral position at the University of Bologna, focusing on the risks of General-Purpose AI systems. She also works as a consultant on the ethical management and legal compliance of AI systems in several EU-funded Horizon projects,collaborating with DEXAI.

With her project, Yasaman Yousefi won the ISA Doctoral Prize for research in algorithmic discrimination. Learn more…

Dëst Event kann als IFEN Formation Continue unerkannt ginn.

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Date:29.04.2025Temps:18:30 jusqu'à 20:00 heureEntrée:freelieu:ErwuesseBildung

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