I don't really appreciate the "victim" tones of this presentation. But i do agree that technology can be problematic in some cases. Of course the unconditioned trust in technology is a problem and it is correct to point it out but i don't think this kind of technologies are the right target to blame. They reflect human biases and prejudices and make them more evident. The problem is the actual society and where and when human-data-based-technology are used
You haven't made any points that Dr. Noble didn't already cover thoroughly in her talk. If in fact there are "victim" tones in this presentation, perhaps consider that the victims of systemic societal racism have a right to be angry about what they've experienced, and they have a right to talk about it, and they have a right to become educators and doctors and advocate for solutions. Ask yourself why you don't "appreciate" that. What I see and hear in this talk is a highly educated woman presenting the truth about the problem of systemic racism in tech.
I don't really appreciate the "victim" tones of this presentation. But i do agree that technology can be problematic in some cases.
Of course the unconditioned trust in technology is a problem and it is correct to point it out but i don't think this kind of technologies are the right target to blame.
They reflect human biases and prejudices and make them more evident. The problem is the actual society and where and when human-data-based-technology are used
You haven't made any points that Dr. Noble didn't already cover thoroughly in her talk.
If in fact there are "victim" tones in this presentation, perhaps consider that the victims of systemic societal racism have a right to be angry about what they've experienced, and they have a right to talk about it, and they have a right to become educators and doctors and advocate for solutions.
Ask yourself why you don't "appreciate" that.
What I see and hear in this talk is a highly educated woman presenting the truth about the problem of systemic racism in tech.