Discriminating Data : Correlation, Neighborhoods, and the New Politics of Recognition

Discriminating Data : Correlation, Neighborhoods, and the New Politics of Recognition

Discriminating Data : Correlation, Neighborhoods, and the New Politics of Recognition

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Discriminating Data

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Discriminating Data : Correlation, Neighborhoods, and the New Politics of Recognition

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How big data and machine learning encode discrimination and create agitated clusters of comforting rage. In Discriminating Data, Wendy Hui Kyong Chun reveals how polarization is a goal-not an error-within big data and machine learning.These methods, she argues, encode segregation, eugenics, and identity politics through their default assumptions and conditions.Correlation, which grounds big data’s predictive potential, stems from twentieth-century eugenic attempts to “breed” a better future.Recommender systems foster angry clusters of sameness through homophily.Users are “trained” to become authentically predictable via a politics and technology of recognition.Machine learning and data analytics thus seek to disrupt the future by making disruption impossible. Chun, who has a background in systems design engineering as well as media studies and cultural theory, explains that although machine learning algorithms may not officially include race as a category, they embed whiteness as a def
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