Artificial Intelligence, Power, and the Cost of Convenience
/
Alan Turing once dreamed of a machine that could echo a lost friend. Decades later, students are now able to outsource essays to AI, and governments risk autonomy in the cloud. Joanna Bryson, professor of ethics and technology at the Hertie School in Berlin, tells Steve Mokaya why she isn’t afraid of machines but of the monopolies behind them, and why the cost of convenience may be far higher than we think. All from a conversation in a quiet Berlin courtyard.
Your digital home for stories powering the African diaspora.
Our journalists bring you trusted, independent news about the African Diaspora on africanavoice.com.
Free access — accept cookies
We and our partners use cookies to improve your experience. Cookies help us personalize content, measure engagement, show relevant ads, and generate revenue to support the cost of producing news content. Accepting cookies gives you free access. You can change this anytime by refusing to accept cookies and not accessing our content. You can also subscribe for an ad-free experience. Click here to see our Privacy Policy.
Subscribe — full access, no advertising cookies
A subscription offers unlimited access across devices, removes advertising cookies, supports independent reporting, and strengthens your privacy settings.
With your consent, we and our partners use cookies to store and process information, including IP addresses and identifiers. Some partners rely on legitimate interest. You may withdraw consent or object by declining cookies.
Support Independent journalism. Subscribe to The Africana Voice and enjoy an ad-free experience
LEAVE A COMMENT
You must be logged in to post a comment.