Artificial Intelligence, Power, and the Cost of Convenience
The Africana Voice
The Africana Voice
Artificial Intelligence, Power, and the Cost of Convenience
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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.

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