Tech Program: Is Ethical AI Possible?

Saturday, June 21, 2025

Thinking systematically about the risks of AI requires two lines of thinking. First of all, we have to establish what it is we want and don’t want. Secondly, we then have to find the most effective ways of imposing our preferences.

— Richard E. Susskind

AI (so-called) may be inevitable. Certainly generative AI and other technologies for making associations within large collections of data are here already, and tech cheerleaders push the claim that there’s nothing we can do to stop the tech.

The question, as Humpty Dumpty told us, is Which is to be master. Mr. Dumpty, of course, was presuming that an individual could control language, and we recognize that claim as absurd since we use language within a speech community which no individual controls. Indeed, language may even be beyond the control of its community. But is AI beyond community control?

The intent for this month’s program is that it be a discussion of how individuals can use AI while remaining true to their own ethical codes and how the human community can control AI in order to make it work for the community as a whole. We’ll look at issues in ethics, environmental responsibility, the economy, government, and whatever issues participants bring.

Tech Program: Are You for Real?

Saturday, September 21, 2024

A meeting that never took place, given that Victoria wasn’t born until George Washington had been dead for 19 years.

Ever since the early days of photography, people have manipulated photos to create faked images. Now, digital photography and AI have helped both to make it easier to create fakes and to create more convincing fakes.

In this program we’ll look at some digital tools and some low-tech tips and techniques to help determine whether an image is real or fake.

Using AI Tools

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Saturday, June 15, 2024

Tech Program: Using AI Tools

Screen shot from the beginning of a session with Eliza, an early chatbot that mimicked a Rogerian psychotherapist

Saturday, June 15
12:00 Noon to 1:00 PM
Registration required

Handout from the class

The notion of computer intelligence has been around since even before Alan Turing first described his Imitation Game, and 74 years later we are now seeing many computer applications—generative AI in particular—hyped with claims that they have made AI ready for prime-time.

This program’s focus will be on how to use some of these tools effectively, but doing that will necessarily involve talking about some of their weaknesses and ethical gray areas.