Oh my god. I had no idea:
Medicaid: 73 million low-income people are exposed to AI-related decision-making
SNAP: 42 million low-income people are exposed to AI-related decision-making
Social Security disability benefits: About 13.8 million people are exposed to AI-related decision-making
Medicaid: 73 million low-income people are exposed to AI-related decision-making
SNAP: 42 million low-income people are exposed to AI-related decision-making
Social Security disability benefits: About 13.8 million people are exposed to AI-related decision-making
Reposted from
Dr Abeba Birhane
"92 million low-income people in the U.S. states—everyone whose income is less than 200 percent of the federal poverty line—have some basic aspect of their lives decided by AI"
www.techtonicjustice.org/reports/ines...
this is a damning report
www.techtonicjustice.org/reports/ines...
this is a damning report
Comments
Nope, would not be a fan.
Words have meanings, and this study, for better or worse, is explicitly misrepresenting the meaning of the term "AI" to encompass things that are not "AI".
That's all I'm saying.
I get it now. AI scares me silly.
https://gofund.me/7f82b97f
This is not a functioning country, it's a casino
“Overwhelm applicants: require excessive documentation, create confusing submission portals, enforce strict deadlines, demand multiple in-person verifications, and vague rejection notices”
An AI would review it first and toss out the application the second it saw things like my medical history.
Having a disability on one's medical record destroys opportunities in an AI automated job marketplace.
https://www.propublica.org/article/unitedhealth-mental-health-care-denied-illegal-algorithm#:~:text=United%20used%20an%20algorithm%20system,to%20a%20patchwork%20of%20regulation.