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Atlas of AI: Power, Politics, and the Planetary Costs of Artificial Intelligence is a book by Australian academic Kate Crawford. It is based on Crawford's research into the development and labor behind artificial intelligence, as well as AI's impact on the world.
Kate Crawford (born 1974) [1] is a researcher, writer, composer, producer and academic, who studies the social and political implications of artificial intelligence. [2] She is based in New York and works as a principal researcher at Microsoft Research (Social Media Collective), [3] the co-founder and former director of research at the AI Now Institute at NYU, [4] a visiting professor at the ...
Katherine B. Crawford (born 1966), an American historian Katherine Crawford (1970s actress) Kathryn Crawford (1908–1980), or Katherine Crawford, or Kitty Moran, an American actress of the 1920s and 1930s
[4] Writing for Nature, Virginia Dignum gave the book a positive review, favorably comparing it to Kate Crawford's Atlas of AI. [5] In 2021, journalist Ezra Klein had Christian on his podcast, The Ezra Klein Show, writing in The New York Times, "The Alignment Problem is the best book on the key technical and moral questions of A.I. that I’ve ...
B(if)tek was an Australian electronic music duo comprising Kate Crawford and Nicole Skeltys, which formed in Canberra in 1994. They released three albums, Sub-Vocal Theme Park (1996), 2020 (2000) and Frequencies Will Move Together (2003) before disbanding in 2003.
Cindy Crawford is showing off her natural beauty!. The supermodel, 58, shared a photo to Instagram on Sunday, Oct. 27, of herself spending quality time with her daughter Kaia Gerber's dog Milo ...
Flyer for the rally that became Black Friday, saved by Kate Frye and included in Campaigning for the Vote: Kate Parry Frye's Suffrage Diary, edited by Elizabeth Crawford. [1] Purple and green were colors of the movement. [2] Elizabeth Crawford OBE is a British author, historian and dealer in suffrage ephemera.
The book notes that after decades of ideological debate, the slave trade ended in 1834, with compensation payments being paid to slave owners. [2] It describes modern racism in Scotland as a legacy of slavery, and it notes the modern tendency for Scottish people to be more comfortable talking about the Scottish role in slavery abolition rather ...