ΑΙhub.org
 

Radical AI podcast: featuring Abeba Birhane


by
21 July 2020



share this:
Abeba Birhane

Hosted by Dylan Doyle-Burke and Jessie J Smith, Radical AI is a podcast featuring the voices of the future in the field of artificial intelligence ethics. In this episode Jess and Dylan chat to Abeba Birhane about “Robot Rights? Exploring Algorithmic Colonization”.

Robot Rights? Exploring Algorithmic Colonization with Abeba Birhane

Should we grant robots rights? What is moral relationality and how can it be useful for designing machine learning algorithms? What is the algorithmic colonization of Africa and why is it harmful? To answer these questions and more The Radical AI Podcast welcomes Abeba Birhane to the show. Abeba Birhane is a PhD candidate in cognitive science at University College Dublin in the School of Computer Science. She studies the relationships between emerging technologies, personhood and society. Specifically, Abeba explores how technology can shape what it means to be human. Abeba’s work is incredibly interdisciplinary – bridging the fields of cognitive science, psychology, computer science, critical data studies, and philosophy. You can follow Abeba Birhane on Twitter @Abebab. For more of Abeba’s work, check out her website.

Full show notes for this episode can be found at Radical AI.

Listen to the episode below:

About Radical AI:

Hosted by Dylan Doyle-Burke, a PhD student at the University of Denver, and Jessie J Smith, a PhD student at the University of Colorado Boulder, Radical AI is a podcast featuring the voices of the future in the field of Artificial Intelligence Ethics.

Radical AI lifts up people, ideas, and stories that represent the cutting edge in AI, philosophy, and machine learning. In a world where platforms far too often feature the status quo and the usual suspects, Radical AI is a breath of fresh air whose mission is “To create an engaging, professional, educational and accessible platform centering marginalized or otherwise radical voices in industry and the academy for dialogue, collaboration, and debate to co-create the field of Artificial Intelligence Ethics.”

Through interviews with rising stars and experts in the field we boldly engage with the topics that are transforming our world like bias, discrimination, identity, accessibility, privacy, and issues of morality.

To find more information regarding the project, including podcast episode transcripts and show notes, please visit Radical AI.




The Radical AI Podcast




            AIhub is supported by:


Related posts :



Everything you say to an Alexa speaker will now be sent to Amazon

  04 Apr 2025
This change was implemented on 28 March 2025.

End-to-end data-driven weather prediction

  04 Apr 2025
A new AI weather prediction system, developed by a team of researchers, can deliver accurate forecasts.

Interview with Joseph Marvin Imperial: aligning generative AI with technical standards

  02 Apr 2025
Joseph tells us about his PhD research so far and his experience at the AAAI 2025 Doctoral Consortium.

Forthcoming machine learning and AI seminars: April 2025 edition

  01 Apr 2025
A list of free-to-attend AI-related seminars that are scheduled to take place between 1 April and 31 May 2025.

AI can be a powerful tool for scientists. But it can also fuel research misconduct

  31 Mar 2025
While AI is allowing scientists to make technological breakthroughs, there’s also a darker side to the use of AI in science: scientific misconduct is on the rise.
monthly digest

AIhub monthly digest: March 2025 – human-allied AI, differential privacy, and social media microtargeting

  28 Mar 2025
Welcome to our monthly digest, where you can catch up with AI research, events and news from the month past.

AI ring tracks spelled words in American Sign Language

  27 Mar 2025
In its current form, SpellRing could be used to enter text into computers or smartphones via fingerspelling.

How AI images are ‘flattening’ Indigenous cultures – creating a new form of tech colonialism

  26 Mar 2025
AI-generated stock images that claim to depict “Indigenous Australians”, don’t resemble Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.




AIhub is supported by:






©2024 - Association for the Understanding of Artificial Intelligence


 












©2021 - ROBOTS Association