Summary: How to correct, shift or expose harms in computational infrastructures?
Summary: How to correct, shift or expose harms in computational infrastructures?
<!-- > Our concern is that the computational infrastructures are far more than a technological ecosystem alone. Like all infrastructure, they incentivize us to embed their values, and therewith much of their politics in the lower layers of the technology stack. Comparable to the cables and control equipment in electrical networks that determine what can and cannot be connected to it, computational infrastructures embed constraints on what can and cannot be built on top of it, as well as what is accessible to those needing to audit or validate its functionality.[^progammableinfrastructures] -->
<!-- What are computational infrastructures? -->
<!-- What are computational infrastructures? -->
<!-- Who designs them? What values do they embed into digital systems? -->
<!-- Who designs them? What values do they embed into digital systems? -->
@ -21,6 +19,5 @@ We will introduce the work of Seda Gürses and dive with her into the following
<!-- Her work focuses on privacy enhancing and protective optimization technologies (PETs and POTs), privacy engineering, as well as questions around software infrastructures, social justice and political economy as they intersect with computer science. -->
<!-- Her work focuses on privacy enhancing and protective optimization technologies (PETs and POTs), privacy engineering, as well as questions around software infrastructures, social justice and political economy as they intersect with computer science. -->
<!-- We propose Protective Optimization Technologies (POTs). POTs, provide means for affected parties to address the negative impacts of systems in the environment, expanding avenues for political con- testation. POTs intervene from outside the system, do not require service providers to cooperate, and can serve to correct, shift, or expose harms that systems impose on populations and their environments. We illustrate the potential and limitations of POTs in two case studies: countering road congestion caused by traffic-beating applications, and recalibrating credit scoring for loan applicants. -->
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content/Section 2 - Harm in Computational Infrastructures/2-question-1.md → content/Section 2 - Harm in Computational Infrastructures/2-introduction-seda.md
Title: Question 1: What are computational infrastructures?
Title: Introduction: Seda Gürses
Slug: 02-s2-question-1
Slug: 01-s2-introduction
Date: 2020-11-01 12:01
Date: 2020-11-01 12:01
Summary: A video contribution by Seda Gürses.
Summary: Seda Gürses, computational infrastructures & *POTs (Protective Optimization Technologies)*
The work of Seda Gürses provides us with handles to XXX [unpack, look closer into, study, explore] computational infrastructures. Throughout her work she has questioned the notion of "fair" technologies, the limits of such practices and who is involved in reviewing their impact. An important factor in her work is to approach computational infrastructures as systems that are far more than a technological ecosystems alone.
The work of Seda Gürses provides us with handles to XXX [unpack, look closer into, study, explore] computational infrastructures. Throughout her work she has questioned the notion of "fair" technologies, the limits of such practices and who is involved in reviewing their impact. An important factor in her work is to approach computational infrastructures as systems that are far more than a technological ecosystems alone.
@ -27,10 +27,6 @@ Seda is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Multi-Actor System
<!-- And how to possibly correct, shift or expose these harms? -->
<!-- And how to possibly correct, shift or expose these harms? -->
@ -38,3 +34,4 @@ Seda is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Multi-Actor System
[^progammableinfrastructures]: Seda Gürses, Roel Dobbe, Martha Poon "Seminar on Programmable Infrastructures" (2020). <https://www.tudelft.nl/tbm/programmable-infrastructures/>
[^progammableinfrastructures]: Seda Gürses, Roel Dobbe, Martha Poon "Seminar on Programmable Infrastructures" (2020). <https://www.tudelft.nl/tbm/programmable-infrastructures/>
[^titipi]: Miriyam Aouragh, Seda Gürses, Femke Snelting, Helen Pritchard "The Institute for Technology in the Public Interest" (accessed on 2020) <http://titipi.org/>
[^titipi]: Miriyam Aouragh, Seda Gürses, Femke Snelting, Helen Pritchard "The Institute for Technology in the Public Interest" (accessed on 2020) <http://titipi.org/>
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content/Section 2 - Harm in Computational Infrastructures/3-question-1.md