Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Casilli, Antonio A., Tubaro, Paola, Cornet, Maxime, Ludec, Clément Le, Torres-Cierpe, Juana, Braz, Matheus Viana
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.14230
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866914125479673856
author Casilli, Antonio A.
Tubaro, Paola
Cornet, Maxime
Ludec, Clément Le
Torres-Cierpe, Juana
Braz, Matheus Viana
author_facet Casilli, Antonio A.
Tubaro, Paola
Cornet, Maxime
Ludec, Clément Le
Torres-Cierpe, Juana
Braz, Matheus Viana
contents Labor plays a major, albeit largely unrecognized role in the development of artificial intelligence. Machine learning algorithms are predicated on data-intensive processes that rely on humans to execute repetitive and difficult-to-automate, but no less essential, tasks such as labeling images, sorting items in lists, recording voice samples, and transcribing audio files. Online platforms and networks of subcontractors recruit data workers to execute such tasks in the shadow of AI production, often in lower-income countries with long-standing traditions of informality and lessregulated labor markets. This study unveils the resulting complexities by comparing the working conditions and the profiles of data workers in Venezuela, Brazil, Madagascar, and as an example of a richer country, France. By leveraging original data collected over the years 2018-2023 via a mixed-method design, we highlight how the cross-country supply chains that link data workers to core AI production sites are reminiscent of colonial relationships, maintain historical economic dependencies, and generate inequalities that compound with those inherited from the past. The results also point to the importance of less-researched, non-English speaking countries to understand key features of the production of AI solutions at planetary scale.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2410_14230
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Global Inequalities in the Production of Artificial Intelligence: A Four-Country Study on Data Work
Casilli, Antonio A.
Tubaro, Paola
Cornet, Maxime
Ludec, Clément Le
Torres-Cierpe, Juana
Braz, Matheus Viana
Computers and Society
Labor plays a major, albeit largely unrecognized role in the development of artificial intelligence. Machine learning algorithms are predicated on data-intensive processes that rely on humans to execute repetitive and difficult-to-automate, but no less essential, tasks such as labeling images, sorting items in lists, recording voice samples, and transcribing audio files. Online platforms and networks of subcontractors recruit data workers to execute such tasks in the shadow of AI production, often in lower-income countries with long-standing traditions of informality and lessregulated labor markets. This study unveils the resulting complexities by comparing the working conditions and the profiles of data workers in Venezuela, Brazil, Madagascar, and as an example of a richer country, France. By leveraging original data collected over the years 2018-2023 via a mixed-method design, we highlight how the cross-country supply chains that link data workers to core AI production sites are reminiscent of colonial relationships, maintain historical economic dependencies, and generate inequalities that compound with those inherited from the past. The results also point to the importance of less-researched, non-English speaking countries to understand key features of the production of AI solutions at planetary scale.
title Global Inequalities in the Production of Artificial Intelligence: A Four-Country Study on Data Work
topic Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.14230