Feeding the Machine
The Hidden Human Labour Powering AI
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Description
Feeding the Machine
examines the latest global technology through the eyes of the people who produce it:
this is the story of the army of underpaid and exploited workers powering artificial intelligence
[A] call to arms to take control over our digital futures: build worker power, hold big tech accountable, and create a better understanding of how these systems work
Feeding the Machine
may just be the most important book to be written in the current fever of AI publishing. It shines a light into the darkest corners of this 'revolution', revealing the enormous human cost behind the giant servers and grinding labour farms that exploit and abuse the human spirit in order to provide a technology that itself exploits and abuses the human spirit. I urge anyone who uses, harnesses or leverages AI to read this and consider. What an important book
I had no idea of the dark, tangled world of human exploitation and corporate greed that is fuelling the growth of AI. Here we meet people working impossible hours for pitiful wages - just so we can get our orders a couple of hours earlier, while some billionaire gets richer. If you think - as I once did - that the internet is a kind of 'free lunch' you need to read this extraordinary and essential book
The darker side of the shiny AI era is the subject of
Feeding the Machine
. . . The authors delve into seven archetypal jobs in the AI supply chain
James Muldoon
,
Mark Graham
and
Callum Cant
work together at Fairwork, a project established to highlight the best and worst examples of how new technologies are being used in the workplace.
James Muldoon
is a Reader in Management at the University of Essex, a Research Associate at the University of Oxford and the Head of Digital Research at the Autonomy think tank. His research examines how modern technologies such as artificial intelligence and digital platforms can create public value and serve the common good.
Mark Graham
is Director of Fairwork and Professor at the Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford. As an internet geographer, Mark studied the growth of a global digital labour market since the first arrival of submarine internet cables in Kenya in 2009. He has also written for publications including
Wired
and the
Guardian
.
Callum Cant
is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Essex Business School, where his research focuses on work, technology, and the crises of the 21st century. He has written for publications including the
New Internationalist
and
Vice News
. He edits
Notes from Below
, a journal of worker writing.