Search engines are not neutral, and their results often contain inherent bias, yet their usage is deeply interwoven into our daily lives. In 2018, Professor Safiya Umoja Noble published Algorithms of Oppression: How Search Engines Reinforce Racism, challenging the idea of search engines' benevolence. She writes, "The public generally trusts information found in search engines. Yet much of the content surfaced in a web search in a commercial search engine is linked to paid advertising, which in part helps drive it to the top of the page rank, and searchers are not typically clear about the distinctions between 'real' information and advertising (p.38)."
An algorithm is a set of rules or instructions used to solve a problem or perform a task. Computer algorithms designed to make predictions and answer questions are called automated decision systems.
Algorithms are used to:
What is Algorithmic Bias and Why Does it Matter?
Algorithmic bias occurs when an algorithmic decision creates unfair outcomes that unjustifiably and arbitrarily privilege certain groups over others. This matters because algorithms act as gatekeepers to economic opportunity. Companies and our public institutions use algorithms to decide who gets access to affordable credit, jobs, education, government resources, health care and investment.
Source: Algorithmic Bias Explained: How Automated Decision-Making Becomes Automated Discrimination
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