CXI was created to proliferate the ideals of responsible participant design, data agency and metrics of economic prosperity prioritizing people and the planet over profit and productivity.
A Vision for Responsible Participant Design
The IEEE Standards Association (IEEE SA) and MIT have joined forces to launch a global Council on Extended Intelligence (CXI) composed of individuals who agree on the following:
One of the most powerful narratives of modern times is the story of scientific and technological progress. While our future will undoubtedly be shaped by the use of existing and emerging technologies – in particular, of autonomous and intelligent systems (A/IS) – there is no guarantee that progress defined by “the next” is beneficial. Growth for humanity’s future should not be defined by reductionist ideas of speed or size alone but as the holistic evolution of our species in positive alignment with the environmental and other systems comprising the modern algorithmic world.
We believe all systems must be responsibly created to best utilize science and technology for tangible social and ethical progress. Individuals, businesses and communities involved in the development and deployment of autonomous and intelligent technologies should mitigate predictable risks at the inception and design phase and not as an afterthought. This will help ensure these systems are created in such a way that their outcomes are beneficial to society, culture and the environment.
Autonomous and intelligent technologies also need to be created via participatory design, where systems thinking can help us avoid repeating past failures stemming from attempts to control and govern the complex-adaptive systems we are part of. Responsible living with or in the systems we are part of requires an awareness of the constrictive paradigms we operate in today. Our future practices will be shaped by our individual and collective imaginations and by the stories we tell about who we are and what we desire, for ourselves and the societies in which we live.
These stories must move beyond the “us versus them” media mentality pitting humans against machines. Autonomous and intelligent technologies have the potential to enhance our personal and social skills; they are much more fully integrated and less discrete than the term “artificial intelligence” implies. And while this process may enlarge our cognitive intelligence or make certain individuals or groups more powerful, it does not necessarily make our systems more stable or socially beneficial.
This is why:
“The most critical question in the time of so-called “intelligent” technologies and systems is how to use them in order to reinvigorate, and not to undermine human autonomy, agency and self-determination at an individual and – most importantly – at a collective level. This desire is the driving force behind the creation of the global Council on Extended Intelligence.”
– Konstantinos Karachalios
We cannot create sound governance for autonomous and intelligent systems in the Algorithmic Age while utilizing reductionist methodologies. By proliferating the ideals of responsible participant design, data symmetry and metrics of economic prosperity prioritizing people and the planet over profit and productivity, The Council on Extended Intelligence will work to transform reductionist thinking of the past to prepare for a flourishing future.
Three Priority Areas to Fulfill Our Vision
The Council on Extended Intelligence has identified three major priority areas[2] that urgently need a concerted global effort by broad societal constituencies in order to:
1 – Build a new narrative for intelligent and autonomous technologies inspired by principles of systems dynamics and design.
“Extended Intelligence” is based on the hypothesis that intelligence, ideas, analysis and action are not formed in any one individual collection of neurons or code. By leveraging principles of systems dynamics and design, developers can guide the integration of increasingly powerful algorithms and machines into present and future systems in a way that increases their robustness and prevents the reinforcement of negative systemic biases. This would align with the flourishing of all humans involved in such systems or affected by them and with the preservation of our natural environment.
2 – Reclaim our digital identity in the algorithmic age
Business models based on tracking behavior and using outdated modes of consent are compounded by the appetites of states, industries and agencies for all data that may be gathered. Such widespread surveillance, combined with social-engineering techniques, has eroded trust and can ultimately lead to authoritarianism and the proliferation of systems that reinforce systemic biases rather than correct them. The Council is actively working against this paradigm – in which people have no agency over their identity and their data – as being fundamentally at odds with an open and free society.
3 – Rethink our metrics for success
Although very widely used, concepts of exponential growth and productivity such as the gross domestic product (GDP) index are insufficient to holistically measure societal prosperity. What we measure reflects the paradigm that governs setting goals and measuring success. Current indexes prioritizing short-term gains tend therefore to reinforce economic and societal models of the Industrial Revolution era. Under current circumstances, progress in autonomous and intelligent technologies is likely to further reinforce the dynamics of such short-term returns-oriented systems, thus increasing inequality and social tensions and further concentrating wealth and power among an ever-smaller class of privileged people.
[2] Based on a submission by Konstantinos Karachalios to the Conference “AI, Intelligent Machines, Smart Policies”. 26-27 October 2017. OECD, Paris
Our Next Steps
To proliferate the ideals of responsible participant design, data agency, and metrics of economic prosperity prioritizing people and the planet over profit and productivity CXI will pursue the following projects:
Extended Intelligence
Awareness and Action
This project will focus on creating an introduction to Extended Intelligence and Participatory Design. To avoid reductionism, these articles, webinars, and curriculum will help organizations build a new narrative for autonomous and intelligent technologies inspired by principles of systems dynamics and design.
Digital Identity
Democracy by Design
This project will create a Data Policy template for governments and organizations to utilize in helping individuals and society reclaim their digital identity in the algorithmic age. Realizing the difficulties with creating a “one-size-fits-all” global solution, CXI will focus on providing general best practices for evolved identity recommendations (Personal Identification Management Systems, Blockchain, etc.) that can be adapted based on country-specific and other contextual considerations.
Enlightened Indicators
Measuring What’s Good Versus Simply Growth
This project will create a Wellbeing Indicator template for governments and organizations to utilize in helping society redefine and reprioritize genuine metrics of prosperity to benefit us all. CXI will focus on providing general recommendations and best practices based on established indicators (such as the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Better Life Index and United Nations Sustainable Development Goals) for their template.
Report
The Case for Extended Intelligence
Technological Advancement in Service of People and Planet
The Case for Extended Intelligence represents the first manifestation of the work of The Council on Extended Intelligence. Featuring the insights of CXI’s Project Teams and Membership working since June of 2018, the report frames how CXI initially believes Extended Intelligence can be fully realized, measured and evaluated:
1. Extended Intelligence. This section provides the initial basis for our philosophical approach, along with the pragmatic framing of Extended Intelligence as developed by CXI Members. The pragmatic framing is what will be utilized for the three “CXI in Action” programs taking place in 2019.
2. Digital Agency and Democracy. This section provides a background and framing on the need for human “digital twins” that mirror our individual and collective values. When accessible and controllable by individuals, truly participatory Extended Intelligence can exist.
3. Developing Enlightened Indicators of Sustainable Human Progress. This section provides an introduction to emerging technology enabled approaches to measuring human progress beyond purely economic metrics. The benefits of Extended Intelligence must be measured in worth not exclusively limited to material wealth.
Download Now
The Case for Extended Intelligence is being launched as a Request For Input (RFI) via survey questions reflected throughout the report. All are welcome to participate in the survey and responses will be featured in CXI work to come later in 2019.
Our Members
Greg Adamson – Associate Professor, University of Melbourne
Micah Altman – Director of Research, MIT Libraries. Head Scientist, Program on Information Science
Azeem Azhar – Founder & Investor, Exponential View
Chelsea Barabas – MIT Media Lab, Research Scientist
Karen Bartleson – IEEE President 2017
Chris Bavitz – Harvard Law School, WilmerHale Clinical Professor of Law
Sophia Adams Bhatti – The Law Society, Director of Legal and Regulatory Policy, UK
Ryan Budish – Harvard University, Assistant Research Director, Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society
Joy Buolamwini – MIT Media Lab, Graduate Researcher
Craig Campbell – Assistant Director for Policy & Operations at the Mayor’s Office of Data Analytics
Anne Carblanc – Head of OECD Division on Digital Economy Policy
Vint Cerf – Google, Internet Pioneer (VP)
Raja Chatila – Professor, Sorbonne Université – Paris & Chair, The IEEE Global Initiative on Ethics of Autonomous and Intelligent Systems
Kade Crockford – American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts, Director, Technology for Liberty Program
Paul R. Daugherty – Accenture, Chief Technology & Innovation Officer
Karthik Dinakar – MIT Media Lab, Research Scientist
Katryna Dow – Meeco, CEO & Founder
Jim Dratwa – European Commission & Woodrow Wilson Center
Nicolas Economou – Chief executive, H5; co-chair, Law Committee, IEEE Global Initiative on Ethics of Autonomous and Intelligent Systems
Riane Eisler – Center for Partnership Studies, President
Arisa Ema – Assistant Professor, Policy Alternatives Research Institute, University of Tokyo & Visiting Researcher, RIKEN Center for Advanced Intelligence Project
Daniel Faggella – CEO, Emerj Artificial Intelligence Research
Ling Fan – Founder & CEO, Tezign.com, Founding Director, Tongji University Design A.I. Laboratory
Kay Firth-Butterfield – World Economic Forum, Head, Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning at World Economic Forum
Mahmud Farooque – Clinical Associate Professor, School for the Future of Innovation in Society; Associate Director, Consortium for Science, Policy & Outcomes-DC; Arizona State University
Urs Gasser – Executive Director of the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University and a Professor of Practice at Harvard Law School
Lord Anthony Giddens – UK House of Lords, Member
Amandeep S. Gill – Executive Director, Secretariat of UNSG High Level Panel on Digital Cooperation
D. Fox Harrell – Professor of Digital Media and AI, MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) and Comparative Media Studies Program; Director, MIT Center for Advanced Virtuality
John C. Havens – Executive Director, CXI & The IEEE Global A/IS Ethics Initiative
Erica Haybron – External Partnerships Liaison, Accenture Responsible AI
Cesar A. Hidalgo – MIT Media Lab, Director, Collective Learning Group
Cyrus Hodes – Advisor to the Minister of Artificial Intelligence (UAE) and co-founder AI Initiative @ The Future Society
Joichi Ito
Eva Kaili – European Parliament, Member of the European Parliament, Head of the Hellenic Delegation for the Progressive Alliance of S&D, Chair Scientific Foresight Unit STOA, Chair EU-NATO Delegation
Konstantinos Karachalios – Managing Director, IEEE Standards Association
Anja Kaspersen – Director, Intrapreneur, Storyteller, Techplomat
Ibram X. Kendi – Professor and Director, The Antiracist Research & Policy Center, American University
Baroness Beeban Kidron – Member of House of Lords, Chair 5Rights Foundation
Benjamin Koo – Founder of Extreme Learning Process (XLP), Tsinghua University
Varun Krovi – Deputy Chief of Staff & Legislative Director, U.S. House of Representatives
Eileen Lach – IEEE Global Initiative, Member, Executive Committee
Lawrence Lessig– Harvard Law School, Roy L. Furman Professor of Law and Leadership
Steve Mann – Chairman and CEO, MannLab.com
Vikash Mansinghka – MIT Probabilistic Computing Project, Principal Investigator
Karren McCabe – Senior Director, Public Affairs and Marketing, IEEE Standards Association
Nicolas Miaihe – Co Founder & President, The Future Society; Senior Visiting Research Fellow, Program on Science Technology & Society, Harvard Kennedy School of Government
Katina Michael – Professor, School for the Future of Innovation in Society and School of Computing, Informatics and Decision Systems Engineering. Director, Engineering, Policy & Society, Arizona State University. Founding editor of IEEE Transactions on Technology and Society.
Martha Minow – Harvard Law School, Carter Professor of General Jurisprudence
Margarita Mora – Community partnerships, Nia Tero / CI / Directors Fellow MIT Media Lab
Catelijne Muller – Member of the EU High Level Expert Group on Artificial Intelligence
Neha Narula – Director, Digital Currency Initiative, MIT Media Lab
Paul Nemitz – European Commission, Principal Adviser
Dr. Clara Neppel – Senior Director, IEEE European Business Operations
Takeo Nishikata – MIT Media Lab, Visiting Scientist, NRI
Neri Oxman – MIT Media Lab, Sony Corporation Career Development Professor and Associate Professor of Media Arts and Sciences
Eleonore Pauwels – Research Fellow on Emerging Cybertechnologies, United Nations University and Director of the AI Lab, Wilson Center
Jonnie Penn – Harvard University, Affiliate, Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society
Alex “Sandy” Pentland – MIT Media Lab, Director, Human Dynamics Group
Rosalind Picard – MIT Media Lab, Founder and Director, Affective Computing Research Group
Edson Prestes – Professor, Informatics Institute, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
Tenzin Priyadarshi – MIT Media Lab, Director, Ethics Initiative
Iyad Rahwan – MIT Media Lab, Associate Professor
Kate Raworth – Senior Visiting Research Associate, Environmental Change Institute, Oxford University
Julia Reda – Member of the European Parliament, Access to Knowledge Advocate
Sara Rendtorff-Smith – MIT Media Lab, Research Scientist & MIT Probabilistic Computing Project, Applied Research Lead for Data-driven Governance and AI Policy
Marc Rosen – Producer at Village Roadshow (studio that produced READY PLAYER ONE, MAD MAX, THE MATRIX); First executive in LA at Heyday Films (HARRY POTTER, GRAVITY) having produced deals in film and TV at Warner Bros, Paramount, and CBS. Recently finished the series SENSE8 on Netflix with the Wachowskis.
Jeffrey Sachs – The Center for Sustainable Development, Director
Ken Sakamura – Dean, INIAD, Toyo University, Chair, TRON Forum
Fr. Eric Salobir – Optic Technology, President
Natalie Saltiel – Program Manager, Ethics & Governance of AI Fund
Anjali Sastry – MIT Sloan School of Management, Senior Lecturer
Ali Shah – BBC, Head of Emerging Technology and Strategic Direction
Alpesh Shah – Sr. Director, Global Business Strategy & Intelligence, IEEE Standards Association
Kevin Slavin – Founding CTO and Artistic Advisor, The Shed / Research Affiliate and Founder, Playful Systems Group, MIT Media Lab
Sarah Spiekermann – Vienna University of Economics and Business, Professor for Information Systems
Dr. Elisabeth Stampfl-Blaha – Austrian Standards, Standardization Strategist
Audrey Tang – Digital Minister, Taiwan
Hruy Tsegaye – Founder, iCog Labs
Andre Uhl – Harvard University, Ph.D. Candidate
Andrew Updegrove – Gesmer Updegrove LLP, Partner
Stephen Welby – IEEE, Executive Director and Chief Operating Officer
Danielle Wood – MIT Media Lab, Director of the Space Enabled Research Group
Don Wright – President IEEE Standards Association 2016-2018
Lan Xue – Dean of School of Public Policy and Management, Tsinghua University
Jonathan Zittrain – Harvard Law School, George Bemis Professor of International Law
Hear from Our Members
Lawrence Lessig – Harvard Law School, Roy L. Furman professor of Law and Leadership >>
Paul Nemitz – European Commission, Principal Adviser >>
Fr. Eric Salobir – Optic Technology, President >>
John C. Havens – Executive Director, CXI >>
Future CXI Videos Coming Soon: Sarah Spiekermann, Danielle Wood and more TBD.
Press
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EEE, the world’s largest technical professional organization dedicated to advancing technology for humanity, and the IEEE Standards Association (IEEE SA) today announced the launch of the first edition of Ethically Aligned Design (EAD1e), “A Vision for Prioritizing Human Well-being with Autonomous and Intelligent Systems.” EAD1e is available from The IEEE Global Initiative on Ethics of Autonomous and Intelligent Systems, which produced the document…
MIT and IEEE Partner to Advance Extended Intelligence
Innovation is entering a new stage of maturity as a range of academic and industry organizations ponder the impacts of autonomous and intelligent systems. There’s a lot of discussion about autonomous and intelligent systems these days, but few realize the impact those technologies will soon have on technology design and use. Already, formal and informal groups are debating the potential impacts of AI systems with the goal of articulating values, principles, and best practices that help guide the responsible design and use of such systems.
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SIXTY-TWO YEARS AGO this summer, Dartmouth professor John McCarthy coined the term artificial intelligence. Joi Ito, director of MIT’s Media Lab, has come to think it’s unhelpful. Talk of AI has become hard to avoid due to surging investment from companies hoping to profit from advances in machine learning. Ito believes the term has also become tainted by the assumption that humans and machines must be in opposition—think debates about jobs stolen by robots, or superintelligence threatening humanity…
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