v3rgEz writes: Every day government decisions from bus routes to policing used to be based on limited information and human judgment. Governments now use the ability to collect and analyze hundreds of data points everyday to automate many of their decisions.

The non-profit MuckRock, in partnership with Rutgers Institute for Information Policy and Law, has a database detailing how local governments across the U.S. are adopting algorithmic decision making, as well as an open collection of contracts, manuals, and other primary source documents detailing how these programs are implemented and overseen.

“Automation and artificial intelligence could improve the notorious inefficiencies of government,” argues one page at Muckrock, “and it could exacerbate existing errors in the data being used to power it…”

“Does handing government decisions over to algorithms save time and money? Can algorithms be fairer or less biased than human decision making? Do they make us safer?”

of this story at Slashdot.

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Source:: Slashdot