About this Event
Unmasking the rituals and cultural norms that define communities of artificial intelligence (AI) workers, demonstrates that there would be no AI without human intervention. Wilson introduces readers to the hidden world of AI—behind the doors of chip design labs, coding bootcamps, and organizations teaching AI to speak dozens of languages. He meets philosophers envisioning a future without disease or death, a Nobel Prize-winning scientist who warns of AI’s existential risks, and ghost workers whose invisible labor powers the world’s biggest tech platforms. He also speaks with writers, artists, and developers wrestling with the promise and peril of AI to find out what they really think of ChatGPT. Wilson’s empathetic and thoughtful investigation provides readers a front row view on how AI is actually made.
Humans of AI is indispensable in reminding people that the work of AI is not miraculous or magical, but vividly human.
About the Speakers
Dan Browne is associate director of research engagement at the Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society at the University of Toronto. His writings on media have appeared in Process Cinema: Handmade Film in the Digital Age (2019) and Canadian Cinema in the New Millennium (2021). He is also an award-winning media artist who has presented his films and videos at more than 120 festivals, cinemas, and galleries internationally.
Joseph Wilson has a PhD in Anthropology from the University of Toronto and has instructed at York University and Trent University. His work focuses on how scientists communicate with one another and with the general public, and he has written about technology, language, anthropology, and education for The Globe and Mail, CBC, SAPIENS, American Scientist, and Anthropology News.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
University of Toronto Bookstore, 214 College Street, Toronto, Canada
CAD 0.00











