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AI's Racist Roots: A New Film Unearths Truths
21 Mar
Summary
- Documentary links AI's origins to Victorian-era eugenics and racism.
- Director critiques AI firms' dismissal of bias concerns.
- Film argues 'artificial intelligence' is a misleading marketing term.

Director Valerie Veatch's documentary, 'Ghost in the Machine,' delves into the historical foundations of artificial intelligence, revealing connections to Victorian-era eugenics. The film argues that the very concept of "artificial intelligence" emerged from a marketing need for funding in 1956, rather than a purely scientific endeavor.
Veatch's work traces a lineage from Francis Galton, Charles Darwin's cousin and originator of eugenics, to modern machine learning. Galton's statistically-driven theories on racial differences, though discredited, influenced social sciences and laid groundwork for measuring human intelligence akin to machines.
The documentary critiques the generative AI space, including OpenAI's Sora model, for perpetuating racist and sexist imagery. Veatch recounts her experience of reporting such biases to OpenAI, only to have her concerns dismissed as "cringe."
'Ghost in the Machine' features AI researchers and historians to demonstrate how discriminatory worldviews have profoundly shaped AI development. Veatch purposefully avoids direct interviews with major AI company heads, viewing such access as potentially compromising the film's critical stance and akin to propaganda.




