4.5 Article

Algorithmic pollution: Making the invisible visible

Journal

JOURNAL OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 4, Pages 391-408

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/02683962211010356

Keywords

Societal effects of AI and algorithms; transformative services; harmful effects; algorithmic pollution; critical performative perspective

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This article focuses on the unintended harmful societal effects of automated algorithmic decision-making in transformative services, identifying it as a new type of digital social pollution named 'algorithmic pollution', and emphasizes the need for transformative actions to address this issue.
In this article, we focus on the growing evidence of unintended harmful societal effects of automated algorithmic decision-making in transformative services (e.g. social welfare, healthcare, education, policing and criminal justice), for individuals, communities and society at large. Drawing from the long-established research on social pollution, in particular its contemporary 'pollution-as-harm' notion, we put forward a claim - and provide evidence - that these harmful effects constitute a new type of digital social pollution, which we name 'algorithmic pollution'. Words do matter, and by using the term 'pollution', not as a metaphor or an analogy, but as a transformative redefinition of the digital harm performed by automated algorithmic decision-making, we seek to make it visible and recognized. By adopting a critical performative perspective, we explain how the execution of automated algorithmic decision-making produces harm and thus performs algorithmic pollution. Recognition of the potential for unintended harmful effects of algorithmic pollution, and their examination as such, leads us to articulate the need for transformative actions to prevent, detect, redress, mitigate and educate about algorithmic harm. These actions, in turn, open up new research challenges for the information systems community.

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