Authors
Fatemeh Alizadeh, Aikaterini Mniestri, Gunnar Stevens
Publication date
2022/10/8
Book
Nordic Human-Computer Interaction Conference
Pages
1-6
Description
For most people, using their body to authenticate their identity is an integral part of daily life. From our fingerprints to our facial features, our physical characteristics store the information that identifies us as "us." This biometric information is becoming increasingly vital to the way we access and use technology. As more and more platform operators struggle with traffic from malicious bots on their servers, the burden of proof is on users, only this time they have to prove their very humanity and there is no court or jury to judge, but an invisible algorithmic system. In this paper, we critique the invisibilization of artificial intelligence policing. We argue that this practice obfuscates the underlying process of biometric verification. As a result, the new "invisible" tests leave no room for the user to question whether the process of questioning is even fair or ethical. We challenge this thesis by offering a juxtaposition with the science …
Total citations
2023202411
Scholar articles
F Alizadeh, A Mniestri, G Stevens - Nordic Human-Computer Interaction Conference, 2022