Recommended by Professor Musser
Cathy O’ Neilâs Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy warns us that the pervasive use of large collections of data can be dangerous. OâNeil, with a Ph.D. in mathematics (âalgebraic number theoryâ), has taught at Barnard, and also has worked at a hedge fund (as a âquantâ) and at an e-commerce start-up. Disturbed by the unexamined influence of large data on our policies and our lives, she decided to alert others to her concerns about big data. So she started a blog, MathBabe, and she wrote this book.
The book explains âthe damage inflicted by WMDs [Weapons of Math Destruction] and the injustice they perpetuateâ (13). It âexplore[s] harmful examples that affect people at critical life moments: going to college, borrowing money, getting sentenced to prison, or finding and holding a jobââall âincreasingly controlled by secret models wielding arbitrary punishmentsâ (13).
The book is clear and persuasive, enlightening and disturbing. As OâNeil explains, large databases may seem to be objective and scientific, their findings or results determined by mathematical principles immune to human error and biases. However, their designers, like all human beings, are prone to error, misunderstanding, and ignorance. The databases âare constructed not just from data but from the choices we make about which data to pay attention toâand which to leave out. Those choices are not just about logistics, profits, and efficiency. They are fundamentally moralâ (218). To minimize the damage, OâNeil argues that âWe have to explicitly embed better values into our algorithms, creating Big Data models that follow our ethical lead. Sometimes that will mean putting fairness ahead of profitâ (204).