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posted by takyon on Sunday May 03 2015, @09:26AM   Printer-friendly
from the garbage-in-garbage-out dept.

Tim O'Reilly has advocated for the idea of algorithmic regulation - reducing the role of people and replacing them with automated systems in order to make goverment policy less biased and more efficient. But the idea has been criticized as utopianism, where actual implementations are likely to make government more opaque and even less responsive to the citizens who have the least say in the operation of society.

Now, as part of New America's annual conference What Drives Innovation Around the Country? Virginia Eubanks has written an essay examining such automation in the cases of pre-crime and welfare fraud. Is it possible to automate away human judgment from the inherently human task of governance and still achieve humane results? Or is inefficiency and waste an unavoidable part of the process?

 
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  • (Score: 1) by Murdoc on Friday May 08 2015, @03:54PM

    by Murdoc (2518) on Friday May 08 2015, @03:54PM (#180348)

    Then why didn't you just use the link in my original post? Googling around will generally only give you info on political technocracy, whereas using my link you'd be sure to know that that was what I was talking about. But I'll explain it in brief here: Political technocracy is simply putting scientists, other technical experts, or simply technophiles in political power. It says nothing about how the government (much less the economy) is actually run, because it can still be a democracy, dictatorship, whatever. It may refer to their desire to use technology in some way in government operations, like this article describes, or it could refer to government involvement in the technology sector, which itself could take many forms.

    Economic technocracy is a very specific program outlining the operation for a sustainable, post-scarcity economy. It was developed by a group of scientists, engineers, and other technical experts in the 1920s, and uses only science in its analysis and synthesis. The program calls for, among other things, the abolition of money and the value-exchange system to be replaced by a scientific resource accounting system (also described in detail), and also would require no political government. For all the many differences between the two of these concepts, it is this last one that is perhaps most prominent, since by using economic technocracy you cannot put scientists or anyone "in power", since there is no political power to be had. I hope that clears things up.