In the Press: 2022

2021 2022 2023

  1. What the TikTok government bans mean for you

    To Kirsten Martin, director of Notre Dame University’s tech ethics center, the TikTok dogpiling seems more like a reaction from politicians not being able to crack the app’s influence.

    Mentions

    Kirsten Martin

    Kirsten Martin

    IT, Analytics, and Operations

  2. If tech ethics is an afterthought, you’re taking too big of a risk

    “Elon Musk firing the ethical AI team, policy team, etc is not surprising since his reason for buying Twitter was to put an end to their content moderation policies,” said Dr. Kirsten Martin, the director of the Notre Dame Technology Ethics Center (ND TEC), which recently launched a 15-credit undergraduate minor in tech ethics.

    Mentions

    Kirsten Martin

    Kirsten Martin

    IT, Analytics, and Operations

  3. As Amazon grows, so does its eye on consumers

    For companies like Amazon, data collection is for more than just data’s sake, noted Kirsten Martin, a professor of technology ethics at the University of Notre Dame.

    Mentions

    Kirsten Martin

    Kirsten Martin

    IT, Analytics, and Operations

  4. If Elon Musk restores Trump’s Twitter account, it could pave the way for other platforms to do the same

    Although far from perfect, Twitter has, at least historically, been viewed as “more nuanced in their content moderation” and as “trying to do the right thing more often than other platforms,” said Kirsten Martin, professor of technology ethics at the University of Notre Dame.

    Mentions

    Kirsten Martin

    Kirsten Martin

    IT, Analytics, and Operations

  5. Reversing Trump Twitter ban will provoke user backlash, Elon Musk warned

    Kirsten Martin, a professor of technology ethics at the University of Notre Dame in Chicago, said Musk would face a backlash if he reinstated Trump’s account. “If Musk is concerned that many people were upset that Trump was banned, he should see how many more people would be upset if Trump was not banned,” she said. “Musk only appears to be worried about the opinion of a small group of individuals who incite violence or perpetuate hate speech.”

    Mentions

    Kirsten Martin

    Kirsten Martin

    IT, Analytics, and Operations

  6. The Dutch Tax Authority Was Felled by AI—What Comes Next?

    “When there is disparate impact, there needs to be societal discussion around this, whether this is fair. We need to define what ‘fair’ is,” says Yong Suk Lee, a professor of technology, economy, and global affairs at the University of Notre Dame, in the United States. “But that process did not exist.”

    Mentions

    Yong Suk Lee

    Yong Suk Lee

    Keough School of Global Affairs

  7. Musk’s ‘free speech’ push for Twitter: Repeating history?

    Kirsten Martin, a professor of technology ethics at the University of Notre Dame, said Twitter has consistently worked at being a “responsible” social media company through its moderation system, its hires in the area of machine learning ethics and in whom they allow to do research on the platform.

    Mentions

    Kirsten Martin

    Kirsten Martin

    IT, Analytics, and Operations

  8. Misinformation or potent symbol? An out-of-date yearbook photo of masked 2nd graders raises questions

    “Is this photo misinformation? It’s in the eye of the beholder,” Tim Weninger, a professor of engineering at the University of Notre Dame who studies social media, told Yahoo News in an email.

    Mentions

    Tim Weninger

    Tim Weninger

    Computer Science and Engineering