Coded Bias

2020

Action / Documentary

2
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 100% · 52 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 57% · 50 ratings
IMDb Rating 6.7/10 10 2770 2.8K

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Plot summary

Exploring the fallout of MIT Media Lab researcher Joy Buolamwini's startling discovery that facial recognition does not see dark-skinned faces accurately, and her journey to push for the first-ever legislation in the U.S. to govern against bias in the algorithms that impact us all.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
March 08, 2021 at 07:05 PM

Top cast

Serena Williams as Self - Tennis Champion
J. Robert Oppenheimer as Self - Theoretical Physicist
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
786.2 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 25 min
Seeds 4
1.42 GB
1920*1072
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 25 min
Seeds 4

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by keikoyoshikawa 6 / 10

Is It A Conspiracy or Incompetence?

Algorithms are not magical systems. At their core they are simply data. Feed your programs with rubbish or incomplete data sets, and you'll get rubbish or inaccurate outputs. What surprises me is not that this is happening with programs like facial recognition software; what surprises me is that the basics taught in any beginning programming class are somehow forgotten.

That said, this documentary feels incomplete. It seems to be one-sided, with lots of interviews with people who are against the use of AI.

But while the film-makers do an ok job of highlighting the dangers and inadequacies of AI systems such as facial recognition software, they failed to show what really is behind these glaring.blunders - was it some kind of knowing omission meant to create more biases, was it a case of software engineers creating something that they themselves don't understand and thus making a mess of things, or was it simply incompetence.on the part of many involved?

Who knows. And that's the problem with this film.

Reviewed by fajarsantoso 8 / 10

AI, a threat or an opportunity?

As an average citizen with limited knowledge of AI, I was quite intrigued by the title and found the documentary quite interesting and it shows that AI can be both a threat and an opportunity. Unfortunately, as the documentary will show, AI will be a threat or an opportunity for citizens based on ones background, culture, skin-color and other social-economic parameters that has been choosen by others for you. The people in the documentary are rebels fighting the status-quo of tech companies like Facebook, Google, Amazon and Wallstreet.

Just watch the documentary if you are interested in AI or would like to know more about it and disregard the bad reviews. These are probably from individuals with a vested interest in the status-quo of AI or can be linked to the techgiants or Wallstreet.

Reviewed by MeadtheMan 5 / 10

Powerful Messages. Poor Execution.

The general messages conveyed are powerful, and there's no denying that we urgently need to regulate a technology that has encroached into every facet of our lives - it's like letting people drive without introducing any traffic laws.

The execution of this documentary, however, is very underwhelming, to say the least. There are the usuals: catchy montages, TED-style interviews, news soundbites, and the most annoying of all - artificially created (pun intended) graphics of AI scanning data in a stereotypical digital font paired with silly sound effects which, unless the primary audience of this documentary is fifth graders, I don't understand why it's necessary to incessantly rehash them. And then there's the unimaginative 'robotic voice.' It's just puerile.

Maybe the producers are wary that people still won't get the danger of unregulated AI without these gimmicks. But I'd argue that people would be more alarmed to learn how AI has been infiltrating and affecting our lives in the least expected ways. If the documentary can clearly point out the potential harms as a consequence, I think people will naturally find the lack of regulation disturbing, no silly visuals and sound effects are needed. Sometimes I think they actually undermine the severity of potential danger at hand. For example, the scene where a teenager is mistakenly stopped by plainclothes police, instead of being accompanied with yet another piece of cheesy soundtrack meant to suggest danger, it would be so much more powerful if everything is just eerily silent.

And the interviews and info - yes, AI is like a black box even to the programmers, but can you explain it in layman's terms so that people get it? - could be a lot more insightful. Even some short Vox-style Youtube clips have explored these issues in greater depth.

The themes explored are a bit all over the place too. I get it this domain is relatively new, so the vocabulary and focus aren't that streamlined yet, still... Sometimes the documentary brings up issues of obvious biases, which is consistent with the title, but sometimes we don't even know what the problem is, it's simply an issue of things being completely nontransparent and/or unverified by a third party. The China parts are also a little disjointed from the rest of the documentary and the country itself is painted in broad strokes - it's as if we can't do good until we can identify the bad guy to feel good about ourselves.

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