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Meredith Whittaker

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American artificial intelligence research scientist

Meredith Whittaker
Whittaker in 2023
Alma materUniversity of California, Berkeley
Employers

Meredith Whittaker is the president of theSignal Foundation and serves on its board of directors.[1][2][3] She was formerly the Minderoo Research Professor atNew York University (NYU), and chief advisor and former faculty director & co founder of theAI Now Institute. She also served as a senior advisor on AI to ChairLina Khan at theFederal Trade Commission and was listed among the 100 most influential people in AI byTIME magazine in 2023.[4][5] Whittaker was employed atGoogle for 13 years, where she founded Google's Open Research group[6][7][8] and co-founded the M-Lab.[9][10] In 2018, she was a core organizer of theGoogle Walkouts and resigned from the company in July 2019.[11][12]

Early life and education

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Whittaker completed her bachelor's degree in rhetoric and English literature atUniversity of California, Berkeley.[13][14][10][15]

Research and career

[edit]

Whittaker is the president of the Signal foundation and serves on their board of directors. She was formerly theMinderoo Research Professor at NYU, and the Faculty Director of NYU’s AI Now Institute.[16]

Whittaker was a speaker at the 2018 World Summit on AI.[17] She has written for theAmerican Civil Liberties Union.[18]

Whittaker co-founded M-Lab, a globally distributed network measurement system that provides the world’s largest source of open data onInternet performance. She has also worked extensively on issues of data validation, privacy, the social implications of artificial intelligence, the political economy of tech, and labor movements in the context of tech and the tech industry.[19] She has spoken out about the need for privacy and against weakening encryption.[20] She has advised the White House, the FCC, the FTC, the City of New York, the European Parliament, and many other governments and civil society organizations on artificial intelligence, Internet policy, measurement, privacy, and security.[21]

Google

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She joinedGoogle in 2006.[13] She founded Google Open Research[22] which collaborated with the open source and academic communities on issues related to net neutrality measurement, privacy, security, and the social consequences of artificial intelligence.[23]

In 2018, Whittaker was one of the core organizers of theGoogle Walkouts, with over 20,000 Google employees walking out internationally to protest Google's culture when it comes to claims of sexual misconduct and citizen surveillance. They released a series of demands, some of which were met by Google.[24][25]

The walkout was prompted by Google's reported $90 million payout to vice presidentAndy Rubin who had been accused of sexual misconduct, and the company's involvement withProject Maven,[24][26] against which more than three thousand Google employees signed a petition. Τhe project was established by a contract between the US military and Google, through which Google was to develop machine vision technologies for the USdrone program. Following the protests, Google did not renew the Maven contract.[27]

Whittaker was part of the movement that called for Google to rethink their AI ethics council after the appointment ofKay Coles James, the president ofThe Heritage Foundation who has fought againstLGBT protections and advocated forDonald Trump’s proposedborder wall.[28] Whittaker claimed that she faced retaliation fromGoogle, and wrote in an open letter that she had been told by the company to "abandon her work" on enforcing ethics in technology at theAI Now Institute.[24][29][30][31]

AI Now

[edit]

Whittaker is current chief advisor and former faculty director & co-founder[32] of theAI Now Institute at NYU, a leading university institute dedicated to researching the social implications ofartificial intelligence and related technologies which she started withKate Crawford in 2017 after a symposium hosted by theWhite House.[33][34][35] AI Now is partnered with theNew York University Tandon School of Engineering,New York University Center for Data Science andPartnership on AI.[36] They have produced annual reports that examine the social implications ofartificial intelligence, including bias, rights and liberties.[37][38]

Congressional testimony

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Whittaker testifies before theHouse Science, Space, and Technology Committee in 2019

Whittaker has testified before Congress, including testimony to theU.S. House Committee on Science, Space & Technology on "Artificial Intelligence: Societal and Ethical Implications" in June 2019.[39] In her testimony, Whittaker pointed to research and cases showing that AI systems can entrench bias and replicate harmful patterns. She called for whistleblower protections for tech workers, arguing that the centrality of tech to core social institutions, and the opacity of tech deployment, made such disclosures crucial to the public interest.[40]

She testified to the House Oversight Committee on “Facial Recognition Technology: Ensuring Commercial Transparency & Accuracy” in January 2020.[41] She highlighted structural issues withfacial recognition and the political economy of the industry, where these technologies are used by powerful actors on less powerful actors in ways that can entrench marginalization. She made the case that ‘bias’ was not the core concern, warned against an over reliance on technical audits that could be used to justify the use of systems without tackling structural issues such as the opacity of facial recognition systems, and the power dynamics that attend their use. Her testimony also pointed to the lack of sound scientific support for some of the claims used by private vendors, and called for a halt to the use of these technologies.[42][43]

Federal Trade Commission

[edit]

In November 2021,Lina Khan confirmed Whittaker joined the United StatesFederal Trade Commission as a senior advisor on artificial intelligence to the chair.[4] Once announced as Signal's president, at the beginning of September 2022, she reported the ending of her term at the FTC.[1]

Signal

[edit]

On September 6, 2022, Whittaker announced that she would be starting as Signal's president on September 12. Signal described the role as "a new position created in collaboration with Signal’s leadership".[3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Meredith Whittaker: "We won't participate in the surveillance business model"".DER STANDARD (in Austrian German). RetrievedSeptember 6, 2022.
  2. ^"Meredith Whittaker | NYU Tandon School of Engineering".engineering.nyu.edu. RetrievedNovember 21, 2021.
  3. ^ab"A Message from Signal's New President".Signal Messenger. RetrievedSeptember 6, 2022.
  4. ^ab"FTC Chair Lina M. Khan Announces New Appointments in Agency Leadership Positions".Federal Trade Commission. November 19, 2021. RetrievedMay 16, 2022.
  5. ^Perrigo, Billy (September 7, 2023)."TIME100 AI 2023: Meredith Whittaker".Time. Time Magazine. RetrievedFebruary 7, 2025.
  6. ^"Google Walkout Is Just the Latest Sign of Tech Worker Unrest".Wired.ISSN 1059-1028. RetrievedDecember 17, 2019.
  7. ^"A Googler who brought down Google's AI ethics board says she's now facing retaliation".MIT Technology Review. RetrievedDecember 17, 2019.
  8. ^"Meredith Whittaker, AI researcher and an organizer of last year's Google walkout, is leaving the company".TechCrunch. July 16, 2019. RetrievedDecember 17, 2019.
  9. ^"Who we are – M-Lab".www.measurementlab.net. RetrievedDecember 17, 2019.
  10. ^abGreenberg, Andy (August 28, 2024)."Signal Is More Than Encrypted Messaging. Under Meredith Whittaker, It's Out to Prove Surveillance Capitalism Wrong".Wired. RetrievedSeptember 9, 2024.
  11. ^"Google Protest Leader Leaves, Warns of Company's Unchecked Power". July 18, 2019. RetrievedJuly 18, 2019.
  12. ^change, Google Walkout For Real (July 16, 2019)."Onward! Another #GoogleWalkout Goodbye".Medium. RetrievedAugust 10, 2019.
  13. ^ab"Scientifically Verifiable Broadband Policy | Berkman Klein Center".cyber.harvard.edu. RetrievedJuly 7, 2018.
  14. ^"Meredith Whittaker".opentech. Archived fromthe original on January 28, 2020. RetrievedJuly 18, 2019.
  15. ^"The big interview" by Andy Greenburg, Wired magazine. November / December 2024 edition pages 56-67
  16. ^"Faculty Director".ainowinstitute.org. RetrievedMay 16, 2022.
  17. ^"World Summit AI | Meet 140 of the world's brightest AI brains".World Summit AI Amsterdam. RetrievedJuly 7, 2018.
  18. ^"Algorithms Are Making Government Decisions. The Public Needs to Have a Say".American Civil Liberties Union. RetrievedJuly 7, 2018.
  19. ^Vgontzas, Nantina; Whittaker, Meredith (January 29, 2021)."These Machines Won't Kill Fascism: Toward a Militant Progressive Vision for Tech".The Nation.ISSN 0027-8378. RetrievedMay 16, 2022.
  20. ^"Wanting It Bad Enough Won't Make It Work: Why Adding Backdoors and Weakening Encryption Threatens the Internet".HuffPost. December 16, 2015. RetrievedMay 16, 2022.
  21. ^"Co-founder, Co-director".ainowinstitute.org. RetrievedAugust 10, 2019.
  22. ^Gershgorn, Dave."The field of AI research is about to get way bigger than code".Quartz. RetrievedJuly 7, 2018.
  23. ^"Most Google Walkout Organizers Left Company".WIRED.
  24. ^abc"How Google treats Meredith Whittaker is important to potential AI whistleblowers".VentureBeat. April 24, 2019. RetrievedApril 27, 2019.
  25. ^Gaber, Claire Stapleton, Tanuja Gupta, Meredith Whittaker, Celie O'Neil-Hart, Stephanie Parker, Erica Anderson, Amr (November 1, 2018)."We're the Organizers of the Google Walkout. Here Are Our Demands".The Cut. RetrievedAugust 10, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  26. ^Bird, Interviews by Cameron; Captain, Sean; Craig, Elise; Gilliland, Haley Cohen; Shan, Joy (March 29, 2019)."Silicon Valley revolt: meet the tech workers fighting their bosses over Ice, censorship and racism".The Guardian.ISSN 0261-3077. RetrievedApril 27, 2019.
  27. ^R, Bhagyashree (October 9, 2018)."Google opts out of Pentagon's $10 billion JEDI cloud computing contract, as it doesn't align with its ethical use of AI principles".Packt Hub. RetrievedApril 27, 2019.
  28. ^Levin, Sam (April 1, 2019)."Google employees call for removal of rightwing thinktank leader from AI council".The Guardian.ISSN 0261-3077. RetrievedApril 27, 2019.
  29. ^Wong, Julia Carrie (April 22, 2019)."Demoted and sidelined: Google walkout organizers say company retaliated".The Guardian.ISSN 0261-3077. RetrievedApril 27, 2019.
  30. ^Wong, Julia Carrie (April 27, 2019)."Google worker activists accuse company of retaliation at 'town hall'".The Guardian.ISSN 0261-3077. RetrievedApril 27, 2019.
  31. ^Sugandha Lahoti (April 27, 2019)."#NotOkGoogle: Employee-led town hall reveals hundreds of stories of retaliation at Google".Packt Hub. RetrievedApril 27, 2019.
  32. ^"Meredith Whittaker".AI Now Institute. RetrievedMarch 18, 2025.
  33. ^"Biased AI Is A Threat To Civil Liberties. The ACLU Has A Plan To Fix It".Fast Company. July 25, 2017. RetrievedJuly 7, 2018.
  34. ^"The Social and Economic Implications of Artificial Intelligence Technologies in the Near-Term - Future of Life Institute".Future of Life Institute. RetrievedJuly 7, 2018.
  35. ^"About".ainowinstitute.org. RetrievedJuly 7, 2018.
  36. ^"Apply - Interfolio".apply.interfolio.com. RetrievedJuly 7, 2018.
  37. ^"Research".ainowinstitute.org. RetrievedJuly 7, 2018.
  38. ^"Research".ainowinstitute.org. RetrievedJuly 7, 2018.
  39. ^"Artificial Intelligence: Societal and Ethical Implications | House Committee on Science, Space and Technology".science.house.gov. RetrievedAugust 10, 2019.
  40. ^"Congressional Testimony on Societal Impact of AI".www.macfound.org. RetrievedAugust 10, 2019.
  41. ^Whittaker, Meredith (January 15, 2020).""Facial Recognition Technology (Part III): Ensuring Commercial Transparency & Accuracy""(PDF).
  42. ^"US lawmakers concerned by accuracy of facial recognition".BBC News. January 16, 2020. RetrievedMay 19, 2022.
  43. ^"Facial Recognition Technology | C-SPAN.org".www.c-span.org. RetrievedMay 19, 2022.
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