Professor, UC-Berkeley, 2007-2021
Director of research, Data & Society, 2021-2023
From 2007 to 2022 I was a faculty member at the School of Information at UC-
Berkeley. I was granted tenure in 2013 and promoted to full professor in 2021 and
continue to advise several PhD students in the School. While at UC-Berkeley I was
co-director of the Algorithmic Fairness and Opacity Group (AFOG) with law scholar
Deirdre Mulligan, which brought together faculty and students from across campus
to facilitate research on how algorithmic systems can be designed, used, or
regulated to support more equitable and just societies. The AFOG team organized
several events including a 2018 workshop and the Refusal Conference in 2020.
Seeking an opportunity to ensure research on technology in society had an impact
in the world, I joined Data & Society as the Director of Research in 2021 and served
in this role for two years. In 2023 I took a hiatus from Academia. As of now (the
summer of 2024) I’m currently living in Yokohama, Japan with my family and working
toward Japanese language proficiency.
My research focuses on how marginalized communities adapt digital technologies to
meet their needs and to pursue their goals and ideals. I am interested especially in
ways of protecting human control and autonomy in the wake of artificial intelligence.
I am the author of Invisible Users: Youth in the Internet Cafes of Urban Ghana (MIT
Press) as well as several widely cited articles including: “How the Machine Thinks:
understanding opacity in machine learning algorithms” and “The Society of
Algorithms” (with Marion Fourcade). My publications span the areas of Science and
Technology Studies, Sociology, Communications / New Media Studies, and
interdisciplinary Computer Science (i.e. HCI, AI Ethics). I earned a PhD in sociology
from the London School of Economics and a BA in computer science from Cornell
University.
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I’m located in Yokohama, Japan (GMT +9). You can reach me by email at jenna1 at
gmail.
Our special issue titled, “Ideologies of AI and the Consolidation of Power” came out
in the April 2024 issue of the online journal First Monday. Thanks to my co-editor
Jacob Metcalf (Data & Society). With an incredible range of thought-provoking
contributions from authors: Shazeda Ahmed, Klaudia Jaźwińska, Archana Ahlawat,
Amy Winecoff, Mona Wang, Meg Young, Upol Ehsan, Ranjit Singh, Emnet Tafesse,
Michele Gilman, Christina Harrington, Timnit Gebru, Émile P. Torres, Abeba Birhane,
Jelle van Dijk, Frank Pasquale, Norah Abokhodair, Yarden Skop, Sarah Rüller,
Konstantin Aal, Houda Elmimouni, and Esther Mwema.
My piece (several years in the making!) which relates AI developments and political
philosophy is now published, “Automated Decision-Making as Domination.”
“The Society of Algorithms” which I co-authored with Marion Fourcade (UC-
Berkeley) is out in the 2021 Annual Review of Sociology. Please get in touch if you’d
like a copy and can’t get past the paywall.
MEdia
Op-eds:
Artificial Intelligence and the Ever-Receding Horizon of the Future, Tech Policy Press
ChatGPT and Copyright: the ultimate appropriation, Tech Policy Press
It’s time to challenge the narrative about ChatGPT and the future of journalism, Poytner
Recent mentions in the media:
Resisting AI and the Consolidation of Power podcast episode with Tech Policy Press hosted
by Justin Hendrix, with Jacob Metcalf, Shazeda Ahmed, and Emile P. Torres.
How Existential Risk Became the Biggest Meme in AI, MIT Technology Review
Jailbreaking AI Chatbots is Tech’s New Pasttime Bloomberg
How the Media is Covering ChatGPT, Columbia Journalism Review
No, the AI Chatbots Still Aren’t Sentient Popular Science
Big Tech is Coming to Small Town America, but There’s a Catch, Time Magazine.
Facebook moderation: is AI really working? San Francisco Examiner