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Google, Facebook, Amazon and others have teamed up to make AI seem less creepy

They’ve started a new nonprofit to sell you on the benefits of their algorithms.

CeBIT 2015 Technology Trade Fair
CeBIT 2015 Technology Trade Fair
Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Some of the most profitable companies in the world are joining forces today to create a new nonprofit.

Amazon, Google, Facebook, IBM and Microsoft want you, as well as federal regulators, to know that artificial intelligence can and should be used for good, not evil. The initiative is creatively dubbed the Partnership on Artificial Intelligence to Benefit People and Society, or Partnership on AI, for short.

The tech giants certainly have their work cut out for them.

While few question the potential benefits of AI — how it can be used to scan through troves of data to detect cancer and automate driving to reduce fatalities — a lot of very smart people, including at the White House and the FTC, have been examining how artificially intelligent systems could go awry.

In order for AI systems to work, they must analyze massive amounts of data, but before that data is processed, it’s profiled and categorized by humans, with all their biases and prejudices in tow.

The White House outlined the discriminatory potential of big data in a report released at the beginning of this year. A ProPublica investigation this summer revealed how judges make sentencing and parole decisions by relying on AI software that is proven to be racially biased. And last July, a computer scientist at Carnegie Mellon found Google’s ad-delivery algorithm served men more ads for higher-paying jobs than women.

Yet artificial intelligence is considered to be the future of computing across the board. All of the companies involved in the nonprofit are pouring billions into artificial intelligence research, making products that predict our needs, help us communicate and connect us to people and objects with incogitable ease.

That’s because for companies like Google and Facebook and Apple (which, notably, isn’t part of this effort), AI is the next step in computing, not just for under-the-hood software, but for how people are interacting with computers. After desktop gave way to mobile, which changed entire business models, Silicon Valley sees voice-enabled computing as the next iteration, which requires AI.

While the new nonprofit says it doesn’t intend to do any lobbying, individually, these companies are all saturated with lobbyists that enjoy intimate relationships with policymakers on Capitol Hill and across the world.

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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