Sam Lavigne and Tega Brain, The Good Life, 2016 (screen capture). Website, public domain text, and mail server. Courtesy the artists
This panel discussion takes place in conjunction with the online exhibition “Sam Lavigne and Tega Brain: The Good Life,” copresented by the New Museum and Rhizome as part of the series First Look: New Art Online.
Datasets often appear to us as if by magic: tidy lists set apart from the messiness of history and the politics of the human world. Much less visible, however, is the fact that each dataset emerges from a specific historical moment and is the product of a massive amount of human labor. These contextual details are fundamental to the nature of all datasets and, by extension, to the systems they goes on to train. Many early machine learning systems—software systems that make decisions based on correlations in given data—were trained using the Enron email archive, which consists of hundreds of thousands of messages that were released into the public domain as part of the investigation into the company in the early 2000s. Although it was sourced from participants in a massive corporate fraud, the archive was assumed to represent how a much broader population used email and language. In this way, machine learning systems extend the historical conditions of their training data into the present.
Building on recent New Museum events that delved into the implications of machine learning for issues of subjectivity and bias, this panel discussion convenes artists and researchers who will consider the historical and human context of the Enron email archive and its ongoing use in machine learning. This event is organized by New Museum affiliate Rhizome with Sam Lavigne and Tega Brain, in conjunction with their online exhibition “First Look: The Good Life,” which invites users to subscribe to receive hundreds of thousands of emails from the Enron archive over the course of seven years.
The panel will include Lavigne and Brain; Finn Brunton, scholar and author of Spam: A Shadow History of the Internet; artist Constant Dullaart, who will present an experiment with the Enron corpus undertaken with NYU data scientist Leon Yin; Devin Kenny, artist, writer, musician, and curator; and Mimi Onuoha, artist and researcher; and will be chaired by Kate Crawford, researcher, academic, and cofounder of the AI Now Institute. Blending historical analysis and artistic response, the panel will call attention to the significance of datasets like the Enron email archive—largely invisible, but instrumental in our daily lives.
Major support for First Look is provided by the Neeson/Edlis Artist Commissions Fund.
Additional support is provided by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature.
Further support is provided by the Toby Devan Lewis Emerging Artists Exhibitions Fund.
New Museum and Rhizome public programs are supported, in part, by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.
The Good Life received a 2016 Microgrant under Rhizome’s Commissions Program. Support for the 2016 Commissions Program was generously provided by the Jerome Foundation, GIPHY, American Chai Trust, the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, and the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature.
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