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Abstract

There have been widespread concerns about two aspects of the current explosion of predictive text models and other algorithm-based computational tools. On one hand, it is often insisted that Artificial Intelligence (AI) should be made “ethical”, and software providers take this seriously, attempting to make sure that their tools are not used to facilitate grossly criminal or widely condemned activities. On the other hand, it is also widely understood that those who create these tools have a responsibility to ensure that they are “unbiased”, as opposed to simply helping one side in political contestation define their perspectives as reality for all. Unfortunately, these two goals cannot be jointly satisfied, as there are perhaps no ethical prescriptions worthy of notice that are not contested by some. Here I investigate the current ethico-political sensibility of ChatGPT, demonstrating that the very attempt to give it an ethical keel has also given it a measurably left position in the political space and a concomitant position in social space among the privileged.

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