What We Talk About When We Talk About Algorithms

Published: July 7, 2022, 9 a.m.

Algorithms! We hear a lot about them. They drive social media platforms and, according to popular understanding, are responsible for a great deal of what\u2019s wrong about the internet today\u2014and maybe the downfall of democracy itself. But \u2026 what exactly are algorithms? And, given they\u2019re not going away, what should they be designed to do?


Evelyn Douek and Quinta Jurecic spoke with Jonathan Stray, a senior scientist at the Berkeley Center for Human-Compatible AI and someone who has thought a lot about what we mean when we say the word \u201calgorithm\u201d\u2014and also when we discuss things like \u201cengagement\u201d and \u201camplification.\u201d He helped them pin down a more precise understanding of what those terms mean and why that precision is so important in crafting good technology policy. They also talked about what role social media algorithms do and don\u2019t play in stoking political polarization, and how they might be designed to decrease polarization instead.


  • If you\u2019re interested, you can read the Senate testimony by Dean Eckles on algorithms that Jonathan mentions during the show.
  • We also mentioned this article by Daniel Kreiss on polarization.

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