In the wake of the Grok scandal, now new polling shows people in four major EU countries would support a ban on X if it continues to break EU law.
Posts by Imogen Parker
"The point is to change it" — a volume of new essays from 21 leading academics exploring the role of philosophy in public life — launches today!
Contributors include @tariqmodood.bsky.social, @martinoneill.bsky.social, @jowolff.bsky.social, @elkeschwarz.bsky.social and more.
Click below to read 👇🦉
ICO orders DWP to
"disclose the list of all AI tools DWP plans to place on the Algorithmic Transparency Recording Standards Hub"
I.e. publish details of all the AI they are using unless there is a valid reason to keep it secret
h/t @rightsnet.org.uk
"In terms of its impacts on people and planet, AI is as physical as any other industry."
Thoughtful piece by @imogen-parker.bsky.social reflecting on last week's Global Fund for a New Economy convening in Nairobi:
www.globalgovernmentforum.com/lessons-from...
We at @instituteforgovernment.org.uk have coordinated a letter in @thetimes.com today in which numerous individuals and organisations call on the government to withdraw its mistaken rules which are having a serious chilling effect on civil servants speaking in public…
Government departments and local authorities are looking to accelerate AI use in the public sector.
Our new policy briefing presents six findings from six years of Ada’s research on public attitudes towards the use of data and AI in public services.
www.adalovelaceinstitute.org/policy-brief...
Brilliant work from my @adalovelaceinst.bsky.social colleagues @imogen-parker.bsky.social and @lauracarter.bsky.social on what the UK public expect from AI deployment in the public sector
www.adalovelaceinstitute.org/policy-brief...
signed up!
Rapidly deploying AI has become one of the government’s top priorities.
Read our new blog from @elliotmjones.bsky.social and @imogen-parker.bsky.social proposing four targeted recommendations to strengthen the foundations for AI in the public sector ⬇️
www.adalovelaceinstitute.org/blog/four-re...
3. Create a Taskforce for local government AI procurement
4. Fund and leverage public attitudes research on AI
. @elliotmjones.bsky.social and I lay out four recommendations to strengthen the foundations for AI in the public sector
1. Establish a What Works Centre for AI in Public Services
2. Strengthen the Algorithmic Transparency Reporting Standard
If Ada's public services research landed on the desk of those leading digital transformation within government – alongside an extensive to-do list and a myriad of competing pressures – where should they start?
@adalovelaceinst.bsky.social
www.adalovelaceinstitute.org/blog/four-re...
I failed to post this last week, but it’s one of the best op-eds you’ll read all year. Two politicians with *wildly* different orientations but a common thread of belief in the nature of citizenship and nationality. (They’re also 100% right obvs.)
on.ft.com/3GS1rPl
Highly sensitive information, relating to people in moments of vulnerability, has been hacked.
The advice warning people of scams is important but only part of it. It's not hard to imagine harms arising if this type of information circulates or is weaponised.
www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
Why public legitimacy isn't just a 'nice to have'.
My new column for Global Government Forum on public sector AI - and risks of moving out of step from the public.
www.globalgovernmentforum.com/why-public-l...
Interested to see how this pans out...
In particular, I welcomed this crucial finding making it into the report summary: "there is no systematic mechanism for bringing together and disseminating the learning from all the pilot activity across government."
Time for a What Works Centre for AI in the public sector?
Many findings align with our recent evidence review, highlighting issues with data quality and curation; legacy systems; transparency and assurance www.adalovelaceinstitute.org/policy-brief...
PAC have published their Use of AI in Government report.
Lots of valuable insight, acknowledging potential for transformation while warning Gov "faces significant challenges if it to grasp these opportunities, & we remain concerned at the scale of the task." committees.parliament.uk/work/8580/us...
Want to know how the public feel about AI?
We've got you.
Here's the next wave of Ada and Turing's UK public attitudes survey published today 📢
attitudestoai.uk
Job alert!!
Could you be Ada's new Associate Director in Emerging Tech & Industry Practice, leading a fab team and a highly impactful research programme?
It's a pretty amazing gig, @agstrait.bsky.social has built something incredible (no pressure). Get in touch if you have Qs!
“There is this terrible misconception that disabled people just take, but actually by taking from us, you prevent us from being able to give – we want to be able to participate in life equally the same as anyone else, and that includes going to work.” Disability campaigner Tanni Gray-Thompson
Really like this list of questions to consider in the context of public sector AI. And lots of resonance with findings from Ada's research synthesis.
A big +1 to sorting out the building blocks.
I'm delighted to say our highly secure and productive OpenSAFELY platform has received a further £17 million in funding from Wellcome, including for a new mental health data project. More here, and clips from Today on Radio4 this morning too!
www.bennett.ox.ac.uk/blog/2025/02...
Technology provides an opportunity beyond the technology itself. If AI is a “golden opportunity”, as Starmer put it, it is as a catalyst for fundamental service redesign, placing people at the centre of public service delivery. @adalovelaceinst.bsky.social
What do we want public services to look and feel like if we adopt greater data, digital and AI? What do we want our relationship to be with the public and private sectors? Where do we want technology to be accelerated or deferred to? Which relationships do we not want mediated by datafication?
Following yesterday's speech by Starmer, it's the final point which stands out. We should see AI not as an opportunity to automate the public sector, but to reimagine it.
For those working in the field, many of the lessons won't come as a surprise. They are the consistent issues around terminology, transparency, procurement for example that hamper understanding and confidence in tech roll outs.