Virginia Dignum Parody (@virginiadignum) 's Twitter Profile
Virginia Dignum Parody

@virginiadignum

A parody account of professor of ethics,Virginia Gamito Dignum.
"Once you accumulate enough institutional power and connections you get to define what's true"

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calendar_today26-06-2022 20:39:52

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Virginia Dignum Parody (@virginiadignum) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The development of ethical AI is not just the responsibility of tech companies. It's up to all of us to think critically about the impact of AI on society and to demand that AI systems are developed and used in an ethical way

Virginia Dignum Parody (@virginiadignum) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Like the worst academics and the best dictators I always choose and support underlings that not only are completely loyal to me but are also clearly inferor to me in intellect.This way they can never outgrow my influence and become something more than my own ideological parrots..

Virginia Dignum Parody (@virginiadignum) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Academia has such a peculiar relationship with corruption. The more systematic the misconduct, the harder it can be to hold perpetrators accountable!

Pedro Domingos (@pmddomingos) 's Twitter Profile Photo

What happens when you put a mediocre academic on the board of a company? She gets the CEO fired because he didn’t like one of her papers.

spiked (@spikedonline) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The double standards at Harvard are shocking. President Claudine Gay stands accused of plagiarism and of equivocating over anti-Semitism. But because she’s one of the woke, her job is probably safe. How absurd, says Jenny Holland spiked-online.com/2023/12/14/cla…

Virginia Dignum Parody (@virginiadignum) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Great academics are preoccupied with ideas; average academics are preoccupied with grants; abysmal academics are preoccupied with politics #academia #AI

Jürgen Schmidhuber (@schmidhuberai) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The #NobelPrize in Physics 2024 for Hopfield & Hinton turns out to be a Nobel Prize for plagiarism. They republished methodologies developed in #Ukraine and #Japan by Ivakhnenko and Amari in the 1960s & 1970s, as well as other techniques, without citing the original inventors.

The #NobelPrize in Physics 2024 for Hopfield & Hinton turns out to be a Nobel Prize for plagiarism. They republished methodologies developed in #Ukraine and #Japan by Ivakhnenko and Amari in the 1960s & 1970s, as well as other techniques, without citing the original inventors.
Virginia Dignum Parody (@virginiadignum) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The essence of underhanded political power lies in the absence of accountability. When no one can effectively challenge your deceitful, self-serving narratives, you’re free to funnel millions toward propping up your inept allies without consequence.

Virginia Dignum Parody (@virginiadignum) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"The ones who are claiming we don't need regulation are the ones who want to regulate or determine themselves how this system should look or not" Virginia Dignum. Yes this is what all AI startups and real innovators truly want. What an insightful quote! youtube.com/watch?v=mTcfqB…

Virginia Dignum Parody (@virginiadignum) 's Twitter Profile Photo

One of the most insidious pleasures of corrupt and incompetent technocrats is leveraging their supposed expertise to dishonestly elevate their subordinates in a way that is difficult to challenge, appears meritocratic, yet is anything but—and all while signaling their own status.

Virginia Dignum Parody (@virginiadignum) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If the EU hadn’t pursued AI ethics so zealously, I might still have been an associate Prof in the Netherlands—chasing promotion to full Prof, failing due to the meritocracy, then putting journalists to present me as a genius and the refusal to promote me as a detriminent to NL...

Virginia Dignum Parody (@virginiadignum) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This analogy used to justify heavy AI governance is flawed. A more accurate comparison might be with internet regulation—where the U.S.'s minimal, reactive approach has arguably led to far greater economic success(see the successful startups.) than the EU’s more restrictive model

This analogy used to justify heavy AI governance is flawed. A more accurate comparison might be with internet regulation—where the U.S.'s minimal, reactive approach has arguably led to far greater economic success(see the successful startups.) than the EU’s more restrictive model