Open Dialogue

Abolish A.I. Proctoring

Evan Selinger in conversation with Chris Gilliard

Evan Selinger
OneZero
Published in
9 min readApr 7, 2021

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Illustration: Julia Moburg/Medium; Source: Getty Images

This is Open Dialogue, an interview series from OneZero about technology and ethics.

During the pandemic, educational technology companies experienced a 900% increase in business once schools started shutting down campuses and restricting visitors. These companies swooped in with A.I.-infused software designed to prevent students from cheating. These proctoring algorithms can verify who is taking an exam through facial verification. They can also monitor test-takers, scrutinizing their behavior for signs of irregularities that might indicate cheating, like looking away from the screen.

Critics contend the software promotes unfairness, invasions of privacy, and unduly inflicted anxiety. The situation is so dire that the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), a public interest research organization, filed a complaint with the D.C. attorney general’s office against some leading companies: Proctorio, ProctorU, Honorlock, Examity, and Respondus.

Once the pandemic ends, everything won’t go back to normal. Controversial ed-tech software will remain an essential testing infrastructure if the fight against it doesn’t intensify. Crucially, we need to consider the long-term impacts of forcing students…

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Evan Selinger
OneZero

Prof. Philosophy at RIT. Latest book: “Re-Engineering Humanity.” Bylines everywhere. http://eselinger.org/