Some HCI Priorities for GDPR-Compliant Machine Learning
This addresses governance challenges for machine learning practitioners and regulators under GDPR, but is incremental as it builds on existing legal frameworks without introducing new technical methods.
The paper tackles the problem of aligning machine learning systems with GDPR requirements by proposing roles for Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) in areas like fairness, transparency, and data protection, but does not report specific results or numbers.
In this short paper, we consider the roles of HCI in enabling the better governance of consequential machine learning systems using the rights and obligations laid out in the recent 2016 EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)---a law which involves heavy interaction with people and systems. Focussing on those areas that relate to algorithmic systems in society, we propose roles for HCI in legal contexts in relation to fairness, bias and discrimination; data protection by design; data protection impact assessments; transparency and explanations; the mitigation and understanding of automation bias; and the communication of envisaged consequences of processing.