Author identification by machine learning - ethics?
I'm far from the first to use machine learning algorithms to identify the author of a text, but I think I have something a little better than most of the research projects I've read about and open-source tools I've tested. Initial results show significantly greater accuracy and a couple orders of magnitude more speed in situations involving thousands of possible authors.
I can imagine potentially good uses for this sort of tech, ranging from keeping banned users out of an online community to identifying the author of a ransom note, death threat or the like. I can also imagine evil uses, such as identifying political dissidents to persecute.
I'm not sure how I feel about releasing such a thing in to the world (as open-source or as a product), knowing that it will be used for both good and evil. Any comments?
8 comments
[ 4.8 ms ] story [ 42.4 ms ] threadAt some point, progress requires that you shrug your shoulders and say "I don't know how the good and bad uses will weigh against each other, but I'm going to go ahead anyway".
A tool that lets you identify a work as belonging to a specific author with relative certainty would be enormously useful to matching potentially fake texts and their authors. There are lots of less technical ways to identify political dissidents ^_^.
But, if you were able to classify people by race, education, sexual-orientation, or even psychological profile, then I could see that becoming a powder-keg. Thanks to the internet, there are a LOT of people who value anonymous self-expression. Destroying that could prevent a lot of excellent works from being created.
It's a text classification system; it can be trained on just about anything. I'm not sure how accurate it would be for other purposes. Things like that are already out there, e.g. http://genderanalyzer.com/