Wednesday, December 18, 2024

These English PhDs helped train Google’s AI bot. Here’s what they think about it now.

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Can an English major make it in a tech world? Allison Harbin was willing to give it a try.

In her new field, Dr. Harbin would just have one pupil: artificial intelligence. English is the next great coding language, Nvidia’s CEO posited, and tech companies recruited hundreds of humanities academics like Dr. Harbin.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

If English is the next universal coding language, as Nvidia’s CEO suggested, why, English academics ask, are they not being valued as were computer programmers during earlier tech booms?

“My goal was to create more ethical guidelines for the technology sourcing our collective intelligence,” she says.

Unfortunately, her new student proved recalcitrant.

“Just imagine grading the errors of a high schooler’s paper that he plagiarized from the internet. That’s kind of what we do,” says Dr. Harbin, who was a prompt engineer on Google’s Gemini. “The robot requires a lot of training. There’s a lot to correct.”

Indeed, when Google released the latest version, it recommended gluing cheese to pizza and making sure you ate one rock a day.

But half a dozen people who worked at Google contractor GlobalLogic, including Dr. Harbin, say the experience behind the scenes was even more disheartening. Rather than being treated as respected professionals, they say they were paid slightly above minimum wage. One described the experience as akin to a “digital sweatshop.”

Can an English major make it in a tech world?

Allison Harbin was willing to give it a try. The English Ph.D. had been working as a high school teacher, after rising costs and the meager pay in adjunct lecturing drove her from academia. 

In her new field, Dr. Harbin would just have one pupil: artificial intelligence.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

If English is the next universal coding language, as Nvidia’s CEO suggested, why, English academics ask, are they not being valued as were computer programmers during earlier tech booms?

English is the next great coding language, Nvidia’s CEO, Jensen Huang, has posited. Tech companies recruited hundreds of humanities academics and freelance writers like Dr. Harbin.

“My goal was to create more ethical guidelines for the technology sourcing our collective intelligence,” she says.

Unfortunately, her new student proved particularly recalcitrant.

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