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 John Browne

By

John Browne,

John Browne

Opinion

We rule technology, for good or for evil

'Computers are the most powerful tools that we have built. Their transformative potential is obvious, but I am clear that they remain our servants and not our masters.'

August 1, 2019 15:52
IBM's Hollerith poster
3 min read

Shortly before she died, my mother, a survivor of Auschwitz, asked me to take her to visit the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC. As we were walking around the museum, I was astonished to see a desk-sized metal device, painted in utilitarian black and white, and packed with electrical circuits, dials and precise moving parts.

The caption described it as an IBM Hollerith D11 automatic tabulator. Why was this precursor to the modern computer displayed so conspicuously in this memorial to one of the greatest tragedies of the twentieth century?

During the Holocaust, automatic tabulators made it possible for the Nazis to analyse census records and identify those with Jewish blood with great speed and precision. This led my mother and several hundred thousand others to be packed into freight trains and distributed among camps across Europe.

As the Nazis’ eager adoption of the tabulator reveals, computing power, like almost any engineered product, can be used for hugely destructive ends. It may be tempting to conclude from this that engineers are to blame for society’s biggest problems and that their inventions will inevitably cause more suffering than good. Judging from much of today’s media coverage of the technology sector, this is a trap that many are falling into.