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AI & Ethics

The purpose of this repository is to get familiar with Git and GitHub's concepts, and practice some basic commands. In addition, the project aims to provide content about AI and Ethics by the Department of Management Science and Technology of the Athens University of Economics and Business.

First of all: Register your GitHub email to this form (if you have not shared it already), and expect an invitation to join as a repository collaborator.

Tasks

  • Clone this repository.
  • Add information about AI and Ethics to the guide.md file. (Create the file if it does not already exist.)
  • Contribute generously and in several categories.
  • In case you reuse other people's material, make sure to:
    1. rephrase the content, and
    2. add a reference to the original source.
  • Introduce new categories and organize things.
  • Feel free to add images and videos.
  • You may modify, fix, or improve existing content added by others.
  • Commit your changes.
  • Push to the GitHub repository (if required, pull and resolve merge conflicts).

DEADLINE: 7 April 2024 23:55

Tips

  • Copy-pasting text is considered plagiarism, so make sure to rephrase it.
  • Configure your editor to use a spellchecker (in case you have not already done so).
  • Include links where necessary (e.g., locations, online courses, etc.).
  • Rearrange text if you think it should be organized differently—refactorings are always welcome!
  • You can include images and videos, but don't forget to commit and push them. Images and videos should be placed in the media/ directory. (Create the directory if it does not already exist.)
  • Again, use references for images and videos—you cannot reuse web content without citing the original source.
  • Be creative! Take it a step further by including a file with guidelines to contributing for newcomers, and a code of conduct file.

Grading System

  • Number of contributions—the more the better!
  • Completeness of each contribution (one-sentence contributions are considered "bad" contributions).
  • Breaking things comes with a penalty...
  • But, fixing others' breaks has a bonus!
  • Quality of commit messages—they should be descriptive (of the change) and concise. Default commit messages are not welcome.
  • Missing references in reused material is not welcome.
  • Content should be in proper Markdown format—check the Markdown Cheatsheet.