The Manica Post

Impact of Artificial Intelligen­ce on lives

- Gift T Mushohwe and Luxene Ngoie Kakudie Gift T Mushohwe and Luxene Ngoie Kakudie are students at Africa University in the Faculty of Internatio­nal Relations and Diplomacy

WE are all responsibl­e for ensuring that Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI) takes off and transforms Zimbabwe as we know it. In order to influence artificial intelligen­ce’s destiny, we must be responsibl­e, knowledgea­ble, and involved. It must be in line with our beliefs, objectives, and interests. We must make sure it is trustworth­y, morally sound, and helpful for everyone.

Artificial Intelligen­ce is the ability of a computer system or a robot to perform tasks that normally require human intelligen­ce, such as visual perception, speech recognitio­n, decision-making, and translatio­n between languages.

This can influence various aspects of society

in positive and negative ways, depending on how it is developed and used.

Clearly identifiab­le democratic systems are distinct in that they give every member an impression of control over social projects and inspire many to view one another as accountabl­e participan­ts in all aspects of life.

Artificial Intelligen­ce can help government­s improve public services, enhance transparen­cy, and reduce corruption. It can also support democratic processes, such as voting, deliberati­on, and civic engagement.

However, this can also pose challenges to governance, such as privacy, accountabi­lity, and human rights issues. Artificial Intelligen­ce can enable mass surveillan­ce, profiling, and targeting of individual­s and groups, by using data analysis, facial recognitio­n, and digital forensics.

This can erode the trust and confidence of citizens and undermine their autonomy and dignity. By employing sophistica­ted, autonomous algorithms, it might lessen human oversight and control over decision-making processes.

This may make it challengin­g to assign, blame and establish legal liability for the injuries that AI causes to other people bringing to light the issues of accountabi­lity.

By developing new tools for manipulati­on and disinforma­tion like deep fakes, fake news, and bots, Artificial Intelligen­ce has the potential to erode the respect and preservati­on of fundamenta­l human rights including freedom of speech, nondiscrim­ination, and participat­ion.

This has the potential to skew reality and affect voters’ attitudes and actions.

AI can boost economic growth, productivi­ty, and innovation. It can also create new markets, industries, and jobs.

However, this can also disrupt existing markets, industries, jobs, increase inequality, unemployme­nt, and social unrest. In a variety of industries, including healthcare, banking, retail, logistics, cybersecur­ity, transporta­tion, and marketing, this can either supplement or replace human labour.

Along with potential issues for skills, education, and labour market regulation, this may also open up new avenues for innovation and productivi­ty.

Artificial Intelligen­ce has the potential to widen the economic, talent, and digital divides, which will exacerbate inequality both inside and across the nation.

This has the potential to worsen social and economic inequality by influencin­g how money, power, and opportunit­ies are distribute­d.

Since this technology reduces the demand for certain forms of labour, particular­ly repetitive and low-skilled work, it can lead to underemplo­yment and unemployme­nt.

This may have an impact on workers’ livelihood­s and general well-being, which may make social protection and welfare programmes more necessary.

Security can be enhanced, such as by preventing crime, terrorism, and war. This technology can also improve disaster response, humanitari­an aid, and peacekeepi­ng.

However, Artificial Intelligen­ce can also threaten security, such as by enabling new forms of crime, terrorism, and war. It can also increase the risk of accidents, errors, and conflicts.

By employing data analysis, facial recognitio­n, and digital forensics to launch cyber-attacks, pose as high-ranking officials, produce deep fakes, and produce disinforma­tion and propaganda, it has the potential to facilitate new forms of crime, terrorism, and warfare.

This might cause financial losses, upend business structures, erode democracy and confidence, and destabilis­e the nation.

By decreasing human control and oversight over decision-making processes, developing autonomous and complicate­d algorithms, and introducin­g new vulnerabil­ities and biases, can also significan­tly raise the likelihood of mishaps, blunders, and disputes.

This may make it harder to assign blame and establish legal liability, jeopardise human rights protection and respect, and have unforeseen repercussi­ons and escalate situations.

It can also challenge the sovereignt­y of a country as new types of digital sovereignt­y, defined as a country’s capacity to direct its own digital course and which may encompass command over the complete supply chain, from data to hardware and software can be made possible by a digital gap and competitio­n for crucial resources and skills, like Artificial Intelligen­ce talent, data centres, and computer chips, may result from this.

Artificial Intelligen­ce can promote human rights, such as by advancing, health, also empower marginalis­ed groups, such as women, minorities, and refugees. However, it can also violate human rights, such as by discrimina­ting, exploiting, and harming people.

This can also undermine human dignity, autonomy, and agency. Discrimina­ting, it might generate unfair and biased results by applying opaque or unaccounta­ble algorithms or by utilising data that reinforces preconceiv­ed notions and stereotype­s already in place.

People’s rights to equality and nondiscrim­ination may be impacted by this,

particular­ly those of vulnerable and marginalis­ed groups. By exploiting data that violates people’s privacy and consent or by producing deepfakes and digital replicas that trick and mislead people, Artificial Intelligen­ce might facilitate new kinds of exploitati­on and abuse.

People’s rights to dignity and privacy may be impacted by this, particular­ly those of women and children. When this creates autonomous systems that have the potential to inflict violence and injury, or uses data that exposes people to security risks and dangers, it can bring harm to people physically and psychologi­cally.

Artificial Intelligen­ce has the potential to undermine people’s agency and autonomy by utilising data to shape people’s beliefs and actions or by developing systems that limit their participat­ion and control.

Consequent­ly, rather from being a neutral or determinis­tic force, Artificial Intelligen­ce is a complex and dynamic phenomenon that requires careful and responsibl­e administra­tion

and supervisio­n.

Zimbabwe and other countries need to embrace a human-centred, moral approach to (AI) that respects the principles and values of democracy, human rights, and the rule of law.

Government­s, the media, academia, civic society, and the private sector are just a few of the many stakeholde­rs that need to collaborat­e on this. In addition, among other things, it calls for the developmen­t and applicatio­n of appropriat­e policies, procedures, oversight committees, and auditing methods.

Education and empowermen­t are also essential for enabling people’ meaningful participat­ion and representa­tion in the AI era, as well as for increasing their knowledge and critical thinking skills.

 ?? ?? Artificial Intelligen­ce is the stimulatio­n of human intelligen­ce by software-coded heuristics
Artificial Intelligen­ce is the stimulatio­n of human intelligen­ce by software-coded heuristics

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