Without rules, AI risks ‘trust crisis’
The world is in a race to spread artificial intelligence, but the pioneering voice of technology ethics warns of the priority of speed on the safety risks of “trust crisis”.
Swiviana Greco, founder of AI for Change Foundation, says that without immediate and powerful governance, we are on our way to “widespread automation.”
Speaking of the integration of artificial intelligence in the critical sectors, GRCU believes that the most urgent moral danger is not the technology itself, but the lack of the structure surrounding its operation.
Strong systems are increasingly making life change decisions around everything from job requests and dozens of credit to health care and criminal justice, and are often without a sufficient test of bias or considering their long -term societal impact.
For many organizations, artificial intelligence ethics remain a document of noble principles instead of daily operational reality. GRCU insists that real accountability begins only when someone is really responsible for the results. The gap between intention and implementation is the place where the real danger lies.
GRCU’s heroes turned from abstract ideas to tangible work. This includes the inclusion of direct moral considerations in the progress of development work through practical tools such as design reviews, pre -publishing risk assessments, and multi -functional review panels that combine both legal, technical and political teams.
According to GRCU, the key is to create a clear ownership at each stage, and to build transparent and repeated operations just as it does with any other basic business function. This practical approach seeks to enhance moral artificial intelligence, and convert it from a philosophical discussion to a set of daily control tasks.
Partnership to build Amnesty International’s confidence and risk alleviation
When it comes to enforcement, GRCU is clear that responsibility can not only decrease the government or industry. “It is not either or, it must be both,” she says, defends a cooperative model.
In this partnership, governments must define legal limits and minimum standards, especially when human rights are basic at stake. It provides basic ground regulations. However, the industry has the light movement and the technical talent of innovation beyond mere compliance.
Companies are better in setting to create advanced auditing tools, leading new protection, and pushing the limits of what responsible technology can achieve.
Leaving the entire governance of the organizers risks the suffocation of the innovation that we need, while leaving it to companies alone calling for offense. “Cooperation is the only sustainable path forward,” confirms GRCU.
Promote a future moved by value
If we look further than urgent challenges, GRCU is concerned about more precise and long -term risks that have an insufficient attention, which is the emotional manipulation and the urgent need for technology that depends on value.
When artificial intelligence systems become more skilled in persuading and influencing human emotion, they warn that we are not ready for the effects of this for personal independence.
One of the primary principle in its work is the idea that technology is not neutral. “Artificial intelligence will not be driven by values, unless we intentionally build it,” it warns. It is a common belief that artificial intelligence simply reflects the world as it is. In fact, it reflects the data we fed, the goals we devote to it, and the results we reward.
Without deliberate intervention, you will always improve artificial intelligence for measures such as efficiency, size and profit, not for abstract ideals such as justice, dignity or democracy, which will naturally affect societal confidence. This is why a conscious and proactive effort is needed to determine the values that we want to promote our technology.
For Europe, this represents a critical opportunity. “If we want artificial intelligence to serve humans (not only markets), we need to protect and include European values such as human rights, transparency, sustainability, inclusion and fairness in each class: politics, design and publishing.”
This is not about stopping progress. It also concluded that the matter is related to controlling the narration and “its formation actively before it formed.”
Through its organization’s work – including public workshops and during the upcoming AI & Big Data Expo EUROPE exhibition, GRCU is the main day of the event – it builds a coalition to direct the development of artificial intelligence and enhance confidence by preserving humanity in its position.
(Photo by Macanaya)
See also: The obsession of artificial intelligence costs us our human skills

Do you want to learn more about artificial intelligence and large data from industry leaders? Check AI and Big Data Expo, which is held in Amsterdam, California, and London. The comprehensive event was identified with other leading events including the smart automation conference, Blockx, the digital transformation week, and the Cyber Security & Cloud.
Explore the upcoming web events and seminars with which Techforge works here.
Don’t miss more hot News like this! Click here to discover the latest in AI news!
2025-08-08 16:04:00



