Artificial intelligence in the state's administrative bodies: Prospects of strengthening governance and technical and legal challenges |
Paper ID : 1060-CFLASU |
Authors |
Ahmad Amr Ali Abdeltawab *1, Ahmed Elfiqy2 1Faculty of Law, The British University in Egypt 2Faculty of Law British University in Egypt |
Abstract |
As a matter of fact, Leaders of artificial intelligence will rule the world. The reason behind that is that artificial intelligence will create agents that compete with humans in the work that humans have always monopolized and that needs high levels of intellect perform. What will be studied in this paper is the field of automation of governmental services. This unprecedented leap in technology allows for massive development in how governmental services are being developed. At the same time, it poses threats to the constitutional rights of individuals. The deployment of autonomous systems by the governmental bodies leads to critical infringements to several constitutional rights of individuals. Such infringements could take the form of systematic discrimination against certain groups of individuals. What makes those decisions more ambiguous is that they do render decisions that are inexplainable; a problem identified as the black box effect. In this paper, artificial Intelligence will be tackled from a technical perspective in order to identify the drawbacks of its deployment by governmental bodies and the legal ramification accompanying such deployment. |
Keywords |
Artificial Intelligence, Data Bias, Black Box Effect, Digitalization |
Status: Accepted |