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Legal scholars warn AI systems could undermine justice itself

A new analysis argues that artificial intelligence is fundamentally incapable of interpreting law or balancing competing rights—yet courts and governments are increasingly deploying it anyway. The gap between AI's perceived reliability and its actual limitations poses a hidden risk to legal systems and creates dangerous dependencies on private tech companies.

Originaltitel: Artificial intelligence and the end of justice

Abstrakt

<p>Justice may be nearing its end with the advent of artificial intelligence. The ubiquitous penetration of AI, reinforced by its gaining legitimacy in non -obvious ways, is leading to a shift in the way humans perceive and apply the principles of justice. AI is incapable of truly understanding and interpreting the law, properly justifying decisions, or balancing rights and interests, which escapes public attention as people are excessively focused on its perceived perfection. Difficult to control, AI entails significant dependency of public institutions on private actors. Without undermining artificial intelligence as such, the article is calling to seriously rethink how far we are ready to go along this path.</p>

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