Deloitte’s newly released study, Leadership, governance and workforce decision-making about ethical AI, found C-level leaders are implementing strategic governance around AI to ensure the ethical use and development of this technology, and most believe these ethical governance structures will support their organization’s ability to innovate on technology.
The authors surveyed 100 C-level executives to understand their decision-making priorities around artificial intelligence (AI), while assessing confidence in their organizations’ existing ethics frameworks and the impact of applying systematic governance in the use of AI. Survey findings point to a human-first approach to regulation, with leaders largely focused on empowering their workforce with the right skills to ensure AI is used responsibly.
“As organizations continue to explore opportunities with AI, it is encouraging to observe how governance frameworks have emerged in tandem, to empower workforces to advance ethical outcomes and drive positive impact,” said Kwasi Mitchell, Deloitte US chief purpose & DEI officer. “By adopting procedures designed to promote responsibility and safeguard trust, leaders can establish a culture of integrity and innovation that enables them to effectively harness the power of AI, while also advancing equity and driving impact.”
The report shows that:
“The widespread development and use of emerging technologies like AI demands systems of governance that encourage the ethical application of these tools,” said Beena Ammanath, executive director, Global Deloitte AI Institute and Trustworthy AI leader, Deloitte LLP. “As leaders look to strike a balance between innovation and regulation, ethically designed governance structures are important to hold both leaders and employees accountable in the responsible use of this technology. Recruiting and upskilling to build a prepared talent pool, providing employee trainings and establishing structures of leadership are some of the tactics that have emerged to drive AI innovation with an ethical focus.”
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Source: Deloitte US