At the Conference on Artificial Intelligence for Developing Countries, held at the UN headquarters in Bangkok, Acromax CEO Aldor Nini introduced the virtual moderator Akila.
Guest on the show "This Week" with moderator Nisida Tufa on News24, spoke about moderator Akila, the rules she follows and the first impact she received during the conference.
"Artificial Intelligence, being used in very critical places, is solving dizzying problems. In the medical sector, in the legal sector, it has also yielded results. While Akila, at the moment it was shown visually, the question was why does Albania need a visual moderator? But it must be said that we have made Akila in such a way that it cannot be commanded and manipulated. Some people who work for traditional media were skeptical about this project that it might make mistakes, or that it could even replace them, but that will not be the case. Akila follows rules that it must follow," he said.
Also during the interview, he focused on monitoring the justice system, with the "RoboCop" model, saying that it can be used by the government, but also by citizens.
"The first case that "RoboCop" can be used, the first scheme is if it should be used by the government. But even a normal citizen can use it to fight corruption. A voluminous file can be processed in 5 minutes. We have a specific case, and in that file it selected it in 5 minutes and drew conclusions, violations committed and also suggested further measures for the next sessions. It must be said that Artificial Intelligence does not attack prosecutors. Today, prosecutors and judges forget that every case that is currently in progress will one day go to the International Court of Human Rights," he continued.
