Overview
- AI now permeates routine work such as writing, organizing information, data analysis and process automation.
- Analysts highlight non-neutral outputs including bias, errors and convincing hallucinations that can mislead even experts.
- Pieces caution that decisions affecting rights require meaningful human supervision, with responsibility remaining on people and the state.
- Authors document new fraud risks from synthetic documents, digital identities and documentary deepfakes that can fool automated checks.
- Research cited links heavy digital and AI use to weaker memory and attention, reduced critical thinking and decision paralysis, prompting calls for robust identity, document traceability and real human review.