Department of Computer Science, Judson University, 1151 N State St, Elgin, IL 60123
World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2025, 25(03), 549-554
Article DOI: 10.30574/wjarr.2025.25.3.0554
Received on 10 January 2025; revised on 15 February 2025; accepted on 18 February 2025
Artificial Intelligence has transformed industries in terms of efficiency, decision-making, and personalization across healthcare, finance, and education. This rapid integration of AI into daily life has also brought forth significant ethical challenges regarding algorithmic bias, transparency, accountability, and regulatory compliance. These come with risks to the equitable application of AI, leading to outcomes that can perpetuate discrimination and systemic injustices. Examples include biased algorithms leading to disparate hiring practices, healthcare access inequity, and credit distribution differences. Most instances of ethical gaps in the use of AI go unmonitored due to a need for well-defined mechanisms for responsibility. Besides that, regulation at a pace equal to AI innovation is a great challenge that creates gaps in oversight and increases risks to privacy, fairness, and other elements of well-being in society. The paper explores these challenges, discussing the causality of the
challenges and suggesting practical ways of mitigating them. It converses technical developments in fairness-aware algorithms, explainable AI, and the legal framework of GDPR to make a case for a multi-stakeholder comprehensive approach towards ethical AI. It would call for collaboration among policymakers, technologists, and industry leaders to build public confidence, ensure fairness and align AI progress with societal values. In the final analysis, the findings have underlined the urgent need for ethical foresight to tap into the potential of AI responsibly and equitably.
Artificial Intelligence; Ethical AI; Algorithmic Bias; Transparency; Accountability; Regulatory Compliance; Fairness-Aware Algorithms; Explainable AI (XAI); Data Privacy; Societal Values; Governance; Interdisciplinary Collaboration; Decision-Making Mechanisms; Global Regulation; Responsible AI
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Manikanta Rajendra kumar Kakarala and Sateesh Kumar Rongali. Existing challenges in ethical AI: Addressing algorithmic bias, transparency, accountability and regulatory compliance. World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2025, 25(03), 549-554. Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2025.25.3.0554.
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