New EFF Report Provides Guidance to Ensure Human Rights are Protected Amid Government Use of AI in Latin America

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Governments increasingly rely on algorithmic systems to support consequential assessments and determinations about people’s lives, from judging eligibility for social assistance to trying to predict crime and criminals. Latin America is no exception. With the use of artificial intelligence (AI) posing human rights challenges in the region, EFF released  today the report Inter-American Standards and State Use of AI for Rights-Affecting Determinations in Latin America: Human Rights Implications and Operational Framework.

This report draws on international human rights law, particularly standards from the Inter-American Human Rights System, to provide guidance on what state institutions must look out for when assessing whether and how to adopt artificial intelligence AI and automated decision-making (ADM) systems for determinations that can affect people’s rights.

We organized the report’s content and testimonies on current challenges from civil society experts on the ground in our project landing page.

AI-based Systems Implicate Human Rights

The report comes amid deployment of AI/ADM-based systems by Latin American state institutions for services and decision-making that affects human rights. Colombians must undergo classification from Sisbén, which measures their degree of poverty and vulnerability, if they want to access social protection programs. This article has been indexed from Deeplinks

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