Authors
Directorate-General for External Policies of the Union, European Parliament, ünver, Akin
Related Organizations
- Catalogue number
- QA-02-24-534-EN-N QA-02-24-534-EN-C
- Citation
- European Parliament, Directorate-General for External Policies of the Union, Ünver, A., Artificial intelligence (AI) and human rights – Using AI as a weapon of repression and its impact on human rights – In-depth analysis , Publications Office of the European Union, 2024, https://data.europa.eu/doi/10.2861/52162
- DOI
- https://data.europa.eu/doi/10.2861/907329 https://data.europa.eu/doi/10.2861/52162
- ISBN
- 978-92-848-1855-6
- Pages
- 119
- Published in
- Belgium
- Themes
- Fundamental rights , Information technology and telecommunications
Table of Contents
- Artificial Intelligence_and_HR.pdf 1
- List of abbreviations 7
- 1 Introduction 9
- 2 Defining repression 10
- 2.1 Scientific definitions 10
- 2.2 Policy definitions 13
- 3 Case studies on algorithmic authoritarianism and surveillance 15
- 3.1 Case and time selection criteria 15
- 3.2 Advanced algorithmic control at scale: The case of China 17
- 3.2.1 Xinjiang region and the persecution of Uighur minority 17
- 3.2.2 China’s social credit system: A technical examination 20
- 3.2.3 Key actors and entities involved in Chinese algorithmic authoritarianism 21
- 3.2.4 Transnational involvement of China’s AI policy and misuse 23
- 3.3 Russian algorithmic authoritarianism: The Yarovaya Law of 2016 and evolution after the 2022 Ukraine invasion 25
- 3.3.1 Evolution and current state after Russia’s 2022 war on Ukraine 27
- 3.3.2 Russian state actors and algorithmic authoritarianism practices 30
- 3.4 Iranian AI-based repression systems: Silencing dissent and suppressing opposition 33
- 3.4.1 Key actors in Iranian algorithmic authoritarianism 36
- 3.4.2 Transnational surveillance and control 38
- 3.5 Egypt or the quest to prevent another Tahrir 39
- 3.6 Algorithmic authoritarianism in Sub-Saharan Africa: The case of Ethiopia and beyond 41
- 4 The role of democracies: Algorithmic bias and technology exports 43
- 4.1 US AI-based systems: Concerns over surveillance and privacy 46
- 4.1.1 Private companies in US domestic AI-based monitoring systems and American AI Systems Exports 50
- 4.1.2 Legislative and judicial check in the USA 51
- 4.2 European high-technology exports 52
- 5 Assessing the effectiveness of the current international regulatory framework and governance initiatives on AI 55
- 5.1 The EU 55
- 5.1.1 The AI Act 57
- 5.1.2 The Ethics Guidelines for Trustworthy AI 58
- 5.1.3 Other EU initiatives 59
- 5.2 The Council of Europe 60
- 5.3 Non-binding international initiatives 61
- 5.3.1 The United Nations and the UNESCO Guideline Evaluation 61
- 5.3.2 The OECD, non-binding AI principles and the Global Partnership on AI 63
- 5.3.3 Expert forums 66
- 5.4 State-led initiatives outside the EU 68
- 5.4.1 The USA 68
- 5.4.2 China 69
- 5.4.3 India 71
- 6 Key recommendations 72
- 6.1 Recommendations for the EU 72
- 6.2 Recommendations for the EP 78
- 6.3 Final conclusions 79
- 7 References 81
- 8 Annexes 97
- 8.1 Techniques, tactics and procedures of algorithmic authoritarianism and bias: An overview of technical repertoires 97
- 8.1.1 Automated Content Filtering (ACF) 97
- 8.1.2 Sentiment analysis 99
- 8.1.2.1 Technical foundations of automated sentiment analysis 99
- 8.1.2.2 Impacts on freedom to access information 100
- 8.1.3 Deep packet inspection 100
- 8.1.4 Facial recognition and surveillance 101
- 8.1.4.1 Technical foundations of facial recognition in surveillance 101
- 8.1.4.2 Applications and impacts on repression 102
- 8.1.5 Predictive policing 103
- 8.1.5.1 Technical foundations of predictive policing 104
- 8.1.5.2 Applications and repression implications 104
- 8.1.6 Deepfake technology 106
- 8.1.6.1 Technical foundations of deepfakes 106
- 8.1.6.2 Applications and repression implications 107
- 8.1.7 Gait detection 108
- 8.1.7.1 Applications and repression implications 109
- 8.2 Current trends in AI abuse for repression 110
- 8.2.1 Outcomes and motivations: Why do governments engage in algorithmic authoritarianism? 110
- 8.2.2 Not all algorithmic authoritarianism plans succeed: Intended vs real effects of AI authoritarianism 111
- 8.2.2.1 User adaptation and resistance 111
- 8.2.2.2 Technological evasion 112
- 8.2.2.3 Algorithmic inefficiency 113
- 8.2.2.4 The over-reliance on technological solutions 114
- 8.2.3 Impact of AI technologies on freedoms and rights 115
- 8.2.3.1 Political Imprisonment 116
- 8.2.3.2 Torture 116
- 8.2.3.3 Killings 117