"Artificial Intelligence has now become part of our daily life horizon and will increasingly be a constituent element of it, with effects of whose scope (in a broad anthropological sense) we are not, perhaps, fully aware. Law has the task of filling this void of awareness, providing us with the tools to understand how to truly place at the service of man what can be as much an extraordinary factor of development, well-being, and promotion of the public interest as it is also, if not well governed, a source of risks that are anything but negligible, for the person, society, and democracy". Thus the Data Protection Authority, Pasquale Stanzione. "Consider that about 65% of children today use Artificial Intelligence to do their homework; two out of three students would have prepared their high school exams by resorting to Chat GPT, which, moreover, apparently failed to correctly translate the Minos, or The Laws, attributed to Plato," stressed the guarantor, who points out, "Artificial Intelligence even managed to enrich, with extraordinary visual and sound effects, the Turandot performed at La Scala. One in four companies in our country has already integrated Artificial Intelligence into their production processes and within a year - it is estimated - 60% of companies will use it in their hiring processes. It is also estimated that Artificial Intelligence could replace, in the next few years, about 85 million jobs while creating, however, 97 million new ones, albeit with a risk of new, further inequalities, highlighted with concern by the International Monetary Fund. And it is not, after all, such a peregrine risk, if one considers the profound inequalities that, even on the labor ground, digital capitalism has produced, compared to the 'invisible' workers of the gig economy".
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