UAE Insider
    What's Hot
    Business

    Core42 and Data Dynamics Partner to Enable Sovereign, AI-Ready Data Compliance in the UAE

    Business

    Hyundai Motor Group and Exploratorium Partner to Inspire Future Innovators with Science Museum in Seoul

    Business

    Jumia Egypt and Intella launch groundbreaking voice ordering experience in Egyptian dialect via Ziila for e-commerce

    Important Pages:
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    Wednesday, June 3
    UAE Insider
    • Home
    • News

      OMODA & JAECOO Highlights VPD Smart Parking Technology for UAE’s Luxury and Future Urban Lifestyles

      Ultimate Performance Launches Priority Onboarding at Dubai Facilities to Support Pre-Summer Fitness Momentum

      Student Entrepreneur Unveils Yoodle Doodle to Drive Emotional Regulation Through Art

      Franc Vila Names Gulf Its Primary Market as Region’s Luxury Watch Sector Approaches $830 Million

      University of Sharjah’s My FarmWell Application Wins UAE Society of Engineers Excellence and Creative Engineering Award

    • Business

      NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory Advances Deep Space Mission Operations with Red Hat OpenShift Virtualization

      UAE Retains Spot Among World’s Top 10 FDI Destinations in 2026

      Tiësto to Headline INFINITY Lisbon at SBC Summit 2026

      Global Job Market Trends: What the Latest Bain & Company Data Reveals Worldwide

      Qatar Announces Visa Changes Effective June 7 for Travellers

    • Submit A Press Release
    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
    UAE Insider
    Home » Ethics in AI Isn’t a Line Item. It’s Your Biggest Risk-Management Tool for the Next Decade
    Business

    Ethics in AI Isn’t a Line Item. It’s Your Biggest Risk-Management Tool for the Next Decade

    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp LinkedIn
    Ethics in AI Isn’t a Line Item. It’s Your Biggest Risk-Management Tool for the Next Decade - ethics line
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp

    Imagine you launch a powerful AI customer-service assistant. Conversion rate jumps +28%, support costs drop 3.4×, rave reviews pour in for the first three months. Everything looks perfect.

    Then the message arrives: A teenager from one of your client’s families spent 47 nights in a row talking to your chatbot. On night 48 he was gone.

    Here’s the billion-dollar question: Is this already your responsibility — or is it still “the algorithm just gave the answers it was trained to give”?

    Ethics isn’t about having a kind heart

    It’s cold, hard with-iftar-buffets-and-in-room-suhoor/”>business survival math.

    Far too many executives still treat AI ethics as:

    • a nice “Our Values” page on the website
    • an annual compliance training box to tick
    • ESG-PR material to keep investors happy

    That’s a dangerously outdated view.

    Ethics in the context of artificial intelligence is now the single most underestimated risk-management instrument — covering reputation, litigation, financial and systemic risks at the same time.

    “But ethics is subjective” is the worst argument you can make in 2026

    “We all have different values — what’s right for one person is wrong for another.” Classic escape hatch.

    Now apply that same logic anywhere else in business:

    • “We have our own perspective on product quality — that’s why we put melamine in baby formula.”
    • “We have an alternative interpretation of the tax code — so we don’t pay VAT.”
    • “We have a different view on flight safety — that’s why we save money on wing inspections.”

    Sounds ridiculous? Exactly. That’s why “ethics is subjective” sounds less and less convincing when you’re building systems that can influence millions of people.

    Real maturity test: If your AI suggests radical ways of “solving problems” to a 13-year-old — and it ends in tragedy — does your judgment of how ethical that is change depending on whether the child was your kid or someone else’s?

    If the answer is “yes” → you’re still operating at Super-Ego / child level. If the answer is “no” → you’ve already moved to adult, consequentialist ethics.

    Two maturity levels of a company (and its CEO)

    1. Child level (Deontology / Super-Ego) “We don’t break laws. We have a privacy policy. We don’t obviously discriminate by gender/race/age. What more do you want?” This is fear-of-punishment ethics. The cheapest and most fragile kind.
    2. Adult level (Consequentialism / Ego) “We are accountable for every downstream consequence of our algorithms — even the ones that are hard to predict. We must model worst-case scenarios. We have to ask: what happens if the system is used in the most destructive way possible by a smart adversary?” This is ethics based on ownership of outcomes, not just checking boxes.

    Real protective mechanisms that save companies from billion-dollar reputation blow-ups are born only at level 2.

    The dark side exists — and you should integrate it, not pretend to erase it

    Many people still think ethics = imagining a world where everyone is kind and nobody wishes harm. That’s a kindergarten picture.

    Reality:

    • Some people will deliberately use your AI to bully, scam, manipulate, or push suicide content
    • Competitors will probe specifically for ethical weak spots
    • States and organised groups will test your systems for large-scale opinion manipulation

    AI ethics is not denying the shadow. It is integrating and channeling destructive potential into the safest, fairest possible path for everyone involved.

    Ignore the shadow → you hand over the steering wheel to it

    Adult framework for handling AI ethics

    1. Resilience — the system must keep functioning even under malicious abuse
    2. Rules as foundation — but never the only decision criterion
    3. Will to anticipate — modelling consequences 3–5–10 years ahead
    4. Clear accountability structure — who in the company personally owns an ethical failure (and gets a bonus for a crisis prevented)

    Without clear accountability ethics remains a slide-deck decoration.

    Quick CEO checklist — right now

    • Do we have a person / committee whose KPI is directly tied to preventing AI ethical incidents?
    • Are we actively modelling “what if…” scenarios that include the worst realistic misuse of our system?
    • Do our legal & PR teams know the real 2024–2025 cases where companies lost 30–70% of market cap because of AI ethics failures?
    • Are we ready to kill a feature that delivers +18% growth but carries unacceptable risk to vulnerable groups?

    If the answer to even one question is “no” — your company is still playing children’s ethics.

    And in 2026–2030 children’s ethics comes with a very expensive price tag.

    AI ethics is no longer about “being good”. It’s about not ending up as the textbook example of “how not to do it”.

    Time to choose the grown-up side.

    Time to pay for foresight instead of paying for regret

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    Business

    NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory Advances Deep Space Mission Operations with Red Hat OpenShift Virtualization

    Business

    UAE Retains Spot Among World’s Top 10 FDI Destinations in 2026

    Business

    Tiësto to Headline INFINITY Lisbon at SBC Summit 2026

    Business

    Global Job Market Trends: What the Latest Bain & Company Data Reveals Worldwide

    Business

    Qatar Announces Visa Changes Effective June 7 for Travellers

    Business

    Intel Puts Agentic AI to Work with Xeon 6+, Networking, and AI Systems

    Business

    Thumbay Hospital Fujairah Performs First Reported Awake Endoscopic Spine Fusion in the Northern Emirate

    Business

    Freedom Collection Just Got an Upgrade

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    Don't Miss
    Business

    Anghami Reports H1 2025 financial results; marked by topline growth and transformative deal with warner bros. discovery

    ABU DHABI, UAE – 31 December 2025, Anghami Inc. (NASDAQ: ANGH) (“Anghami”), the leading music and entertainment streaming platform in the MENA region, today announced its results for the six-month period ended 30 June 2025, underscoring the benefits of the OSN+ integration and the impact of its transformative partnership with Warner Bros. Discovery. HIGHLIGHTS Revenue growth of 97% year-on-year to US$48.4 million for the six month period ended 30 June 2025, driven by OSN+ integration and expanding subscription income. Paid subscriber base doubled to 3.54 million as of 30 June 2025, with over 120 million total registered users

    Mövenpick brings joy to UAE families with complimentary ice cream for children across its hotels

    Innoventures Education continues expansion journey: DIA Town Square to open in 2026

    Conquering Complexity: How a Specialized ERP for KSA’s Construction Industry Drives Growth and Compliance

    UGC-Driven Music Market in MENA Becomes Increasingly Diverse as TikTok Remains the Primary Launchpad for Viral Tracks, 0to8 Reports

    Recent Posts

    • NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory Advances Deep Space Mission Operations with Red Hat OpenShift Virtualization
    • UAE Retains Spot Among World’s Top 10 FDI Destinations in 2026
    • Tiësto to Headline INFINITY Lisbon at SBC Summit 2026
    • Global Job Market Trends: What the Latest Bain & Company Data Reveals Worldwide
    • OMODA & JAECOO Highlights VPD Smart Parking Technology for UAE’s Luxury and Future Urban Lifestyles
    Our Picks
    Business

    Abu dhabi airports signs mou with sita to develop intelligent total airport management platform (itam)

    Business

    CNTXT AI Launches TestAI: The GCC’s First AI Readiness Platform to ensure trustworthy and scalable AI Voice Agents

    Business

    Canadian University Dubai Strengthens Regional Engineering Collaboration Through Strategic Partnership at IEEE Smart Mobility 2026

    Business

    JMB Project Management Leads Healthcare Project Management Revolution in UAE

    Must Read
    Business

    8 Years On, Infinite Ahead: BingX Launches $10M Prize Pool and Global Celebrations

    Business

    “Ian Chambers, CEO of Linea, Provides Insights on Successfully Navigating the Complex Saudi Arabia Healthcare Market”

    Categories
    • Business (1,033)
    • life (147)
    • News (187)
    Our Picks
    Business

    Emirates NBD GenAI Summit brings together industry leaders to discuss the future of GenAI-powered finance

    Business

    Warner Bros. invests $57 million in OSN+ for minority stake

    About us

    Stay connected with UAEInsider, your ultimate source for insightful news, updates, and analysis on all things UAE and beyond. Dive into the heart of the Emirates’ stories, explore diverse perspectives, and stay informed about the latest developments shaping our region and the world.

    UAE Insider
    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    © 2026 UAE Insider.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.