Experts Caution Against Bias In AI’s Work

Haydarabad: What happens to artificial intelligence not only to answer demands, but also to make decisions, complete tasks and act independently? For women, students from all over Haydarabad were implemented with agent AI, a model that is a model that can perform complex functions such as preparing business applications from passive automation, responding to e-mails, summarizing or researching the news.
“This is not only about technology, but about the elections that build it, how it is used and which values are buried in Hyderabad American Programming Coordinator Melissa Nandula. “Agent artificial intelligence will shape how people work, communicate and solve their problems. However, this means that we need to ask difficult questions about trust, responsibility and ethics.”
The two -day workshop organized in cooperation with American Corner Hyderabad and Centle showed students how to use Coded platforms to create AI agents working without the need for programming background. However, in addition to the technique, focal, context and conclusion remained strict.
Centle’s founding partner Sai Krishna said, uz We want students to see that AI is not magic. A system built by people for people, ”he said. “If we give AI goals, we must understand that they have goals and what happened when they are wrong.”
During a panel debate about AI in ethical, autonomy and accountability, the real founder Raqesh Dubbudu warned against the charm of calling AI systems as neutral tools. “If a system rejects someone’s benefits or makes a life -based decision, who answers it?” he asked. “We can’t let artificial intelligence become a new excuse.”
St Francis Assistant Professor, Padmashree, said that students should learn not only what AI is doing, not what AI is doing, but what to do. “Prejudice is not an error, a design choice that we usually notice. We must be intentional about what we build these agents.”
Director Prof T. Uma Joseph, the main purpose is not only users, but to shape informed creators, he said. “The agent points to a turning point of artificial intelligence, we go to the agents who commented, decide and move from the tools that serve the instructions, and come with this civilian responsibility.”
The event ended with the words of the political-economic officer Veena Thangavelu, who called on students to step into leading leadership roles in developing technology. “Workshops like this are more than skills. It is about shaping values that guide AI how AI develops, and you do not need to be coder to do so.”
Approximately 175 participants from the colleges in Haydarabad took part in the program, formed their own AI agents, entered the critical dialogue, and came face to face with greater questions raised by AI.
