AI

Priest on World Communications Day 2024


The Coordinator of the Department of Social Communications of the Association of Member Episcopal Conferences in Eastern Africa (AMECEA) said that though the technology has a lot of potential, “there are also many dangers especially when the technology can tap from the algorithm of a person and do things in the name of that person.”

He went on to laud the Kenyan government for taking the issue of ICT seriously and challenged African nations to formulate “a clear legal frame in dealing with AI issues.”

“Our friends in Europe have already come up with a legal framework, but in Africa, very few countries have that legal framework,” the Nairobi-based Malawian member of the Montfort Missionaries (SMM) said, adding, “There is a need for this legal framework to protect the privacy of every human being.”

Such policies and regulations would go a long way in fostering and safeguarding human dignity, he further said.

Fr. Kaufa went on to caution against overdependence on digitality, saying, “People need not to depend on these technologies so much; technology must be at the service of humanity, not humanity at the service of technology.”

“People are posing themselves like they are subjects to technology in such a way that technology is doing everything for them; that is wrong,” the SMM member, who was among members Pope Francis appointed as Consulters to the Vatican Dicastery of Communications in September 2022 lamented. 

He urged Catholic media content producers to be vigilant while engaging AI and cautioned them against disinformation. “We as communicators who are responsible for content production; we have to take our responsibility seriously,” Fr. Kaufa said during the May 12 interview at Our Lady of Assumption Umoja Parish of ADN, the venue of this year’s WCD celebrations for Catholic media entities in the Kenyan Metropolitan See.

Also speaking to ACI Africa, Patricia Mwende Kilonzo, a parishioner at the Kenyan Catholic Parish said that parents and guardians have a responsibility to regulate social media content for their respective children. 

“As mothers, we should support our children; we should make sure they watch the right content whether in the house or outside the house,” Mrs. Kilonzo said, adding, “This will enable us to control what they watch on social media. We should also make sure that what they post on social media is positive.”

AI, the member of the Catholic Women Association (CWA) in the ADN said, “is a new model in the market and as much as we are going to rely on it, we also have our intellectual property that we should safeguard.”





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