AI surpasses e-governance and technology hurdles with proper control

Book Title: Shaping the Future: Innovation, Sustainability, and Inclusive Growth in a Globalized Economy

Editors: Editors: Dr. Shanu Singh, and Dr. Yashmita Awasthi

Student Editor: Krishna Singh Rawat

ISBN: 978-93-7183-006-5

Chapter: 3

DOI: https://doi.org/10.59646/725/3

Author: Dr. Kavirayani Srikanth

Abstract

In the digital e-governance era , tolerance for corruption, crime should be subject to decline but it has relatively increased due to common man’s inability to understand the nature of cybercrime that are possible. If in today’s world, AI doesn’t come to the rescue of common man, there would be more technology based losers than the gainers. It is seen in daily news and articles people loosing money for cyberfrauds due to lack of awareness with policies. This paper investigates a method and proposes a solution where people could use a cooling time or a healing time to reduce the risk of falling prey to a cyber bully or cyber fraudster. This is possible with delayed AI interference where AI based tool would intentionally delay the transaction so that the fraudster is got in a dilemma and the risk is reduced for the prey. Strategic latency is the key in governing or controlling the cyber crime where AI plays the intermediate catalyst role. Typically the job of AI handler would be to analyze behavioral patterns and transaction velocities in real-time so that high risk interactions are identified and a mandatory cooling off period is actuated. The delay effects and how it impacts the policy is further explored when  integrated into the e-governance frameworks of citizen protection initiatives(CPI) over digital speed of operation.AI-CFMS(AI- Controlled Fraud Mitigation System) depicted in the figure 1 is the model of a fraud call input which is regulated and guards the user when the user receives the call. The smartphone or the device would typically have the literary data of the user and AI app would interfere with the phone call process and prompts the user for possible theft and uses a strategic latency protocol and creates a synthetic disturbance