Artificial Intelligence is turbocharged crime, the European Union Police Agency warns

R.Hay, the Netherlands-The European Union Law Agency warned on Tuesday that artificial intelligence is to turns the organized crime that erodes the foundations of societies across the 27-countries bloc where it intertwines with the state-sponsored stability campaigns.

The dark warning came in the launch of the latest edition of a report on the organized crime that is published every four years by Europol that was collected using police data from the European Union and will help form a law enforcement policy in the bloc in the coming years.

“Electronic crimes are developing into a digital armament race targeting governments, companies and individuals. The attacks by artificial intelligence have become more accurate and destructive,” said Catherine de Ball, Executive Director of Europol.

She added, “Some attacks show a mixture of profit motivations and destabilization, because they are increasingly from the state and motives ideologically.”

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The report, which is the evaluation of the threat of serious and organized crime in the European Union 2025, said that the crimes ranging from drug trafficking to people who are blowing, money laundering, electronic attacks and online fraud undermine society and the rule of law “by generating illegal returns, spreading violence, and normalizing corruption.”

The report said that the size of the sexual assault materials on children available online increased significantly due to artificial intelligence, which makes it difficult to analyze images and identify criminals.

“By creating a very realistic artificial media, criminals can deceive the victims, impersonate individuals, distorting a reputation or extortion objectives. Add the cloning of the sound and direct video increases the threat, which provides new forms of fraud, extortion and theft of identity.”

The report said that the countries that seek to obtain the geopolitical advantage use criminals as contractors, citing electronic attacks against critical infrastructure and public institutions “arising from Russia and countries in their field of influence.”

She said: “The hybrid actors and traditional electronic crimes will be increasingly intertwined, as the representatives sponsored by the state themselves as electronic criminals hide to hide their origin and real disturbance motives.”

The Undersecretary of the Polish Ministry of State of the Ministry of State MacIEJ DUSZCKYK was martyred with modern electronic dates in the hospital as the latest example in his country.

He said, “Unfortunately, this hospital must stop its hours for hours because it was lost due to a dangerous electronic attack.”

The report said that artificial intelligence and other technologies “are an incentive for crime, and to pay the efficiency of criminal operations by amplifying its speed, arrival and development.”

While the European Commission is preparing to launch a new internal security policy, de Paul said that countries in Europe need to address threats urgently.

“We must integrate security in everything we do,” said European Commissioner for Internal Affairs and Immigration Magnus Bruner. He added that the European Union aims to save enough money in the coming years to double the Europol employees.

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