Pope Leo denounces ‘culture of power’ driving rise of AI
TL;DR
Pontiff calls for ‘most rigorous’ ethical constraints on tech and apologises for church’s delay in condemning slavery Pope Leo has denounced the “culture of power” driving the rapid rise of artificial intelligence while warning that the technology must be subject to the “most rigorous” ethical constraints as it infiltrates everything from work to war. In his encyclical – the first major text on safeguarding humankind of his papacy – Leo, the first US-born pontiff, also apologised for the Catholic church’s long delay in condemning slavery, describing it as “a wound in Christian memory”, while warning about the “new forms of slavery” due to the digital economy.
Nauti's Take
The opportunity: when the Pope himself drags AI ethics into the global conversation, pressure on builders and regulators ratchets up — a real chance to move risk talks out of the tech bubble. The catch: an encyclical is not a law, and 'most rigorous' ethical constraints stay a moral appeal without concrete definitions or enforcement teeth.
Nauti's view: anyone shipping AI should treat this as a barometer of public mood, not as a compliance checklist.