The proliferation of AI-driven surveillance architectures has intensified global debates surrounding privacy, dignity, and the preservation of human rights in digital societies. From a broad perspective, artificial intelligence technologies including facial recognition, behavioral analytics, and predictive policing have become integral to governance, security, and commercial systems. Yet their expansion has also introduced profound ethical tensions between the pursuit of safety and the protection of individual freedoms. States increasingly deploy AI surveillance under the banner of national security and public order, while private corporations utilize similar tools for consumer profiling and behavioral prediction. This convergence of state and corporate monitoring creates unprecedented asymmetries of power over individuals’ digital identities and personal autonomy. At the normative level, these practices challenge the universal entitlement to privacy and dignity enshrined in international human rights law, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Article 12) and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (Article 17). Narrowing the scope, this paper examines how algorithmic surveillance erodes the principles of consent, proportionality, and accountability that underpin digital rights frameworks. It highlights the blurred boundary between legitimate oversight and intrusive control, exploring case studies where AI surveillance has facilitated discrimination, social manipulation, and suppression of dissent. Ultimately, the paper argues that reconciling technological innovation with human rights preservation requires embedding ethical oversight mechanisms into AI governance architectures. Establishing binding safeguards, transparency mandates, and rights-based digital charters is essential to ensuring that security-enhancing technologies do not compromise human dignity. In the evolving digital order, privacy must remain a universal entitlement rather than a privilege subject to algorithmic discretion.
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Obioma Adesewa Okonkwo
Magna Scientia Advanced Research and Reviews
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Obioma Adesewa Okonkwo (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6906a3a98b61f987b17a0238 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.30574/msarr.2023.9.2.0179