ARMONK, N.Y. — A new report shows the gap between companies’ plans for artificial intelligence (AI) ethics and the market reality.
“AI ethics in action” by the IBM Institute for Business Value (IBV) is intended to show “where executives stand” on AI ethics and how they’re implementing AI ethics, according to IBM this month.
The report indicates there’s a “strong imperative for advancing trustworthy AI,” including better performance compared to peers in sustainability, social responsibility, and diversity and inclusion.
Yet, there’s an AI ethics gap between “leaders’ intention and meaningful actions.”
“AI ethics in action” also highlights the “radical shift” in the roles responsible for leading and upholding AI ethics at company: 80% of survey respondents pointed to a non-technical executive, such as a CEO, as the primary “champion” for AI ethics, up from 15% in 2018.
Non-technical business executives are now seen as the driving force in AI ethics:
Building trustworthy AI is perceived as a strategic differentiator, and organizations are beginning to implement AI ethics mechanisms:
Ensuring ethical principles are embedded in AI solutions is a pressing need for organizations, but progress is slow:
IBM provides several recommendations for business leaders to implement AI ethics: take a cross-functional, collaborative approach; establish both organizational and AI life cycle governance to operationalize the discipline of AI ethics; and reach beyond the organization for partnership.
“As many companies today use AI algorithms across their business, they potentially face increasing internal and external demands to design these algorithms to be fair, secured, and trustworthy,” said Jesus Mantas, global managing partner, IBM Consulting.
“Yet, there has been little progress across the industry in embedding AI ethics into their practices.”
Mantas said building “trustworthy AI is a business imperative and a societal expectation, not just a compliance issue.”
“As such, companies can implement a governance model and embed ethical principles across the full AI life cycle,” Mantas said.
The IBM report “AI ethics in action” is partly based on a survey of 1,200 executives working across 22 countries and 22 industries.
The survey was conducted in partnership with Oxford Economics in 2021.
Datamation is the leading industry resource for B2B data professionals and technology buyers. Datamation's focus is on providing insight into the latest trends and innovation in AI, data security, big data, and more, along with in-depth product recommendations and comparisons. More than 1.7M users gain insight and guidance from Datamation every year.
Advertise with TechnologyAdvice on Datamation and our other data and technology-focused platforms.
Advertise with Us
Property of TechnologyAdvice.
© 2025 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved
Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this
site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives
compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products
appear on this site including, for example, the order in which
they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies
or all types of products available in the marketplace.