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Leader of Albania Pelted With Trash for Appointing AI-Powered Minister to Cabinet

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The world's first AI government official is going about as well as anyone could expect.

Yesterday, the virtual assistant "Diella" made its "inaugural address" to the Albanian parliament. Maybe unsurprisingly, the software — which had been appointed Minister for Public Procurements last week by prime minister Edi Rama — was met with fury by certain officials.

Chaotic video shared by Albanian media group Report TV shows lawmakers from the opposition party throwing bottles and desk clutter at the prime minister and his cabinet members, after previous attempts to block the address failed.

"This marked the end of the first session of the new legislature," the video caption reads.

In its "speech" — if you can call it that — Diella took aim at opponents who protested the appointment on constitutional grounds.

"Some have called me 'unconstitutional' because I am not a human being," the program chimed. "Let me remind you, the real danger to constitutions has never been the machines but the inhumane decisions of those in power."

The opposition party, the Democratic Party of Albania (PD), is a conservative organization which holds slightly less sway than the ruling party, the Socialist Party of Albania, a democratic socialist group.

Both camps have grappled with widespread corruption dating back to the implementation of a market economy in the early 1990s. Initially, Rama seemed to float the idea of an AI minister as a tongue-in-cheek threat — as if to draw attention to the urgent task of tackling political corruption, seen as key for Albania's bid to join the European Union.

But in a dumbfounding move, the prime minister went ahead and appointed Diella to his cabinet after all, bestowing it with complete control over all public contracts. This, Rama asserts, will make government logistics "100 per cent corruption-free," adding that "every public fund submitted to the tender procedure will be perfectly transparent."

Not everyone shares his optimism.

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