The slow-motion AI explosion

Issue 9 2020 Editor's Choice

Artificial intelligence (AI) has been around for years. It has crept into systems and solutions with determined, algorithmic intensity, and it has layered its capabilities onto chatbots, APIs, neural networks, and business processes. It has evolved within the networks and the innovation hubs to become more than the hype that once preceded it.

While it has yet to shift into robotic form and exceed the human, it has exceeded expectations in terms of its scope and scale. According to Sabelo Dlamini, senior research and consulting manager, International Data Corporation (IDC) sub-Saharan Africa, AI is now entering the commercial space at speed, bringing with it applications and solutions that can change the face of business – not explosively, but intelligently.

“AI has been around since the 1950s, but today we can see its promise far more clearly,” he says. “It is promising a significant impact across multiple sectors and it can potentially solve problems of a global magnitude. Recent technological advancements in computing, storage, and networking capabilities have enabled the viability of AI implementation.”

The technology that currently holds up the growing weight of big data and that ensures it is processed, stored, and transmitted has become far more robust and scalable. Advancements in its abilities, and cost reductions, have made AI applications more commercially accessible today than at any time in the past. This is being further supported by ongoing research and development by organisations spurred by existing successes in the field. However, for AI to become even more relevant and accessible, there has to be a shift in business thinking.

“There’s an urgent need for business leaders to go beyond the AI headlines, which have mostly focused on machines replacing humans and causing job losses, and to look at more practical AI-powered solutions,” says Dlamini. “AI needs to be leveraged for business decision-making to complement humans, to provide more predictive and prescriptive analytics, and to unpack the vast quantities of data owned by the organisation. AI can be used in so many ways, and those ways do not entail job losses and human cost.”

With AI, the business can enhance employee productivity and skills development. It can automate the banal and change the boundaries of individual and business growth. But to do so, it needs buy-in from leadership and organisational culture. With this commitment, AI can go far beyond the hyped trauma of job loss and into the realm of improving business processes and customer experiences.

“A starting point for AI can be in embedding security throughout the business,” says Dlamini. “Using AI can enhance human analysis by automating repetitive security tasks and minimising error. It can also be used in threat hunting and detecting, stopping malicious activities, and analysing endpoints. As the security guard that never sleeps, AI supports the human to provide a holistic security net for the entire organisation.”


Sabelo Dlamini, senior research and consulting manager, International Data Corporation (IDC) sub-Saharan Africa.

AI is also being used to manage physical surveillance using video analytics and machine learning. Video surveillance systems pull on AI to interpret images and manage data at massive volumes, supporting the physical security of high-risk areas and remote sites.

“Another concern that is raised by the business is the saying, ‘use AI before it uses you’,” explains Dlamini. “This isn’t as ominous as it sounds. It simply points to the fact that the business needs to take advantage of the technology before it is left out, or left behind. Almost all sectors now have a case or application for AI, so every organisation within these sectors needs to take the opportunity to explore how technology can be of use to them.”

Today, to put the gears of AI in motion, the business should be putting proofs of concept (PoCs) in place that use AI to improve specific business processes. These PoCs should be focusing on the areas of the business where AI can complement human processes and where it can enhance different technology applications, such as the Internet of Things (IoT) or robotic process automation (RPA). These technologies use AI in the backend to improve business processes and augment the way the company delivers services in the future.

“While AI is continuously developing, there is still room for customising and localising the technology,” concludes Dlamini. “We’ve seen this already in voice recognition solutions that have been developed using AI to recognise local voices, accents, and languages so that something as common as call centre technology can become fully relevant in a country like South Africa with eleven official languages. This is just one example of how AI can reduce the friction in the business and make life easier, and more profitable, in the future.”




Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page



Further reading:

What is your ‘real’ security posture?
BlueVision Editor's Choice Information Security Infrastructure AI & Data Analytics
Many businesses operate under the illusion that their security controls, policies, and incident response plans will hold firm when tested by cybercriminals, but does this mean you are really safe?

Read more...
What is your ‘real’ security posture? (Part 2)
BlueVision Editor's Choice Information Security Infrastructure
In the second part of this series of articles from BlueVision, we explore the human element: social engineering and insider threats and how red teaming can expose and remedy them.

Read more...
IQ and AI
Leaderware Editor's Choice Surveillance AI & Data Analytics
Following his presentation at the Estate Security Conference in October, Craig Donald delves into the challenge of balancing human operator ‘IQ’ and AI system detection within CCTV control rooms.

Read more...
Onsite AI avoids cloud challenges
SMART Security Solutions Technews Publishing Editor's Choice Infrastructure AI & Data Analytics
Most AI programs today depend on constant cloud connections, which can be a liability for companies operating in secure or high-risk environments. That reliance exposes sensitive data to external networks, but also creates a single point of failure if connectivity drops.

Read more...
Toxic combinations
Editor's Choice
According to Panaseer’s latest research, 70% of major breaches are caused by toxic combinations: overlapping risks that compound and amplify each other, forming a critical vulnerability to be exploited.

Read more...
Continuum launches centralised access and identity management
Editor's Choice Access Control & Identity Management Integrated Solutions Facilities & Building Management
Continuum Identity is a newly launched company in the identity management and access control sector, targeting the complexity of managing various Access and Identity Management (AIM) systems.

Read more...
Making drone security more accessible
Editor's Choice Integrated Solutions Residential Estate (Industry) AI & Data Analytics IoT & Automation
Michael Lever discusses advances in drone technology, focusing on cost reductions and the implementation of automated services, including beyond line of sight capabilities, for residential estates with SMART Security Solutions.

Read more...
Private fire services becoming the norm?
Technews Publishing SMART Security Solutions Editor's Choice
As the infrastructure and service delivery in many of South Africa’s major cities decline, with a few, limited exceptions, more of the work that should be done by the state has fallen to private companies.

Read more...
View from the trenches
Technews Publishing SMART Security Solutions Editor's Choice Integrated Solutions Security Services & Risk Management Residential Estate (Industry)
There are many great options available to estates for effectively managing their security and operations, but those in the trenches are often limited by body corporate/HOA budget restrictions and misunderstandings.

Read more...
SMART Estate Security Conference KZN 2025
Arteco Global Africa OneSpace Technologies SMART Security Solutions Technews Publishing Editor's Choice Integrated Solutions Security Services & Risk Management Residential Estate (Industry)
May 2025 saw the SMART Security Solutions team heading off to Durban for our annual Estate Security Conference, once again hosted at the Mount Edgecombe Country Club.

Read more...










While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd. | All Rights Reserved.