
Government will use AI to crack down on benefit cheats with £70million in funding earmarked for high-tech 'machine learning' to detect fraud
Daily MailArtificial Intelligence will be used in a crackdown on benefit cheats, the Government has announced. The Department for Work and Pensions is investing £70million into high-tech 'machine learning' in an attempt to identify patterns and anomalies among welfare applications that could be fraud. And in sweeping reforms, DWP investigators will be given powers to make arrests and conduct searches, as well as retrieve information from claimants' banks. An estimated £6.4billion was lost to fraudsters in the last financial year, and the crackdown comes a month after a Bulgarian gang admitted masterminding Britain's biggest benefits fraud, stealing £54 million through claims 'factories'. Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride pictured in February DWP investigators will also be given powers to make arrests and conduct searches, as well as retrieve information from claimants' banks Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride said last night: 'The scale of their offending is a sobering reminder of the calculated and organised nature of fraud committed against our welfare system.'
History of this topic

Firms can use AI to help offset Budget tax hikes, says Google UK boss
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Embracing AI could save Government £40 billion a year, experts say
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Revealed: Government using AI to decide on benefits and driving licences
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Inside a Misfiring Government Data Machine
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