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How Nonprofits Can Create Ethical AI Policies

NonProfit Quarterly

Image Credit: ThisIsEngineering on Pexels Artificial intelligence (AI) has come to the nonprofit sector. Whether one views the technology as a force for good or something more sinister, the use of AI by nonprofits is sure to grow. Yet less than 10 percent of nonprofits have any kind of policy governing the use of AI.

Ethics 114
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Sector Adopting AI, Building Reserves, and Expanding, Survey Shows

NonProfit Quarterly

Image credit: Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels Eighty-two percent of nonprofits say they’re using artificial intelligence (AI), with financial tasks being the most commonly reported use. The next most common use of AI, cited by 36 percent of nonprofits, was for program optimization and impact assessment.

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NPOs Keeping Human Touch Amid Tech And AI

The NonProfit Times

That was the unanimous view of panelists from some of the nations largest healthcare nonprofits during a discussion at the Consumers Electronics Show (CES) here. Food and Drug Administration-approved treatments to patients. She also spoke about ethical guidelines of AI use.

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4 Ways Nonprofits Can Beat AI Blandification

Nonprofit Tech for Good

By Greg Fine a marketing consultant who leverages 30 years of for-profit marketing and advertising experience to help nonprofits create larger-than-life giving campaigns and marketing that connect. At face value, AI appears to be a gift from the fund development and marketing gods. But whats the reality? But whats the reality?

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Nonprofit Board Management Software to Boost Success | Affnetz

Affnetz

Corporate Sponsorships for Nonprofits | A Guide to Grow Nonprofits/ By Bala Guntipalli Introduction to Nonprofit Board Management Software: Technology has become an integral part of our lives, changing the way we do business and manage organizations. Nonprofit boards typically consist of people from various backgrounds.

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What’s in a Name? The Ethics of Building Naming Gifts

Stanford Social Innovation Review

Today, nonprofit fundraising and especially large capital campaigns emphasize naming opportunities to attract seven-, eight-, and nine-figure donations from high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs). In response, I returned to school to study fundraising and nonprofit sector leadership and their relationship to normative ethics.

Ethics 122
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Privacy Without Pain: A Primer for Nonprofits

Nonprofit Marketing Guide

How do nonprofit administrators and fundraisers incorporate privacy as a process, in working with clients and donors? FIPs were developed just as computers began storing previously unfathomed amounts of data in the 1970s. Guest Post by David Schulz. Privacy is a cherished right. But it’s among the most confusing and nuanced.