From kiosks designed to speed customer check-in to vibrant casino games, Nevada’s tourism industry is putting artificial intelligence to work. But one of AI’s potential best uses – its ability to assimilate massive amounts of data and identify patterns that could detect fraud and money laundering – is taking a back seat to automating table games and replacing bartenders.
“AI is being used on the operations side, but not necessarily on the compliance side,” says attorney Michael Beckwith of Dickinson Wright, who is speaking Tuesday at the Global Gaming Expo in Las Vegas about maximizing the ability of AI to analyze massive amounts of data, discern patterns, and detect other cues valuable to casinos in preventing fraud and money laundering.
He says casinos are already employing AI technologies for those purposes “but not on the large scale, and not the most cutting edge technology.”
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