By pairing the power of AI systems and human wisdom, researchers Drs. Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, Jana Shaich Borg, and Vincent Conitzer at Duke University hope to offer a tool for strengthening the moral capacities of humans. AI is being implemented across a wide spectrum of use and this proliferation is giving rise to concern. One day, researchers expect to advance a moral structure to these technologies. The research group has focused on kidney donations. With many recipients waiting for their exchange and limited donors, the moral decisions of the next in line become complex. Artificial Intelligence does not mind filtering huge amounts of data in order to streamline decisions that ultimately will be made by humans. The concept of a single human morality is one that may never be agreed on but researchers are taking steps with basic concepts like, do no harm, and maintaining human rights. Technology with a moral compass is perhaps decades away but the concerns are evident and preliminary efforts are underway. Human decision is being studied through data gathered from large segments of the population. The choices that we make are being collected and from this collection, researchers expect to inform the machines about human morality in a general way. Morality is a very personal matter, so the paths taken by AI will not match for every individual, but we will have a basic safeguard in place.