You Can’t Bribe the Sun
Here’s what nobody wants to admit: we’ve known how to fix corruption for decades. We just haven’t wanted to pay the price.
The price isn’t money. It’s power. It’s the ability to call in favors, to look the other way, to remember who helped you get elected. Corruption isn’t a bug in the system – for many, it’s been the feature that makes the whole thing work.
Albania just changed the game.
They hired someone who doesn’t need favors
In September 2025, Prime Minister Edi Rama introduced Diella to his cabinet. The name means “sun” in Albanian, which is fitting because sunlight is exactly what she brings to the darkest corners of government spending. Diella is an AI minister built on OpenAI models, and her job description is beautifully simple: make corruption impossible.
Not harder. Not riskier. Impossible.
She scans every tender in Albania’s public procurement system. Every proposal. Every contract. Every suspicious pattern that humans have learned to ignore or explain away. And when something doesn’t add up, she doesn’t schedule a meeting to discuss it. She blocks it.
This is what audacity looks like in 2025
Albania scores 42 out of 100 on Transparency International’s corruption index. That’s not a grade you frame and hang on the wall. The country’s $16 billion procurement system has been a playground for organized crime and money laundering, the kind of systemic rot that everyone acknowledges and nobody fixes because fixing it would require investigating the investigators.
Diella doesn’t have that problem. She has no friends to protect, no career to advance, no family to threaten. She can’t be bribed with money because she doesn’t spend it. She can’t be intimidated with violence because she doesn’t bleed. She can’t be seduced with power because she already has the only power that matters: the ability to say no.
Here’s the uncomfortable question this raises
Is this authoritarian or democratic? An AI with the power to override human decisions sounds like something from a dystopian screenplay. But what do you call a system where humans override ethical decisions for personal gain? We’ve been living in that movie for centuries. We just called it “politics as usual.”
The paradox is delicious. Albania is using an authoritarian tool – algorithmic oversight that cannot be negotiated with – to create radical transparency. They’re fighting corruption not with better people, but by removing people from the equation entirely.
This isn’t about Albania
It’s about what happens when one country proves it can be done. When other nations with corruption scores that make Albania look pristine start asking themselves: what if we couldn’t be bribed either?
The future of governance might not be about electing better leaders. It might be about designing systems where being a worse leader simply doesn’t work anymore.
Diella isn’t just scanning contracts. She’s scanning our assumptions about what government has to be.