Authentise uses AI to reduce paperwork in aircraft and Boeing saves millions

Published on 2026-07-01 | Translated from Spanish

Authentise has launched an artificial intelligence-based tool designed to reduce the bureaucratic burden in the manufacturing of aeronautical parts. Boeing has already implemented it and estimates savings of $8 million in engineering costs during the first year. For the average citizen, this suggests that products like airplanes could become cheaper and faster to manufacture. Technology, when applied well, has the potential to lower prices and accelerate industrial production.

industrial engineering workspace showing a large aircraft wing section on a factory floor, a holographic AI interface floating above a tablet displaying digital workflow automation, a technician gesturing toward the hologram while paper documents are visibly shrinking into a small stack, metallic tools and aerospace components in foreground, bright overhead LED factory lighting, clean modern assembly line background, photorealistic technical visualization, sharp focus on the holographic data streams and mechanical details, cinematic depth of field, hyper-detailed metal surfaces

How AI Digests Technical Documents to Streamline Certifications 🤖

Authentise's tool automates the processing of material certificates, engineering orders, and quality records. It uses language models specifically trained on aeronautical regulations to extract key data and validate compliance. This reduces hours of manual review by engineers, who previously had to cross-check each specification sheet against FAA or EASA requirements. The system generates compliance reports in minutes, eliminating bottlenecks in the production chain. The result is a cleaner workflow less prone to human error.

Finally, AI is Good for Something: Less Paperwork Than Your Boss 😅

Until now, artificial intelligence only promised us self-driving cars that never arrived and assistants that don't understand accents. But Authentise has achieved what seemed impossible: getting engineers to stop crying over mountains of forms. Boeing, instead of continuing to hire interns for filing, has decided to let a machine do the dirty work. And the best part: no one will have to ask the boss for permission to use the stapler.