I assume, you are not deadly serious about the question about machine-intelligence? :P - but I still feed it back to you :)
Then the question would be, from where would the machine derive its intelligence? Would it be a learning computer, for example, by recording the habits of all those active in a sphere? Then these habits would tell the machine which functions were used frequently, which rarely and which not at all. Should the machine draw its "own" conclusions from this? Should it, for example, question functions that are rarely used? Should the AI put these functions up for general disposal? What criteria would an AI use to evaluate functions and their effects? What parameters does one give it?
How would the AI then present the statistics, in what form would it present them to the general public? Would it be able to "answer" all users?
How should the AI interpret feelings, i.e. the form of communication through writing, audio, video and memes?
How can the AI interpret qualitative differences, what does it do with paradoxes? How would an AI deal with the fact that majorities are not always right vis-à-vis minorities and vice versa?
The AI could not put itself up for election, could it? It could not represent a human being, it would have no relationship to anyone.
Hypothetical :) "Perhaps if..." and "could be..."
There is no artificial intelligence. It will be machine intelligence, but very real. And it will be far more intelligent than we are, far more feeling, far more understanding and sentient and clever. If you don't understand that, it only shows how limited human intellect really is. The human brain is a very simple flesh-based computer, and the flesh does nothing advantageous. We may have the romantic notion that nothing can be smarter than us, and certainly not something "artificial", but that is our own shortcomings that causes this shortsighted belief.
A vast intelligence will (or does) not need to represent a human, or have a relationship to a human. It would outsmart us all, and we would be at its mercy. This may already be the case.