Safe and effective surgical care is one of the most serious health challenges worldwide, and these inequities are the most severe in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and remote areas. Such areas tend to have poor access to specialized surgical skills, poor infrastructure, and a severe shortage of trained healthcare personnel. Geography and economic or logistical barriers further increase the gap between patients who can access timely, high-quality surgical care[1]. This healthcare disparity is a direct contributor to increased preventable morbidity and mortality. To overcome these systemic issues, new technological applications like telementoring and remote surgery have started to gain traction as potentially potent tools that can revolutionize the provision of surgical care, connecting resource-rich areas to resource-poor ones and providing expert surgical advice/intervention to patients in underserved areas[2]. This manuscript upholds the ethical use and communication of AI-powered technologies in surgical caregiving routines by the TITAN 2025 Guidelines, focusing on AI reporting in healthcare systems[3].