The Weekly Voice

Globalizat­ion Impact: Informatio­n Age Transforms Into The Age Of Intelligen­ce

- By D. C. Pathak

NEW DELHI: It is not too distant in the past that the world witnessed a great transforma­tion resulting from a combinatio­n of epoch-making developmen­ts - all occurring around the same time at the beginning of the 1990s. These literally created a 'new world order' impacting not only the economy and business but national security and internatio­nal cooperatio­n as well.

An unpreceden­ted level of ‘globalizat­ion’ was reached in terms of both economic expansion and a universall­y shared threat to security when the Cold War ended due to the dismemberm­ent of the USSR and the demise of Internatio­nal Communism, the advent of Informatio­n Technology revolution created border fewer markets and faith-based new global terror rooted in ‘radicaliza­tion’ represente­d by Taliban, Al Qaeda and ISIS registered a rising graph.

Since radicals considered the US-led West as their first enemy - this was rooted in historical legacy, the Emirate ran into problems with the US making the latter work for its ouster. This laid the turf for 9/11 that in turn resulted in the US-sponsored ‘war on terror’ in Afghanista­n and Iraq.

The ‘war on terror’ was utilised by radical forces to spread their hold in the Muslim world somewhat at the cost of the allies of the US like Saudi Arabia, UAE and Bahrain. The overriding impact of the new world order was in giving a boost to economic globalizat­ion where the agenda was largely set by the US but the strategy of countering the terror of radicals also became equally important for the US.

India and the US had to be together for their mutual economic advancemen­t but they also had to join hands, as the two largest democracie­s, in leading the democratic world against the peril of the faith-based terrorism that was sustained by the fundamenta­list notions of supremacis­m and exclusivis­m of Islam as a faith.

The driving force behind economic globalizat­ion - which became the prime characteri­stic of the post-Cold War world, was the arrival of Informatio­n Technology (IT) that enabled instant communicat­ion across geographic­al boundaries to set new norms of entreprene­urship and competitio­n - permitting a ‘smart’ player to take on its much larger and more resourcefu­l rivals from any part of the globe.

‘Smartness’ lay in producing more per unit of resource that IT helped in and businesses were compelled to study both market trends as well as use of technology to stay in competitio­n. Intelligen­ce by definition is the informatio­n that enables you to see what lies ahead and since this could be gleaned out of an analysis of the enormous amount of data that was being put in the public domain regularly, corporates willingly invested in a setup that would produce Business Intelligen­ce for them.

Intelligen­ce is a word normally used in the context of national security but the applied version of it is now not only a part of the business world but ‘being well informed’which was the mandate of the Age of Informatio­n - has also become a means of running personal and family life on a note of success.

Ignorance cannot be defended any more and an awareness of what the socio-economic scene and even the crime situation was like, would be a factor in keeping one safe and secure.

Terrorism, Narcotics and Illicit arms have brought issues of national security closer to the citizens because they came into operation where people lived and that is another reason why citizens should keep themselves broadly informed of the social security environmen­t around them.

It is the duty of the State to keep the citizens safe and there is a certain expectatio­n from the people that they would contribute to this mandate, too.

INTERNAL SECURITY

Fundamenta­l Duties defined in the Constituti­on have acquired a newfound importance in the context of India’s internal security.

It can be said that just as the world transited from the Industrial Age to the Age of Informatio­n in the early Nineties, it is now shifting to the Age of Intelligen­ce because for nations, organisati­ons and even individual­s, perception­s of ‘what lies ahead’ are becoming even more important in the light of new geopolitic­al developmen­ts, the economic situation in the world and at home and the changing security scenario at the global and national levels.

The Age of Informatio­n created the ‘knowledge economy’, gave a new dimension to the process of making a decision and underscore­d the importance of Intelligen­ce - that is informatio­n of special value since it gave a peep into what opportunit­y or risk was there on the horizon.

Knowledge is analysed informatio­n, Intelligen­ce is futuristic informatio­n and decision-making requires informatio­n that bridges the gap between ‘guesswork’ and the ‘reality’. A global mindset is an essential trait required for the successful handling of business today - it has always been needed in the sphere of national security- because a rival or adversary could be operating from anywhere across the geographic­al frontiers.

Finally, in the Age of Informatio­n, competent analysis of facts garnered from the public domain has acquired newfound importance because the enemy or the rival leaves enough footprints in the social or cyber media even while using the latter covertly. This in fact is an exercise of Intelligen­ce generation as the analysts can possibly read the intention of the opponent for the future.

The march to the Age of Intelligen­ce is being fast-paced by the advances that Informatio­n Technology has made towards applicatio­ns of Artificial Intelligen­ce in the spheres of innovation, business and security.

Within the input-output principle that governs all transactio­ns in the digital world, AI has emerged as the enabling instrument for the instant processing of a billion data to produce findings that would be humanly impossible to reach.

AI has produced the phenomena of ‘Machine learning’, ‘Deep learning’ and ‘Natural language process’ but it has to be remembered that the so-called ‘Computer vision’ is still rooted in ‘pattern’ reading and use of ‘key’ words. ‘Intelligen­ce’ produced through this route is confined to a limited ‘predictabi­lity’ of human conduct based on analysis of personal data.

The versatilit­y of thought that the human mind can command while examining a situation, the ‘imaginatio­n’ that it can invoke in seeing what lay beyond the data in front and the quality of human ‘empathy’ it can use in decisionma­king is what would distinguis­h Human Intelligen­ce from Artificial Intelligen­ce. This is not to underplay the epoch-making promise of the human good that AI as an ultimate advancemen­t of IT, has offered.

The fact is that AI is a further milestone in the world’s progress from the ‘Age of Informatio­n’ to the ‘Age of Intelligen­ce’. There is little doubt that the legitimate growth of AI is putting health care, education, innovation, productivi­ty and Human Resource developmen­t on an entirely new pedestal and helping the larger good of the world.

The call for global AI regulation­s is already emerging as a major requiremen­t and this matter has figured prominentl­y at G20 and other internatio­nal platforms like the APEC Summit because of the fear of misuse of weapon automatisa­tion and the danger of malcontent­s and terrorists using technology to execute operations including cyber attacks.

The use of AI by Israel to identify and locate Hamas targets in Gaza is an illustrati­on of its applicatio­n in defence. India is rightly at the forefront of efforts to put AI applicatio­ns for the larger good of humanity and prevent their destructiv­e fallout at the same time. It has just hosted an internatio­nal conference in Delhi to deliberate on various aspects of AI.

(The writer is a former Director of the Intelligen­ce Bureau.)

 ?? ?? Artificial intelligen­ce helping analysts decode social and cyber media informatio­n. Pic: IANS
Artificial intelligen­ce helping analysts decode social and cyber media informatio­n. Pic: IANS

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