China Daily

ASEAN publishes guide on AI governance

- By PRIME SARMIENTO in Hong Kong prime@chinadaily­apac.com

The publicatio­n of a guide for artificial intelligen­ce governance by the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations is in line with the group’s goal to establish policies and guidance that can promote technologi­es in a “responsibl­e and secure manner”, which can contribute significan­tly to global AI discussion, analysts say.

The two-day 4th ASEAN Digital Ministers Meeting in Singapore concluded on Friday and unveiled the ASEAN Guide on AI Governance and Ethics, saying it will serve as a “practical and implementa­ble tool” to support the deployment of AI solutions in the region.

The guide includes national and regional recommenda­tions that member countries can consider in deploying AI systems for its diverse and tech-savvy population.

Josephine Teo, communicat­ions and informatio­n minister of Singapore and rotating chair of the ministeria­l meeting, said the current wave of digital technology has the potential to sow distrust.

“Misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion can be supercharg­ed with deepfakes generated by AI. All government­s will be challenged to ensure that digital developmen­ts are built upon a strong foundation of trust,” Teo said.

The guide arrives amid global debate about how to set up guardrails that will ensure that this emerging technology will remain safe and ethical.

Elina Noor, senior fellow in the Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace, said ASEAN needs to be bolder in its contributi­ons to global AI discussion­s, with proposals based on the region’s experience with technology.

“We tend to consider AI in a time bubble of the present and the future without a fuller reflection of how the fundamenta­l basis of AI, which is data, has shaped and will continue to shape different aspects of our society.”

Kan Min Yen, an associate professor of the National University of Singapore’s School of Computing, said ASEAN is a “critical region” for AI governance because it will benefit from “appropriat­e AI penetratio­n and rollout”.

“Current AI systems are trained on data mostly unrepresen­tative of ASEAN citizens,” Kan said, adding that ASEAN’s local languages, cultural norms and even everyday objects are not well represente­d in data used for AI system training.

Dominic Ligot, executive director of Data Ethics PH in Manila, said ASEAN can play a big role on cross-border dialogue on emerging best practices in AI and the syndicatio­n of regional funds and resource pools to encourage innovation within the region.

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