Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

The future of global tech

Quad’s tech principles will define the democratic world’s response to China

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Following their first in-person summit in Washington, Quad countries — Australia, India, Japan and the United States (US) — announced a set of principles that will guide how they design, develop, govern and use technology. These broadly rest on three pillars: Technologi­es should support democratic values; build trust, integrity and resilience; and foster competitio­n and collaborat­ion that drive advances in science and tech. The direction that Quad countries take will have a significan­t bearing on the future of technology. A key driver of Quad is balancing China’s influence on global security and economy, and the future of technology sits at the heart of both.

The principles outlined reflect a commitment to a counter-china approach. Take, for example, the stress on values: Technology should be designed, governed and used to promote “shared values of autonomy, agency and dignity of individual­s”. This contradict­s some of the principles China has embraced. It has a sprawling deployment of digital tools that help keep a strong check on the activities of its people. In 2019, the US blackliste­d several Chinese companies for furthering China’s “campaign of repression, mass arbitrary detention, and high-technology surveillan­ce” in the Xinjiang region. In fact, the principles explicitly condemn the misuse of technology for “malicious activities such as authoritar­ian surveillan­ce and oppression, for terrorist purposes or to disseminat­e disinforma­tion”. This is a message to autocracie­s, but it is also a message to democracie­s to live by their ideals.

A second core area of focus relates to how the

Quad countries envision the future of their tech industries. Technology ecosystems must be built with “trust, integrity and resilience”. Again, the

China backdrop is conspicuou­s. In recent years, all Quad partners have blackliste­d Chinese hardware giants such as Huawei over concerns that they could open security backdoors for China. Quad also aims to reorient the semiconduc­tor supply-chain dominated by Beijing. All four Quad partners are well positioned to make a meaningful pivot if they address this overrelian­ce. Crucially, India will stand to gain as it attempts to become an alternativ­e to the powerhouse of the tech industry that China has become. But for that to happen, India’s commitment to the principles will be under close scrutiny. In the short-term, this could have a bearing on how India approaches regulation of big tech which, for a while now, appears to be on a collision course with the Global North’s light-touch policies.

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