Hindustan Times (Delhi)

India could be the data hub for the AI arrival

- Anirudh Bhattachar­yya is a Torontobas­ed commentato­r on American affairs The views expressed are personal Inner Voice comprises contributi­ons from our readers. The views expressed are personal Innervoice@hindustant­imes.com

It was an unusual turnout at the Desautels Hall, an auditorium at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management. Nerds and geeks packed the place for a book launch, a work of nonfiction from a trio of management professors. Published by Harvard Business Review Press, the book, Prediction Machines: The Simple Economics of Artificial Intelligen­ce, was just the sort of topic that would attract such a crowd. And, of course, a couple of the authors are involved with the Creative Destructio­n Lab, which provides a launchpad for startups, many of them in the AI space.

AI is a little like pixie dust, as one of the authors said. Sprinkle it around and it seems to have properties of transformi­ng the most mundane into the magical, like automatica­lly transcribi­ng notes from a meeting (yeah, there’s an app for that). AI is hardly a fairy tale, but among those looking for a happy ending is the Chinese regime.

The State is investing billions in the sector. As the book notes, the city of Tianjin, the eighth-largest there, plans a $5 billion AI industry fund, an allocation of resources greater than “all of Canada”. Another advantage is that of data access.

Without the privacy protection­s of North America, Europe or other democracie­s, companies are using facial recognitio­n databases, for instance, to authorise payments, authentica­te rail passengers or drivers for ride-share services or even transferri­ng money. Even as the latest Facebook kerfuffle makes privacy issues that much more sensitive in much of the world beyond China, the authors posit an interestin­g dilemma: “Users want better products trained using personal data, but they prefer that data be collected from other people, not them.”

IT majors like Amazon could transform the shopping dynamic. And Google has shifted from a “mobile-first” outlook to “an Ai-first world”, even as CEO Sundar Pichai has moved its AI team on to the same floor he occupies.

The curious aspect of this book is that India figures nowhere in it, even though one of its authors, Ajay Agrawal, also CDL’S founder, is of Indian origin. Like his co-authors Joshua Gans and Avi Goldfarb, he’s a professor at Rotman.

But India may have the advantage of volume. India could be the data hub for the AI arrival. After all, the sheer population of the country helps generate a quantum of data for training AI systems that demographi­cally challenged countries of the West cannot match. For instance, Canada may have a wealth of AI engineerin­g talent, but the entire nation’s numbers are lower than that of the National Capital Region.

That could be re-enacting the IT and Internet revolution­s, with India as the global back office. Of course, there’s always the opportunit­y of moving up the chain, instead of being service hacks, with policies in government and the corporate sector, to drive an industry of the decade ahead.

It doesn’t take much intelligen­ce, artificial or otherwise, to plot that potential. To make our life a meaningful one, we need to mind our thoughts and give a correct direction to it. Our thoughts are the foundation, the inspiratio­n and the motivation behind our deeds. We create our entire world by the way we think. Our circumstan­ces and conditions are not dictated by the outside world, but the world inside us and what we make of it. Moreover, our thoughts are even more dynamic. Even when inactive on the bodily plane, we are all the time, active on the thought plane. If our thoughts are pure, these will automatica­lly lead to noble actions. However, if our thoughts are filled with jealousy, hatred and greed so will be our actions, leaving us with an agitated state of mind. Even Lord Buddha had said, “Those who are free of resentful thoughts surely find peace.”

Karmically our thoughts have more far reaching consequenc­es than the actual deeds. One may perform a charitable act, but if it is done with some motive rather than selflessly, then the thoughts would determine the result. We alone have the choice to instill ourselves with loving and positive thoughts, so that the same get reflected in our actions.

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