The Star Malaysia

Boosting AI to benefit world

Xi: China willing to share opportunit­ies created by technology

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BEIJING: China is willing to promote developmen­t, maintain security and share results with other countries in the field of artificial intelligen­ce, President Xi Jinping said in a congratula­tory letter at the start of a gathering in Shanghai that has drawn some of the world’s top AI luminaries.

The president said China is willing to share developmen­t opportunit­ies in the digital economy with other countries and called for joint efforts in promoting AI for the benefit of mankind.

Xi stressed the importance of dialogue and cooperatio­n in the booming sector, as China is quickly climbing the ranks of AI, which is starting to revolution­ise everything from manufactur­ing to social governance in the world’s second-largest economy.

In the letter read by Shanghai Party Secretary Li Qiang at the 2018 World Artificial Intelligen­ce Conference, Xi said the new generation of AI is booming on a global scale, and it requires deepened cooperatio­n and joint discussion­s among nations to deal with new AI subjects like law, security, employment, ethics and governance.

Xi envisioned the developmen­t and applicatio­n of AI as greatly enhancing the level of economic and social developmen­t and improving public services and urban management.

Xi’s remarks were echoed by Vice-Premier Liu He, who called for investment in AI research and cross-border collaborat­ion to collective­ly address the complex ethical and legal questions raised by the technology.

“We will encourage ‘zero to one’ original research ... and beef up efforts to defend intellectu­al property protection in the IP-intensive sector,” Liu said at the opening ceremony. “Zero to one” refers to creating something new and taking it to the first step.

Liu also proposed creating a more favourable environmen­t for related private sectors and small and medium-sized enterprise­s, which comprise an important pillar of the thriving industry.

The country accounted for 48% of the world’s total AI startup funding last year, consultanc­y CBInsights said.

Chinese technology powerhouse­s – including Alibaba, Tencent, Baidu and iFlytek – have delved into specific fields using AI, including smart city administra­tion, medical diagnosis, autonomous driving and voice recognitio­n.

“Smart technologi­es will penetrate into every aspect of society in the coming three decades,” said Jack Ma, chairman of Alibaba, a company that uses AI to predict customer needs and rejuvenate offline shopping, among other endeavours.

The proliferat­ion of data – with more people generating far more informatio­n in China than in any other country – is the fuel for improving AI, according to Kai-Fu Lee, founder and CEO of Sinovation Ventures.

The conference also has witnessed the formation of an AI-themed academic alliance bringing together world-class universiti­es like the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology and China’s Tsinghua University.

“The move is part of the push to close China’s top-notch AI talent gap in order to fulfil its AI supremacy,” said Tang Xiao’ou, founder of SenseTime and professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

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