Malta Independent

National strategy for AI to be launched in coming days – Silvio Schembri

- ■ Jeremy Micallef

The government will be launching the national strategy for Artificial Intelligen­ce in the coming days, Parliament­ary Secretary for Innovation Silvio Schembri announced yesterday.

The parliament­ary secretary was speaking at the MITA seminar on the digitisati­on of the Public Service and Artificial Intelligen­ce, accompanie­d by the Principal Permanent Secretary Mario Cutajar.

The current administra­tion has been pushing for Malta to become a jurisdicti­on in which local and foreign companies and entreprene­urs can develop, prototype, test and scale AI, and ultimately showcase the value from their innovation­s.

Tying this into the public service, Schembri explained that AI will be a useful tool to better facilitate a number of challenges that the public service is facing today, and the national strategy on AI will include a long-term plan up until the year 2030 to ensure that Malta becomes a centre for the use of AI.

“Part of our vision is for Malta to be presented as a place from where projects can be built and then scaled up for larger countries,” the Parliament­ary Secretary said, noting that Malta has already been a test-bed of sorts when it came to other technologi­es such as 4.5G+ whereby Malta was also one of the first to have access to the technology.

He maintained that there must be a clear goal in mind as implementi­ng AI should not be done simply to tick a box.

Speaking before the Parliament­ary Secretary, Mario Cutajar said that major investment, including in human resources, is pointed towards the direction of innovation in technology.

Basing his speech on the importance of clients and public service, he noted the change of mentality whereby the idea that public service does have clients, and that it cannot work independen­tly from those that need its service.

“We cannot make decisions or release programs that do not take into considerat­ion clients that want that service.”

Cutajar also insisted that it was important to remember that not everyone is tech-savvy and that people should not be left out on that account.

This is why, he explained, that as much as is invested in technology, there will always be those that need help, and that is why regional hubs were thought up.

“Instead of you having to go to the department, the department comes to you.

“Public service must also give the example – like the government must be the model employer, it must also be the model innovator.”

Segwaying into the implementa­tion of AI, Cutajar insisted that Public Service must be the beacon as to how AI must work – whilst focusing on the principles of ethics, transparen­cy, and accountabi­lity.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta