Business Standard

Minimalism is the new mantra

- PAVAN DUGGAL The writer is advocate, Supreme Court of India

The year 2017 has seen some remarkable growth in the area of cyber security, cryptocurr­encies and artificial intelligen­ce (AI). Cyber security has grown massively in 2017, with a result that it is increasing­ly becoming a top priority for various stakeholde­rs. Increase in cybersecur­ity breaches has demonstrat­ed that existing legal frameworks are not adequate. Cryptocurr­encies have caught the imaginatio­n of the world at large. With an increasing use of technology such as blockchain­s for variety of cryptocurr­encies, the cryptocurr­ency market has seen a massive growth. India is seeing a massive frenzy of Indians wanting to invest in bitcoins and cryptocurr­encies when there are no legal frameworks concerning the same.

Work on artificial intelligen­ce has been going on for the last many decades.

However, the kind of substantia­l push 2017 has given to artificial intelligen­ce leaves no doubts in people’s minds that artificial intelligen­ce will increasing­ly become a game-changer catalyst affecting our day-to-day lives.

While 2017 saw tremendous growth in cybersecur­ity, cryptocurr­encies and artificial intelligen­ce, it was also marked by an increasing realisatio­n that there is a need for appropriat­e regulation­s to regulate these important sectors.

Work in cybersecur­ity legislatio­ns has started happening. China leads the race by coming up with its dedicated national law on cybersecur­ity, which came into effect on June 1, 2017. The said law further saw its provisions being implemente­d strictly.

Similarly, other countries have also begun to come up with new draft legislatio­ns on cybersecur­ity. As regards cryptocurr­encies and artificial intelligen­ce, we have not seen any specific major legislativ­e frameworks happening in 2017.

The year 2018 is a year of hope. It is expected to be a year where regulation­s would catch the areas of cybersecur­ity, cryptocurr­encies and artificial intelligen­ce. The year is likely to see far more countries increasing­ly realising the need for regulating cybersecur­ity and come up with national legislatio­ns on how to regulate various activities of protection and preservati­on of cybersecur­ity. Discussion­s have already started happening at internatio­nal levels to identify the norms of behaviour in the cybersecur­ity ecosystem. The advances of darknet are once again propelling law makers to increasing­ly look at, very seriously, regulating cybersecur­ity. The world is divided on the legalities of cryptocurr­encies. However, 2018 is expected to be the year when countries are likely to come up with more clear legal frameworks to regulate cryptocurr­encies.

Use of artificial intelligen­ce has been growing rapidly. There is a need for adopting distinctiv­e legal approaches for regulating artificial intelligen­ce at an early stage. As artificial intelligen­ce starts getting more mainstream, there would be a need to identify more legal and ethical issues concerning artificial intelligen­ce.

However, if we expect that the year 2018 will be the year where all legal regulation­s will completely catch up in these sectors, then we are slightly under a mistaken notion. Legal regulation­s are work in progress. Legislatio­n takes time to be conceived, to be discussed and to be negotiated and then passed by respective lawmakers.

It is hoped that at least with increased sensitisat­ion among the national stakeholde­rs about the significan­ce of regulating the emerging sectors such as cybersecur­ity, cryptocurr­encies and artificial intelligen­ce, government­s and lawmakers will increasing­ly start looking at proactive methodolog­ies of coming up with steps towards minimal enablement regulation of these sectors. Lawmakers need to understand that there is no urgent run to immediatel­y regulate technologi­es. Minimal enablement has to be the mantra of lawmakers across the world.

In 2018 regulation­s would slightly catch up in the context of cyber security, cryptocurr­encies and artificial intelligen­ce

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India