AI explained: AI and building the ecosystem in Singapore

Tech Law Talks - A podcast by Reed Smith

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Singapore is developing ethics and governance guidelines to shape the development and use of responsible AI, and the island nation’s approach could become a blueprint for other countries. Reed Smith partner Bryan Tan and Raju Chellam, editor-in-chief of the AI Ethics & Governance Body of Knowledge, examine concerns and costs of AI, including impacts on owners of intellectual property and on workers who face job displacement. Time will tell whether this ASEAN nation will strike an adequate balance in regulating each emerging issue. ----more---- Transcript: Intro: Hello and welcome to Tech Law Talks, a podcast brought to you by Reed Smith's Emerging Technologies Group. In each episode of this podcast, we will discuss cutting-edge issues on technology, data, and the law. We will provide practical observations on a wide variety of technology and data topics to give you quick and actionable tips to address the issues you are dealing with everyday.  Bryan: Welcome to Tech Law Talks and our new series on artificial intelligence. Over the coming months, we'll explore all the key challenges and opportunities within the rapidly evolving AI landscape. Today, we'll focus on AI and building the ecosystem here in Singapore. My name is Bryan Tan, and I'm a data and emerging technology partner at Reed Smith Singapore. Together, we have with us today, Mr. Raju Chellam, the Editor-in-Chief of the AI E&G BOK, And that stands for the AI Ethics and Governance Body of Knowledge, initiative by the SCS, Singapore Computer Society, and IMDA, the Infocomm Media Development Authority of Singapore. Hi, Raju. Today, we are here to talk about the AI ecosystem in Singapore, of which you've been a big part of. But before we start, I wanted to talk a little bit about you. Can you share what you were doing before artificial intelligence appeared on the scene and how that has changed after we now see artificial intelligence being talked about frequently?  Raju: Thanks, Bryan. It's a pleasure and an honor to be on your podcast. Before AI, I was at Dell, where I was head of cloud and big data solutions for Southeast Asia and South Asia. I was also chairman of what we then called COIR, which is the Cloud Outage Incidence Response. This is a standards working group under IMDA, and I was vice president in the cloud chapter at SCS. In 2018, the Straits Times Press published my book called Organ Gold on the illegal sale of human organs on the dark web. I was then researching the sale of contraband on the dark web. So all of that came together and helped me when I took over the role of AI in the new era.  Bryan: So all of that comes from dark place and that has led you to discovering the prevalence of AI and then to this body of knowledge. So the question here is, so tell us a little bit about this body of knowledge that you've been working on. Why does it matter? Is it a game changer?  Raju: Let me give you some background. The Ethics & Governance Body of Knowledge is a joint effort by the Singapore Computer Society and IMBA, the first of its kind in the Asia-Pacific, if not the world, to pull together a comprehensive collection of material on developing and deploying AI ethically. It is anchored on the AI Governance Framework 2nd Edition that IDA launched in 2020. The first edition of the BOK was launched in October 2020 before GenAI emerged on the scene. The second edition focused on GenAI was launched by Minister Josephine Thieu in September 2023. And the third edition, the most comprehensive, will be launched on August 22, which is next month. The most crucial thing about this is that it's a compendium of all the use cases, regulations, guidelines, frameworks related to the responsible use of AI, both from a developing concept as well as a deploying concept. So it's something that all Singaporeans, if not people outside, would find great value in accessing.  Bryan: Okay. And so I see how that kind of relates to your point about the dark web

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