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Significance of Artificial Intelligence

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July 27, 2018

What is the issue?

  • The countries with advantage in Artificial Intelligence (AI) could soon take form as concentrations of global power.
  • It is high time that India use to its fullest advantage the IT and entrepreneurial competence, and a huge domestic market.

What is Artificial Intelligence (AI)?

  • The human brain uses multiple techniques to both formulate and cross-check results.
  • AI is the simulation of this human intelligence processes by machines, especially computer systems.
  • These processes include learning, reasoning and self-correction.

Why is AI unique?

  • Most industrial technologies develop in laboratories and then get applied by businesses.
  • But, uniquely, AI develops within business processes as data are mined from digital platforms.
  • These are then turned into intelligence and reprocessed to produce more data and intelligence.
  • So any country’s AI largely exists within its huge, domestically owned commercial digital/data systems.
  • E.g. in the U.S. it is with Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple and Microsoft.
  • In China it lies with Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent.

How is India in this regard?

  • India is not making a rational use of its great advantages of high IT capabilities.
  • It also leaves unplanned, the big domestic market required for data harvesting.
  • India is thus far behind in this emerging Artificial Intelligence race.
  • It has no large domestically owned commercial data systems as that of US and China.
  • Bleak chance, if any, could be hampered by allowing takeovers like that of Flipkart by Walmart.

What is the threat?

  • Economic - India’s consumer-behavioural and other economic data may soon be owned by Walmart and Amazon.
  • This will offer them the scope to develop various kinds of Artificial Intelligence.
  • Eventually, such AI will allow them to control everything.
  • Every participant, along various economic value chains linked to consumer goods would be under their control.
  • Power - Intelligent systems typically tend to centralise and monopolise control.
  • Thus beyond economic dominance, AI influences cultural, political and military power.
  • Notably, Google and Microsoft are partnering with U.S. military on AI applications.
  • Likewise, China’s AI platforms are working even more closely with its military.
  • Logically, in the coming time, whoever rules Artificial Intelligence will rule the world.
  • A non-AI military against an AI-powered one would be at a great disadvantage.

What are the concerns for India?

  • Competition - The digital/AI industry works in huge ecosystems with global digital corporations at the centre.
  • The US and Chinese firms are trying to ensure the largest number of clients and followers possible.
  • Given this, start-ups, including in India, are struggling to find a place in huge global ecosystems.
  • Understanding - Indian IT industry leaders are conveying a wrong message that India is doing well with AI.
  • But these are only in reference to the fragment of IT/digital business.
  • The real need is creating the highest levels of new value chains that AI will create in every sector.
  • Applications - AI applications talked about in India are largely in reference to eased agriculture output, precision medicine or tailored learning.
  • But these are just a miniscule of global digital/AI corporations, giving one-off benefits here and there.
  • Evidently, the AI engine owned by Google or Microsoft is gathering further data from each new instance.
  • In the course of time, they become more intelligent about India’s problems and solutions.
  • So a big nation like India cannot derive satisfaction from rapidly becoming a client country for AI.
  • Owning the centres of systemic AI from controlling huge commercial data ecosystems is the real power.

What is the way forward?

  • Policy makers should aim at building the systemic cores of AI where the real national advantage lies.
  • India must welcome global technology companies to help India’s digital development.
  • But the challenge is, while technology is global, data are essentially local.
  • So India must start treating its collective social/economic data as a strategic national asset.
  • It thus has a right to provide domestic data protection through policy.
  • So data-based sectoral platforms, like in e-commerce, agriculture, health, education, should largely be domestic.
  • Such policy protection will encourage large-scale data-driven Indian companies to develop the highest AI in every sector.
  • After developing enough AI proficiency domestically, it should be used to go global.

 

Source: The Hindu

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