AMLAN MOHANTY, ASHIMA SINGH
In a mid-term review of the India-U.S. initiative on Critical and Emerging Technology (iCET), senior officials from both countries reiterated the importance of artificial intelligence (AI) to their strategic bilateral partnership.
Based on closed-door discussions held at the Global Technology Summit 2023 on the sidelines of the iCET review, we outline five areas where India and the United States should collaborate to advance their partnership on AI.
DEVELOPING COMMON STANDARDS
As founding members of the Global Partnership on Artificial Intelligence (GPAI), both India and the United States can help build scientific consensus on the nature of the risks emerging from AI systems. A shared understanding of safety risks would help establish a set of common standards to mitigate concerns around bias, privacy, security, and lack of trust.
While some efforts are already underway to develop such standards, more needs to be done. Specifically, there is a need for global benchmarks to evaluate the safety and efficacy of large language models (LLMs) before they can be made available to consumers. Another potential area of collaboration is to develop a common taxonomy for AI systems so that they can be classified and defined based on their primary function and the risk of causing harm.
Given their prior experience in developing standards for the telecom and space sectors, the expectation is that India and the United States will adopt a balanced approach that incentivizes innovation and nurtures a vibrant technology ecosystem while promoting the principles of fairness, accountability, and transparency in AI systems.
ENABLING ACCESS TO COMPUTE
Access to computing power, more commonly referred to as “compute,” is now a critical geopolitical issue. The scarcity of resources required to run advanced AI systems and the acute concentration of such resources in a few Western countries could lead to an unequal distribution of the benefits of AI between the Global North and the Global South.
India and the United States can play an important role in bridging this new digital divide through a combination of technical innovations, market interventions, and development aid.
A good model is the U.S.-India Global Digital Development Partnership, which promotes the adoption of digital public infrastructure (DPI) in developing countries. India can also share its experience with building DPI for low-resource settings to support AI deployments in regions with limited connectivity.
PROMOTING DATA SHARING
Data sharing between India and the United States can help promote linguistic diversity in popular LLMs such as OpenAI’s GPT-3, which is primarily trained on English-language content.
Both countries possess complementary strengths in this domain. In India, there is a strong push to make local language content readily accessible, while the United States is leading the development of powerful LLMs, which are accessed by millions of people around the world.
An immediate priority is to develop trusted models for cross-border transfers of data, ideally as part of the India-U.S. trade and commercial dialogue and anchored around the implementation of India’s new data protection law.
The hope is that the India-U.S. partnership on data sharing will provide a blueprint for the Global South to develop demographically representative AI models. This could prove especially useful in the African Union, which faces similar challenges due to its multilingual culture.
ENHANCING CYBERSECURITY
India and the United States have a shared interest in using AI for cybersecurity, as recognized with the launch of a Defense Artificial Intelligence Dialogue at the Ministerial Dialogue in April 2022.
On the U.S. side, an executive order issued by President Biden calls on government agencies to examine how AI can be used in cyber defense. But India’s national cybersecurity policy, which is more than a decade old, fails to capture the value of AI in cyber defense and the protection of critical infrastructure.
With AI being elevated to a strategic priority, now is the right time for both countries to collaborate on using AI in intelligence gathering, military training, and counterterrorism.
INNOVATION AND SKILLING
Bilateral engagements on AI research and skilling are closely connected. While investment capital is necessary to support foundational breakthroughs, developing and maintaining advanced systems to facilitate such breakthroughs will also require specialized talent.
In this regard, there is an urgent need for India and the United States to share critical computing resources, research facilities, and datasets. Export barriers for high-performance computing systems must also be removed so that the United States and India can collaborate on the development of supercomputers.
To address the shortage of skilled AI professionals, the easing of H-1B visa requirements for Indians is crucial, along with facilitating deeper cross-border cultural exchanges. Further, academic universities have an important role to play in preparing the workforce for future employment opportunities through skilling programs focused on AI.
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