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India should partner with China to bridge digital divide

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Editor’s note: Rabi Sankar Bosu is an Indian contributor to Chinese media outlets. He writes about Chinese politics, social and cultural issues, and China-India relations with a special interest in the Belt and Road Initiative. The article reflects the author’s views, and not necessarily those of CGTN.

The wonderful making of the internet in 1969 added a new dimension to the technological revolution. Since the middle of the last century, countries leading in information technology have been striving to build an inclusive digital society using multidimensional digital technologies.

In the era of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, many technological breakthroughs and advanced digital services, such as artificial intelligence (AI), the Internet of Things (IoT), robotics, autonomous vehicles, 3D printing, biotechnology, materials science and quantum computing, are creating incredible possibilities for building an inclusive digital society by eliminating social inequalities.

The developed countries and some developing countries around the world have transformed the digital governance that has accelerated welfare measures for people of all ages.

However, figures show that the gap of economic growth and social progress between the developed and the developing countries is being rapidly enlarged on the application of information and communication technologies (ICTs) and assistive technologies. This gap is called the digital divide, which is one of the top challenges that must be tackled collectively.

Nevertheless, the COVID-19 pandemic has affected the digital governance around the world as well as everything else while bringing many adversities in populations, in particular, students and older adults around the world.

Meituan’s unmanned delivery vehicle in operation in Chengdu, southwest China’s Sichuan Province, August 3, 2021. /VCG

Digital divide has become a buzzword in the post-COVID world. The pandemic has shown the whole world how the right to use the internet is intertwined with every aspect of life, be it education, healthcare or economic services.

But the digital divide has worsened the situation of the elderly population across the world during the pandemic and the post-pandemic world. Although tech-savvy Western countries and countries in Asia like China, Japan, Singapore and South Korea have come forward to help their elderly cross the digital divide by using digital resources, technological disparities in terms of using personal computers or mobile devices have become extremely severe in India and other South Asian countries amid COVID-19 curbs.

The lack of digital tools and services has brought many challenges to the senior citizens who live in rural areas of India as they do not know how to use mobile devices or computers.

A country like India where economic inequality has been on the rise for the last half a decade, losing the rights of the internet world means paving the way for more social inequality. According to the recently published World Inequality Report 2022, India is among the most unequal countries in the world with rising poverty and 1 percent affluent elite who control 22 percent of the national income. The COVID-19 pandemic and long lockdown strategies have created almost irreversible economic turmoil in rural and urban India.

The population of India is now 1.38 billion, but nearly 22 out of every 100 people in the villages have a net connection. In other words, in the rural region where most of the people live, about 78 percent of the people have no internet accessibility.

More importantly, marginalized groups such as women and older adults in rural India are deprived of the benefits of the internet due to their internet illiteracy and technological know-how which caused a widening digital gap between young versus elderly people.

Their alarming situation during the pandemic highlights the urgency of speeding up digital transformation so that they can establish their digital presence, not being isolated from the digital world.

There is no surprise that words like “internet surfing” or “video chat” or “telemedicine” or “downloading apps” are still foreign to most rural residents of India.

Although a section of older seniors in cities across India have access to the benefits of welfare measures in the areas of health, education and livelihoods, thanks to their family members and some NGOs, the vast majority of the elderly population are still offline as they do not have their own mobiles.

China has made headway in narrowing the digital gap among the elderly population aged 60 and above, overcoming technology-related problems in their daily lives with the introduction of the “Digital Village Strategy” under first policy paper of 2019.

From the data in Statista, as of February, China was ranked first among the countries with the most internet users. China had 1.02 billion internet users, more than triple the amount of third-ranked U.S. with just over 307 million internet users. China currently has 1.425 million installed 5G base stations that support more than 500 million 5G users nationwide.

According to China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the penetration rates of the fiber optic and 4G networks in China had reached over 98 percent of the entire population and over 98 percent of geographic areas by 2019.

In order to narrow the digital divide among the elderly population, China’s National Development and Reform Commission formulated a medium-and long-term plan based on a thorough analysis of seniors’ everyday needs in November 2019 and created a timetable for closing the digital divide in stages in the three-year period ending 2022. It also detailed moves to be taken up to 2049, including bolstering disease prevention and vocational education for older adults.

Digital empowerment is crucial to elderly people to overcome many social barriers. The Indian government must come forward to abolish the digital divide of older citizens by providing free digital training to help them remain connected to the modern digital world.

Since India is facing enormous social inequities and economic disruptions with acute unemployment and spiraling inflation due to the long pandemic, its “2015 Digital India” master-plan and “National Digital Healthcare Mission”, launched in 2021, will get a tremendous boost if learn lessons can be learned from China’s digital infrastructure, digital governance and services, and digital empowerment of its citizens of all ages.

Source: Rabi Sankar Bosu (CGTN) 

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Google trial wraps up as judge weighs landmark U.S. antitrust claims

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Google and the U.S. Justice Department wrapped up closing arguments on Friday over claims that the Alphabet unit has unlawfully dominated web search and related advertising, in a case the government contends could shape the “future of the internet.”

U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta in Washington for hours grilled both sides with questions, probing whether competitive platforms such as ByteDance’s TikTok and Meta’s Facebook and Instagram are competitive substitutes for search advertising dollars.

Mehta said a central issue was platform “substitute-ability” for advertisers, which the court must resolve. He will now begin preparing to render a major decision on whether Google’s conduct broke civil antitrust law. He did not indicate when he would rule, but experts say he could potentially order changes to Google’s business practices.

Mehta also questioned whether Google assesses competitors’ pricing while considering its own adjustments. Google’s advertising business is responsible for about three-quarters of its revenue.

U.S. government lawyer David Dahlquist argued that “advertising revenue is what drives Google’s monopoly power today.”

Google has boasted it feels no real market pressures, Dahlquist said, arguing that the company does not fear increasing its pricing or not improving its products.

“Only a monopolist can make a product worse and still make more money,” Dahlquist argued.

Google’s lawyer John Schmidtlein countered that Google’s share of U.S. digital advertising revenue has steadily decreased. He touted the advertising power of rival platforms ByteDance’s TikTok, Meta’s Facebook and Instagram, and Amazon.

That’s because it’s not made from plastic, but wheat straw and has seeds nestled inside.

Schmidtlein argued that Google is “constrained” by rival platforms “where the eyeballs are,” because advertisers know there are overlapping audiences and can spend their dollars elsewhere.

He also asserted that Google was continually moving to innovate its search advertising products. “If Google is a monopolist, why improve anything? Why not just jack the price up?” he told the court. He later argued that “Google has won with a superior product.”

The Justice Department has hammered away at Google in a trial that started on September 12, contending the search engine giant is a monopolist that illegally abused its power to boost profits.

Witnesses from Verizon, Android maker Samsung Electronics and Google itself testified about the company’s annual payments, $26.3 billion in 2021, to ensure that its search is the default on smartphones and browsers, and to keep its dominant market share.

Mehta also took up the government’s claim that Google intentionally destroyed internal documents that were relevant to the issues in the lawsuit.

The government asked Mehta to presume that Google deleted chats that were unfavorable to the company.

Mehta repeatedly questioned Google’s prior policies, which he said left document retention decisions to its employees.

“They should have been preserved. Should there be some consequence for what at a minimum was far from best practices?” the judge asked.

A lawyer for Google, Colette Connor, defended its data preservation practices, calling them reasonable, and urged the court not to sanction the company.

The case, filed by former U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration, was the first of several aimed at reining in the market power of tech leaders.

Another case, against Facebook parent Meta, was also filed during the Trump administration. U.S. President Joe Biden’s antitrust enforcers have followed with a second case against Google and cases against Amazon.com and Apple Inc.

Source(s): CGTN

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UN adopts first global artificial intelligence resolution to ensure AI is safe

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The United Nations General Assembly unanimously adopted the first global resolution on artificial intelligence on Thursday, encouraging countries to safeguard human rights, protect personal data, and monitor AI for risks.

The nonbinding resolution, proposed by the United States and co-sponsored by China along with over 120 other nations, also advocates for the strengthening of privacy policies.

“Today, all 193 members of the United Nations General Assembly have spoken in one voice, and together, chosen to govern artificial intelligence rather than let it govern us,” U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield said.

The resolution is the latest in a series of initiatives – few of which carry significant enforceability – by governments around the world to shape AI’s development amid fears it could disrupt democratic processes, turbocharge fraud, or lead to dramatic job losses, among other harms.

“The improper or malicious design, development, deployment and use of artificial intelligence systems … pose risks that could … undercut the protection, promotion and enjoyment of human rights and fundamental freedoms,” the measure states.

In November, the U.S., Britain and more than a dozen other countries unveiled the first detailed international agreement on how to keep artificial intelligence safe from rogue actors, pushing for companies to create AI systems that are “secure by design.”

Europe is ahead of the United States, with EU lawmakers adopting a provisional agreement this month to oversee the technology. The Biden administration has been pressing lawmakers for AI regulation, but a polarized U.S. Congress has made little headway. In the meantime, the White House sought to reduce AI risks to consumers, workers, and minorities while also bolstering national security with a new executive order in October.

The resolution aims to close the digital divide between rich developed countries and poorer developing countries to ensure that all are included in discussions on AI. It also aims to ensure that developing countries have the technology and capabilities to take advantage of AI’s benefits, including detecting diseases, predicting floods, helping farmers, and training the next generation of workers.

The resolution recognizes the rapid acceleration of AI development and use and stresses “the urgency of achieving global consensus on safe, secure and trustworthy artificial intelligence systems.”

It also acknowledges that “the governance of artificial intelligence systems is an evolving area” that requires further discussions on possible governance approaches and emphasizes that innovation and regulation are mutually reinforcing – not mutually exclusive.

Source(s): CGTN

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Beijing still tops Nature Index global science city rankings

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Beijing has consistently ranked first in the global science city rankings for eight consecutive years, as measured by the Nature Index, according to Yin Yong, deputy secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Beijing Municipal Committee and mayor of Beijing.

Nature Index tracks the authorship of articles in prestigious research journals and Beijing’s ranking has shown that the city remains the top science city in the world.

On Tuesday, China’s State Council Information Office held a press conference on leveraging Beijing’s strategic role as the national capital, initiating a new chapter in high-quality development. Yin made the remarks while he answered questions from the media at the press conference.

Yin also introduced the capital’s achievement in seeking scientific and technological innovation and attracting high-level talent in science and technology.

Beijing has 92 colleges and universities, and more than 1,000 research institutes and its numbers of national laboratories and large scientific installations are ranked first in the country.

Beijing’s investment in research and development has also been among the largest in the country. Every 10,000 people in Beijing hold an average of over 262 invention patents, ranking first in China.

The capital has a large talent pool with more than 550,000 scientific researchers. In the field of artificial intelligence, for instance, Beijing’s top talent accounts for about 43 percent of the country’s total.

An average of 337 technology-based enterprises are established in Beijing every day, and the number of national high-tech enterprises and unicorn enterprises rank first among all cities in the country.

Source(s): CGTN

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