With the adoption of artificial intelligence fast accelerating, Singapore says it has taken steps to ensure data centers operating in the country are energy efficient and government data used to train models are adequately secured.
Also: Every AI project begins as a data project, but it's a long, winding road. The ministry was replying to parliamentary questions on how the government was balancing the growing demand for computing power with the country's AI developments and sustainability targets, as well as ensuring that the necessary infrastructure remains environmentally friendly.
Acknowledging that AI compute power from data centers is a critical enabler of Singapore's national AI strategy, the ministry said one key strategy is to improve the energy efficiency of data centers and drive the development of efficient cooling solutions.
There also are measures, such as grants, to support operators that work to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from their data centers.
Singapore is developing sustainability standards that will pave the way for data centers to operate at higher temperatures and use less energy for cooling, MCI said.
Singapore released operating standards last June that it said would optimize energy efficiency in data centers located in tropical climates.
A data center set up to operate in such climates began operating last month, offering a facility for researchers and industry players to develop energy-efficient cooling technologies.
Touted as the world's first data center testbed for tropical environments, the new site is hosted by the National University of Singapore's College of Design and Engineering, on its Kent Ridge campus.
Singapore also is reviewing its Green Mark certification scheme for data centers to update the energy-efficiency criteria, MCI said.
These include coding and algorithm optimization, optimization for both software and hardware, and developing standards for low-data, low-energy AI models.
Data used for AI models to be appropriately protected.
Measures also are in place to manage sensitive information used to train AI models, MCI said in response to questions on how the government ensures confidential data is protected in prompts powered by large language models.
It noted that highly sensitive applications and data are not accessible online.
Also: New research initiative aims to build large language AI model for Southeast Asia.
Where less sensitive data is involved, the AI models may be owned and managed by commercial and private companies, MCI said.
The government's contracts with these companies are governed by service agreements that include clauses on data handling and security, it noted.
These include the non-retention of data and limitations on the use of data to train other products or models.
The government also has implemented technical measures to monitor sensitive data and provide visual cues to remind users of data security policies.
Dubbed the National Multimodal LLM Programme, the initiative will build on current efforts from AI Singapore's Southeast Asian Languages in One Network, which is an open-source LLM that the government agency said is designed to be smaller, more flexible, and faster compared to LLMs on the market today.
SEA-LION currently runs on two base models: a 3-billion parameter model, and a 7-billion parameter model.
This Cyber News was published on www.zdnet.com. Publication date: Wed, 10 Jan 2024 17:58:06 +0000