MDDI 演讲稿 · 2026-06-17

部长尤索夫·依萨法迪在印度尼西亚雅加达亚洲经济峰会上的主旨演讲

部长尤索夫·依萨法迪在印度尼西亚雅加达亚洲经济峰会上的主旨演讲

Josephine Teo · 数码发展及新闻部长 · 印度尼西亚雅加达亚洲经济峰会

要点

  • 东盟数据中心容量预计在2025至2030年间增逾三倍,峰会前的交流显示实际增幅可能超过十倍。
  • 开源多语言模型SEA-LION(东南亚语言一体网络)下载量已超过20万次,区域内众多企业以此为基础构建产品。
  • 新加坡是亚洲首个发布《人工智能治理框架》的国家,东盟亦已采纳《人工智能治理与伦理指南》及相关安全测试计划。
  • 东盟基金会计划赋能10万家中小微企业使用数字工具,2025年东盟轮值主席国菲律宾已将中小微企业AI应用列为优先议题。
  • 东盟《数字经济框架协议》(DEFA)将建立共同规则与框架,促进数字贸易并支持可信的跨境数据流通。
  • 部长郑慧英点出两大隐患:过于严苛的数据政策阻碍中小企业创新,以及将「主权」狭义定义为必须完整拥有芯片、模型、数据与应用全栈。

完整译文(中文)

MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期: 2026-06-21

Selamat pagi(早上好)。我很高兴再次来到雅加达,见到我的好友Meutya部长。她在演讲中提及了我,十分友善,但我想提醒大家:尽管有许多女性数字部长,却只有一位需要照管2.8亿人口。

大约一个月前,Meutya部长与另外五位东盟数字部长来到新加坡,出席亚洲科技峰会。这是我们多次会面中的一次,充分体现了我们在推进本国及东盟数字发展方面的共同兴趣。我们始终在思考:"我们还能携手做些什么?"

今天我将聚焦两点:第一,为何东南亚具备扩大人工智能应用的良好条件;第二,我们必须规避哪些陷阱,才能有信心地推进这一进程。

东南亚推进人工智能应用的理由

首先,让我从积极的方面讲起。在每个地区,实现人工智能的广泛应用,可能都有赖于五大关键支柱。

第一,可靠的基础设施;

第二,组织与劳动力的能力建设;

第三,全社会的参与;

第四,有利的法律法规;以及

第五,国际合作。

在东盟,我们五大支柱齐头并进、全力推动。

支柱一——基础设施

基础设施建设规模相当可观。

新的数据中心容量几乎在各地接连上线,

预计从2025年到2030年,容量将超过现有水平的三倍。如果我与大家分享今早峰会开幕前的对话,三倍还是保守说法——听起来更像是十倍以上。

我们的海底正迅速成为全球最繁忙的数字高速公路网络之一。

然而,正如Meutya部长正确指出的,基础设施不仅仅是电缆和算力,还包括使人工智能可及且实用的软件层与政策层。

例如,人工智能模型和应用对我们多元文化的适应程度如何?

SEA-LION——全称"东南亚语言一体化网络"(Southeast Asian Languages In One Network)——是能够助力实现这一目标的软件层之一。作为开源模型,任何人均可免费使用。

如今,该模型已累计超过20万次下载,区域内众多企业在其基础上构建自己的产品。

支柱二——能力建设

超越基础设施,组织和个人必须懂得如何使用人工智能。事实上,越来越多的企业正在将人工智能融入其运营之中——这实际上是更难做到的事,Meutya部长此前也谈及了这一点。

银行将其用于欺诈检测。借助人工智能,制造商能够更好地优化供应链、减少停机时间。

Kata.AI等企业正在开发人工智能工具,以提升印度尼西亚语的客户服务水平。

今年东盟轮值主席国菲律宾将帮助微型、小型和中型企业(MSMEs)应用人工智能列为优先事项,可谓恰逢其时。

与此同时,东盟基金会计划赋能10万家中小微企业,帮助其使用数字化工具。

我们的人民年轻、数字化程度高、适应能力强。许多国家政府正着力为学生培养人工智能就绪技能,并与科技企业合作,提升劳动力水平。

支柱三——全社会参与

这让我谈到人工智能普及接入的民主化价值。我们在近期的"人工智能就绪东盟青年挑战赛"中清晰地看到了这一点。

来自文莱的两名大学生开发了Sahabat-Care——一个支持失智症患者及其照护者的人工智能平台。

印度尼西亚的Noah AI解决了一个不同的问题。他们搭建了一个平台,能够实时预测、核实洪水情况并发送短信预警。

与当今许多创新者一样,这些年轻的创造者设法克服了当地的限制,例如偏远地区移动网络覆盖不足,有时仅有3G甚至更低。这些自下而上的举措将AI的实用价值传递给了服务不足的社区。

第四支柱——治理

AI的覆盖范围越广,我们就越需要良好的治理来管控风险、保持问责。

部分AI风险可由现行法律加以应对;例如,劳动法可能已涵盖由问题AI工具引发的职场歧视行为。

在其他情况下,例如选举期间使用AI生成的材料,相关法律可能需要更新。

随着这一领域科学的不断演进,有时阐明原则比规定具体监管措施更为有效。这正是新加坡所采取的方式。

我们是亚洲首个发布《人工智能治理示范框架》的国家。

我们还发布了负责任AI使用指南。

东盟通过其《AI治理与伦理指南》及《AI治理与安全测试计划》,采纳了大体相同的方式。

第五支柱——国际合作

这些得以实现,是因为我们已设有东盟AI治理工作组。放眼东盟之外,我们也一直与技术合作伙伴携手共建能力。

我们积极参与AI影响力峰会、ISO等国际平台,确保本地区在谈判桌上占有一席之地,并拥有参与塑造AI标准的话语权。

潜在陷阱

总体而言,东南亚处于广泛部署AI的有利位置。但这并非水到渠成。时不时谈谈哪些因素可能让我们最好的计划脱轨,是有益的。今天我想点出两个:数据与主权。

陷阱一——数据

第一个潜在陷阱是我们的数据政策。

数据是AI的命脉。

要训练可靠、稳健的AI模型,我们需要获取高质量数据,以及有利于数据流通的支持性环境。

例如,企业可能需要全面掌握其与多个国家客户和供应商的互动情况,以便规划和优化运营。若仅在单一国家经营,这并不构成问题;但若将业务扩展至多个地区,数据政策互操作性的问题便极有可能成为现实。

当然,某些限制对于保护个人数据、敏感数据或国家安全是必要的。但对于更广泛的经济而言,繁苛的数据限制会阻碍创新和商业发展,尤其对于那些并不总是具备足够资源来克服合规障碍的小企业而言更是如此。

我们应当共同帮助这些小企业茁壮成长、扩大规模,无论它们身处雅加达、万隆、河内还是曼谷。这正是《数字经济框架协议》(DEFA)所致力于实现的目标。

DEFA是一项里程碑式的协议,将建立共同规则和框架,以促进数字贸易、支持可信赖的跨境数据流通。

多个国家在推动DEFA成果形成方面发挥了关键作用。我要向泰国、菲律宾和印度尼西亚的同仁致谢,他们为东盟数字经济的发展奠定了坚实基础。

陷阱二——对"主权"的狭义解读

第二个潜在陷阱是我们如何回应AI主权的需求。

主权是一项合理的关切,理应如此。每个国家都必须能够按照自身条件使用AI,为本国人民服务。有时,这一问题被狭义地界定为所有权问题,或构建、占有整个AI技术栈的竞赛:芯片、模型、数据与应用。

这种观点虽情有可原,但对大多数国家而言既不现实,也无裨益。

撇开巨大的成本不谈,AI技术栈依赖错综复杂的全球供应链,极少有国家能够指望在每个层面都加以构建或拥有。

我们中的许多国家还有其他财政优先事项,例如照顾老龄化人口、医疗卫生或教育。

我建议,我们可以从三个维度来界定我们的目标:

第一,具备为公共利益使用和治理 AI 的能力。

第二,拥有自主权,能够明智地选择向谁采购、与谁合作以及合作条款。

第三,拥有在 AI 生态系统中构建广度与深度的支柱,例如研究机构、开发者社区、风险投资人以及富有进取心的用户。

实现这三个目标已需付出相当大的努力。但它们是切实可行的途径,有助于我们保护公民利益与战略利益。这些应是我们的优先要务。

结语

明年,新加坡将出任东盟轮值主席国。我们将在菲律宾所做良好工作的基础上,推进我们共同的 AI 优先议程。

以下是值得期待的内容:

第一,我们将汇聚更多中小微企业(MSMEs)、劳动者和政府,共同更好地运用 AI。

第二,我们将加大对共享数字公共产品的投入,例如语言模型、治理工具包和能力建设项目。

第三,我们将深化跨境数据流通机制,并在区域内协调统一 AI 治理方式。

这不仅仅是新加坡的议程,这是东盟的议程。

东盟的力量从来不在于同质化。

它始终在于求同存异、携手合作。

印度尼西亚正体现了这一点。正如贵国国家格言所言:「Bhinneka Tunggal Ika」,即"多元一体"。

只要东盟各成员国携手并进、步调一致,我们便能取得更大成就。

我期待接下来的小组讨论,并向各位学习。Terima kasih。

英文原文

MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期: 2026-06-21

Selamat pagi. I’m happy to be back in Jakarta, and to see my good friend, Minister Meutya. She was very kind to refer to me in her speech, but I would like to remind everyone that although there are many digital ministers who are women, there is only one that has to look after 280 million people.

About a month ago, Minister Meutya and five other ASEAN digital ministers were in Singapore for the Asia Tech Summit. This is one of the many occasions we have met. It speaks to our shared interest in advancing digital development, in each of our countries and in ASEAN. We are always asking, “what more can we do together?”

I will focus on two things today: First, why Southeast Asia is well-positioned to expand AI adoption, and; second, the pitfalls we must avoid to do so confidently.

The Case for AI adoption in Southeast Asia

First, let me start with the positives. In every region, achieving widespread AI adoption will likely depend on five key building blocks.

The first, reliable infrastructure;

The second, capabilities within organisations and the workforce;

Third, whole-of-society involvement;

Fourth, supportive laws and regulations; and

Fifth, international cooperation.

In ASEAN, we’re firing on all five cylinders.

Pillar 1 – Infrastructure

The infrastructure build-up is considerable

New data centre capacity is coming online almost everywhere,

Between 2025 and 2030, capacity is expected to more than triple. If I share with you this morning’s conversation before the start of this summit, triple is more than modest. The number sounded like more than ten times.

Our seabed is fast becoming one of the world's busiest networks of digital highways.

However, as Minister Meutya correctly pointed out, infrastructure is more than just cables and computing power. It includes the software and policy layers that make AI accessible and useful.

For example, how well do AI models and applications respond to our cultural diversity?

SEA-LION, which stands for Southeast Asian Languages In One Network, is one software layer that can help. As an open-source model, anyone can use it freely.

Today, it has over 200,000 downloads. Many companies across the region build their products on top of it.

Pillar 2 – Capabilities

Beyond infrastructure, organisations and people must know how to use AI. In fact, more companies are integrating AI into their operations. That is actually the more difficult thing to do, and Minister Meutya was talking about it earlier.

Banks are using it for fraud detection. With AI, manufacturers can better optimise supply chains and reduce downtime.

Companies like Kata.AI are creating AI tools to enhance customer service in Bahasa Indonesia.

It is timely that this year’s ASEAN Chair, the Philippines has prioritised helping Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) to adopt AI.

In parallel, the ASEAN Foundation plans to empower 100,000 MSMEs to use digital tools.

Our people are young, digitally connected, and quick to adapt. Many governments are looking to equip their students with AI-ready skills and partnering with tech companies to level up their workforce.

Pillar 3 – Whole-of-Society

This brings me to the democratising value of AI access. We saw this clearly at the recent AI-Ready ASEAN Youth Challenge.

Two university students from Brunei built Sahabat-Care – an AI platform that supports dementia patients and their caregivers.

Indonesia’s Noah AI tackled a different problem. They built a platform to predict, verify, and send SMS alerts about floods in real time.

Like many innovators today, these young creators worked around local constraints, such as low mobile connectivity in the far-flung areas, sometimes 3G or less. These ground-up initiatives spread AI’s practical value to under-served communities.

Pillar 4 – Governance

The wider the reach of AI, the more we need good governance to manage the risks and stay accountable.

Some AI risks can be addressed by existing laws; for example, employment laws may already cover workplace discrimination caused by problematic AI tools.

In other cases, such as the use of AI-generated materials during elections, the law may need to be updated.

As the science is evolving, it is sometimes more useful to set out the principles, rather than to prescribe the regulation. This is the approach we have adopted in Singapore.

We were the first country in Asia to launch a Model AI Governance Framework.

We have also published guidelines on responsible AI.

ASEAN has adopted broadly the same approach through its Guide on AI Governance and Ethics and its Programme on AI Governance and Safety Testing.

Pillar 5 – International Cooperation

These were possible because we already have an ASEAN Working Group on AI Governance. Looking beyond ASEAN, we have also been working with technology partners to build capacity.

We are active at international platforms like the AI Impact Summits or the ISO, ensuring that our region has a seat at the table, and a voice to shape the standards around AI.

Potential pitfalls

Overall, Southeast Asia is in a good position to deploy AI widely. But we will not get there automatically. Every now and then, it is useful to talk about what could derail our best plans. I want to name two today: data and sovereignty.

Pitfall 1 - Data

The first potential pitfall is our data policies.

Data is the lifeblood of AI.

To train reliable and robust AI models, we need access to quality data, and a supportive environment for data to flow.

For example, businesses may need a holistic view of their interactions with customers and suppliers in multiple countries, to plan and optimise their operations. If they operate only in a single country, that is not a problem, but if they expand and scale beyond one territory, then the interoperability of the data policies becomes very possible.

Some restrictions are of course necessary to protect personal and sensitive data, or national security. But for the wider economy, onerous restrictions on data hamper innovation and business, especially for small companies that do not always have the resources to overcome compliance hurdles.

Collectively, we should help these small companies to thrive and scale, whether in Jakarta, Bandung, Hanoi, or Bangkok. This is precisely what the Digital Economy Framework Agreement, or DEFA, aims to achieve.

DEFA is a landmark agreement that will put in place common rules and frameworks to enable digital trade, and support trusted cross-border data flows.

Several countries were key in shaping DEFA outcomes. I want to acknowledge colleagues in Thailand, the Philippines, and Indonesia. They have laid a strong foundation for ASEAN’s digital economy to grow.

Pitfall 2 – A Narrow Reading of "Sovereignty"

The second potential pitfall is how we respond to the need for AI sovereignty.

Sovereignty is a legitimate concern and rightly so. Every country must be able to use AI on its own terms, in service of its own people. At times, this question gets framed narrowly as one of ownership or a race to build or claim full possession of the entire AI stack: chips, models, data, and applications.

This view, while understandable, is neither realistic nor helpful for most countries.

Setting aside the enormous costs involved, the AI tech stack relies on intricate global supply chains that very few can hope to build or own at every level.

Many of us have other fiscal priorities, such as to take care of our aging populations, healthcare, or education.

I suggest that we can frame our goals in three ways:

First, the ability to use and govern AI for the public good.

Second, the autonomy to make smart choices about who to buy from, who to partner with and on what terms.

Third, the anchors to build breadth and depth in our AI ecosystems, such as our research institutions, developer communities, venture capitalists, and ambitious users.

These three goals will already take considerable effort to achieve. But they are practical ways that help us to protect our citizens’ and strategic interests. They should be our priorities.

Close

Next year, Singapore will assume the ASEAN Chair. We will build on the Philippines’ good work to advance our shared AI priorities.

Here is what to look forward to:

First, we will bring more MSMEs, workers, and governments together to use AI better.

Second, we will invest more in shared digital public goods, such as language models, governance toolkits, and capacity-building programmes.

Third, we will deepen cross-border data flow mechanisms and align AI governance approaches across our region.

This is not just Singapore’s agenda. This is ASEAN's agenda.

ASEAN’s strength has never been about being the same.

It has always been about working together, despite being different.

Indonesia embodies this. As your own national motto puts it: “Bhinneka Tunggal Ika” or unity in diversity.

As long as ASEAN moves ahead in step with one another, we can achieve much more.

I look forward to the panel discussion, and to learning from all of you. Terima kasih.