MDDI 演讲稿 · 2026-05-18
部长何晶在2026年国际AI安全科学交流主会议上的开幕演讲
部长何晶在2026年国际AI安全科学交流主会议上的开幕演讲
要点
- • 新加坡的国家人工智能战略和人工智能任务重点关注部署人工智能以改善医疗保健、运输和物流、制造业、教育和气候抗御能力。
- • 新加坡将通过建立信任环境和负责任的技术部署来区分自身作为人工智能中心的地位,而不是通过计算能力或资本支出与全球领先者竞争。
- • 新加坡推出了人工智能验证(AI Verify)以促进负责任的人工智能测试,并正在启动独立第三方人工智能测试人员认证计划以建立测试标准。
- • 新加坡致力于通过在各行业开展数字素养和技能培训来防止因人工智能导致的失业增长,帮助劳动力适应人工智能驱动的工作。
- • 新加坡正在建立内部政府技术专业知识,以独立评估人工智能风险并做出有效的监管决策。
- • 新加坡将与志同道合的国家合作开展人工智能治理、标准和风险管理,因为人工智能风险不受国家边界限制。
完整译文(中文)
MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期: 2026-05-21
新闻 Josephine Teo部长在2026年国际人工智能安全科学交流大会主论坛致辞 演讲 Josephine Teo部长在2026年国际人工智能安全科学交流大会主论坛致辞 2026年5月18日
大家早上好。
我很高兴能欢迎大家,并感谢各位参与国际科学交流2026。我们深切感谢各位对人工智能安全和有意义对话的承诺。新加坡能够成为这样对话的东道主,这对我们来说是一种荣幸,我们不会轻视这一特权。
在过去的一年中,人工智能的发展继续加速。对于许多更多的组织和个人来说,它从偶尔使用发展到了塑造日常生活的力量。我们可以看到并感受到它对我们如何学习、企业如何运营、政府如何提供服务,甚至公民如何形成观点和做出决定的影响。
我们面前有巨大的机会。像新加坡这样资源受限的国家最负不起忽视人工智能的责任。我们需要它来提升生产力和经济竞争力,就如同我们需要它来提供更好的医疗保健和教育一样。它也可以扩大我们对科学进步的贡献能力并增强国家韧性。
因此,新加坡已经明确阐述了成为人工智能领先枢纽的抱负——一个顶级研究人员、工程师、公司和投资者聚集在一起构建有用且有影响力的人工智能系统的地方。
我们希望人工智能帮助解决现实问题,例如改进医疗保健、加强运输和物流、提升制造能力、加强教育和支持气候韧性等领域。我们的《国家人工智能战略》和国家人工智能任务反映了这些目标。
除了寻求成为一个人工智能枢纽,我们还提出了另一个非常重要的问题:我们的目标是成为什么样的人工智能枢纽?因为在人工智能领域有许多种竞争方式。一些国家在市场规模上竞争。其他国家在计算能力或资本获取上竞争。
新加坡既不会也不能试图超越世界上在人工智能上花费最多的国家。我们没有这样深厚的财力。
因此,我们将专注于创造一个信任的环境——在这个环境中,技术被负责任地部署,风险得到充分理解,有效保护得到深思熟虑的实施。这就是我们的想法。
这就是为什么人工智能安全是必不可少的。通常,安全被框架为与创新相对立,好像更多的安全必然意味着更少的创新。这不总是思考这一挑战的有效方式。
对于新加坡,安全不被看作是对创新的制动器,而是我们价值主张的一个重要方面。我们希望企业、公共部门机构和公民将人工智能深层次地整合到重要系统中。
但是要做到这一点,他们必须有信心这些系统是可靠的、安全的,并得到妥善管理的。我们相信能够提供这种信心的国家和公司将有更好的机会维持人工智能创新。
这一点特别重要,因为人工智能正在超越聊天机器人和搜索工具。日益增多的是,即使在新加坡,我们看到人工智能系统被用于直接影响人们生活的领域:医疗保健、金融、运输、公共服务、教育、网络安全和关键基础设施。
在这样的领域,信任是至关重要的。
一家公司在决定在哪里建立人工智能研究中心时,应该考虑的不仅仅是获取人才和基础设施,还应该考虑周围的人工智能生态系统是否稳定、值得信任和管理良好。
研究人员在决定在哪里工作时应该问自己,他们是否处于一个大胆创新与严肃的长期社会影响思考共存的环境中。
政府在决定与谁合作时,将日益寻求那些将能力与责任结合的伙伴。
换句话说,我们相信安全和创新正在相互强化。一个值得信任的人工智能生态系统最终可能比一个单纯快速移动的生态系统更具吸引力。
与此同时,我们也应该清醒地认识这些风险。对于像新加坡这样一个开放且全球互联的城市,首要关切是信任。人工智能现在使得以极低的成本创建令人信服的文本、音频、图像和视频变得很容易。这造成了围绕诈骗和欺诈的明显风险。我们已经看到在线诈骗如何变得更加复杂和更加个性化。到现在为止,这已经非常普遍,以至于已不再新鲜。
但问题不仅限于诈骗。随着时间的推移,人们可能开始质疑他们在线看到的东西是否真实。那个视频是真的吗?那条消息是人写的吗?那场在线对话是真实的吗?
一旦人们开始对他们看到和听到的东西失去信心,对机构和彼此的信任就很容易削弱。这对于像我们这样高度依赖信任的社会来说至关重要:交易中的信任、沟通中的信任、公共机构中的信任,以及社区之间的信任。
我们的第二个关切是网络安全。人工智能使网络攻击更容易实施和更难被检测。犯罪分子现在可以制作更令人信服的钓鱼电子邮件、冒充声音,并大规模自动化攻击。Mythos只是我们看到这些被如此突出呈现的一种方式。
与此同时,各国变得越来越数字化和互联。不可避免地,政策制定者必须担心基本系统的韧性:银行、电信、运输、医疗保健和公共服务。
实际上,两周前在议会,我们回答了有关Mythos影响的问题,以及我们正在做什么来更好地保护我们的关键基础设施。这些问题只是开始。随着议员们获得提出更深层次问题的语言能力,我期望他们追求这些问题的深度和角度只会进一步锐化。
随着人工智能能力的增加,网络攻击可能只是冰山一角。专家们正在强调其他安全关切,如失去控制。已经有研究表明,人工智能代理的对抗行为寻求增殖其存在,代价是我们关心的一切,例如安全。
第三个关切是对工作和技能的影响。人工智能将创造许多机会,但它也将非常迅速地改变工作。一些任务可能会消失——我们知道这是事实。其他任务可能会被大量自动化。这在专业人士和中期职业工作者中造成了可以理解的焦虑。人们在问:「我的技能仍然会有相关性吗?我如何适应?机会对于进入劳动力的年轻工作者仍然开放吗?」这些不仅仅是经济问题。它们也是社会问题。
第四个关切是过度依赖。今天,世界上许多先进的人工智能能力集中在少数公司和国家手中。这造成了一种新的依赖关系。各国可能变得依赖于他们不控制也无法完全检查的系统。当发生问题时——无论是系统故障、有害内容,还是重大安全事件——政策制定者可能对这些系统实际如何工作或访问和使用权利如何被决定的可见性有限。
那么,问题是:像新加坡这样的国家能做什么?
首先,我们相信,是建立韧性,而不是恐惧。新加坡总体上采取了一种务实的技术方法。我们不会因为新技术承载风险就简单地拒绝它们。但我们也不假设仅凭市场就能解决每个问题。
我们对人工智能采取同样的平衡方法。例如,新加坡已经推出了「AI Verify」等举措,以鼓励负责任的人工智能测试和透明度。
我们正在启动一项新项目,以认证第三方AI测试者,为部署者提供额外的保证。我们希望部署者进行适当的测试,但他们自然会问这个问题:「我可以信任谁作为测试者?」
因此,认证第三方AI测试者的方案(这些测试者不是政府)旨在设定标准,并维持对测试者本身的一定水平的信心。
我们还推出了关于生成式人工智能治理的指导,以及围绕在线安全、诈骗和数字信任的更广泛的努力。
这些努力不是反技术的,而是需要共同关注创新和问责。我们的目标是通过增加信心来最终支持采用。这一区别很重要。
在这里,我想特别指出 Concordia 的努力——我们组织 ISE 的合作伙伴——在描述新加坡 AI 安全状况方面所做的出色工作。谢谢你,Brian,让我获得一份报告副本——我确信他正在提供更多副本。
在你给我这份报告后的这几个小时内,我有机会快速浏览了一遍。我必须感谢你既指出了我们已经取得进展的领域,也突出显示了重大差距,特别是在设计安全方面。这就是为什么我们对继续讨论 AI 安全研究优先事项非常感兴趣。
我们认为像新加坡这样的国家可以做的第二件事是继续投资于人力。我们致力于确保人工智能不会导致无就业增长。我们将帮助我们的人民在不断变化的劳动力中保持相关性,并使他们能够安全地使用人工智能。我们不认为 AI 安全仅仅是工程师和计算机科学家的关注。我们相信这也是教师、心理学家、公务员、网络安全专家、商业领袖甚至家长的关注。
我们相信,广泛和深入理解 AI 风险的社会将比不了解的社会应对得更好。因此,数字素养变得越来越关键:如何验证信息,如何识别诈骗,如何质疑可疑内容,以及如何负责任地使用 AI,而不是盲目依赖它。
第三,政府需要继续建立内部专业知识。公共机构需要足够的技术理解来提出正确的问题。如果我们不这样做,我们就完蛋了——因为我们甚至无法自己评估我们承担的风险水平是否可接受。我们需要评估风险并做出明智的决定。否则政府可能会过于缓慢地监管或以无效的方式做出反应。
第四,我们将寻找志同道合的国家,并与他们合作应对共同挑战。许多 AI 风险不会尊重国家边界。较小的国家可能无法单独塑造全球 AI 开发,但他们可以一起影响国际规范、标准和期望。
现在让我转向我们对科学家、研究人员和技术公司的要求。
首先,我们要求责任。构建最强大的 AI 系统的公司应该认识到他们不再创建普通消费产品。这些技术可能会影响整个社会。因此,安全不能被视为事后的想法。
第二,我们要求透明度。政府和公民需要清楚地了解:AI 系统能做什么,它们的局限是什么,以及有什么保障措施。当系统不透明和无法解释时,信任就会变得困难。
第三,我们要求研究人员不仅要专注于使 AI 更强大和更有能力,还要使其更可靠和可控。我们需要更容易测试、更容易监控的 AI 系统,不太可能产生有害或误导性结果。今天的讨论对于确定需要更多关注和投资的关键领域将很重要。我们对为通过 Consensus 优先考虑的全球研究项目提供资金支持的举措感到鼓舞。
今天早上,我与 Max Tegmark 会面,我们讨论了 12 个月前开始的工作如何出人意料地被证明是及时的。随着势头开始转变,兴趣也开始转向,我们处于良好的位置来应对这一变化,希望能够将 AI 引向更安全的方向。
我们希望这些被优先考虑并付诸行动的全球研究项目,将是我们从对话转向行动的切实方式。
第四,我们要求全球 AI 社区扩大参与。塑造当今前沿 AI 的国家可能很少,但受 AI 影响的社会将有很多。较小的国家不应仅仅是在其他地方开发的技术的被动消费者。我们的经验、约束和观点也很重要。我很高兴 UNDP 在这里,与 Singapore AI Safety Hub 和 IMDA 合作,将今天的讨论与 UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance 联系起来。
最后,我们要求合作。像新加坡这样的国家可能无法控制 AI 开发的前沿——我们可能永远无法做到。但我们可以在信任部署、治理、网络安全、公共部门实现和复杂城市环境中的真实世界测试等领域做出有意义的贡献。这些是 AI 时代的宝贵能力。
因此,新加坡的雄心不仅仅是成为 AI 中心,而是成为一个被信任能够谨慎使用它的中心。
我们的目标是成为想要快速和负责任地创新的人才的家园,在那里有影响力的 AI 系统被测试和部署以改善人民生活和维护公众信心。
我们希望你们将继续与我们合作,以发展一个 AI 服务于公众利益的中心,为新加坡和世界。
再次感谢你们的到来。
英文原文
MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期: 2026-05-22
Newsroom Opening Speech by Minister Josephine Teo at the International Scientific Exchange for AI Safety 2026 Main Conference Speeches Opening Speech by Minister Josephine Teo at the International Scientific Exchange for AI Safety 2026 Main Conference 18 May 2026
Good morning, everyone.
I am truly delighted to welcome you and want to thank you for being part of the International Scientific Exchange 2026. We deeply appreciate your commitment to AI Safety and meaningful dialogue. The fact that Singapore can be a host for such dialogue is an honour for us, and we do not take this privilege lightly.
In the year past, AI developments have continued to accelerate. For many more organisations and individuals, it is moving from occasional use to a shaper of everyday life. We can see and feel its influence on how we learn, how businesses operate, how governments deliver services, and even how citizens form opinions and make decisions.
There is enormous opportunity before us. Countries like Singapore that are resource-constrained can least afford to disregard AI. We need it for productivity and economic competitiveness, as much as to provide better healthcare and education. It can also amplify our ability to contribute to scientific progress and strengthen national resilience.
It is no surprise therefore that Singapore has outlined a clear ambition to become a leading AI hub — a place where top researchers, engineers, companies and investors come together to build useful and impactful AI systems.
We want AI to help solve real problems, such as improving healthcare, strengthening transport and logistics, boosting manufacturing capabilities, enhancing education and supporting areas such as climate resilience. Our National AI Strategy and national AI Missions – they reflect these aims.
Apart from seeking to become an AI hub, we also ask another very important question: what kind of AI hub do we aim to be? Because there are many ways to compete in AI. Some countries compete on market size. Others compete on compute power or access to capital.
Singapore will not, and cannot, try to outspend the world’s biggest spenders on AI. We do not have such deep pockets.
Therefore, we will focus on creating an environment of trust – where technology is deployed responsibly, risks are well understood, and effective protections thoughtfully implemented. That is how we are thinking about it.
This is where AI safety is essential. Too often, safety is framed as being in tension with innovation, as though more safety must equate to less innovation. This is not always a helpful way to think about the challenge.
For Singapore, safety is not viewed as a brake on innovation, but a vital aspect of our value proposition. We want businesses, public sector agencies, and citizens to integrate AI deeply into important systems.
But to do so, they must have the confidence that these systems are reliable, secure and properly governed. We believe countries and companies that can provide such confidence will have a better chance of sustaining AI innovation.
This matters especially because AI is moving beyond chatbots and search tools. Increasingly, even in Singapore, we see AI systems being used in areas that affect people’s lives directly: healthcare, finance, transport, public services, education, cybersecurity, and critical infrastructure.
In such areas, trust matters enormously.
A company deciding where to build an AI research centre should consider not only access to talent and infrastructure, but also whether the surrounding AI ecosystem is stable, trusted and well-governed.
Researchers deciding where to work should ask whether they are anchored in environments where bold innovations coexist with serious thinking about long-term societal impact.
Governments deciding who to partner with will increasingly look for those that combine capability with responsibility.
In other words, we believe that safety and innovation are becoming mutually reinforcing. A trusted AI ecosystem may ultimately become more attractive than a purely fast-moving one.
At the same time, we should also be clear-eyed about the risks. For an open and globally connected city like Singapore, the first major concern is trust. AI now makes it very easy to create convincing text, audio, images and videos at very low cost. This creates obvious risks around scams and fraud. We have already seen how online scams can become more sophisticated and more personalised. By now, this is so commonplace, that they are not even novel to talk about.
But the issue goes beyond scams. Over time, people may begin to question whether what they see online is real. Was that video genuine? Was that message written by a person? Was that online conversation authentic?
Once people start to lose confidence in what they see and hear, trust in institutions and in one another can easily weaken. This matters a great deal for a society like ours that depends heavily on trust: trust in transactions, trust in communications, trust in public institutions, and trust between communities.
The second concern we have is cybersecurity. AI is making cyberattacks easier to carry out and harder to detect. Criminals can now produce more convincing phishing emails, impersonate voices, and automate attacks at a much larger scale. Mythos is just one way in which we see this being presented so prominently.
At the same time, countries are becoming more digital and more connected. Inevitably, policymakers must worry about the resilience of essential systems: banks, telecommunications, transport, healthcare, and public services.
In fact, two weeks ago in Parliament, we answered the question on the impact of Mythos and what we are doing better to secure our critical infrastructure. These questions are only the beginning. As Parliamentarians acquire the language to ask deeper questions, I expect that the sophistication and the angles from which they will pursue them will only sharpen further.
As AI capabilities increase, cyberattacks may just be the tip of the iceberg. Experts are surfacing other security concerns like loss of control. There are already studies that suggest adversarial behaviour by AI Agents that seek to proliferate their existence at the expense of everything else that we care about, such as safety.
The third concern is the impact on jobs and skills. AI will create many opportunities, but it will also change work very quickly. Some tasks may disappear – we know that’s a fact. Others may be heavily automated. This creates understandable anxiety, especially among professionals and mid-career workers. People are asking: will my skills still be relevant? How do I adapt? Will opportunities remain open to younger workers entering the workforce? These are not just economic questions. They are social ones as well.
The fourth concern is over-dependence. Today, much of the world’s advanced AI capability is concentrated in a small number of companies and countries. This creates a new kind of dependence. Countries may become reliant on systems that they do not control and cannot fully inspect. When something goes wrong — whether a system failure, harmful content, or a major security incident — policymakers may have limited visibility of how those systems actually work, or how access and usage rights were even decided.
So, the question is: what can countries like Singapore do?
The first, we believe, is to build resilience, not fear. Singapore has generally taken a practical approach to technology. We do not reject new technologies simply because they carry risks. But neither do we assume that markets alone can be counted on to solve every problem.
We adopt the same balanced approach to AI. For example, Singapore has already introduced initiatives such as AI Verify to encourage responsible AI testing and transparency.
We are launching a new programme to accredit third party AI testers, to give deployers added assurance. We want deployers to go for proper testing, but they naturally ask the question: who can I trust as a tester?
And so, the scheme to accredit third-party AI testers, who are not the government, is intended to set standards and to uphold a certain level of confidence in the testers themselves.
We have also introduced guidance around Generative AI governance and broader efforts around online safety, scams, and digital trust.
Rather than being anti-technology, these efforts require a joint focus on innovation and accountability. Our aim is to ultimately support adoption by increasing confidence. This distinction is important.
Here, I want to especially call out the effort by Concordia, our partner in organising ISE, for doing a great job of describing the state of AI Safety in Singapore. Thank you, Brian, for letting me have a copy of the report – I’m sure he is making available more copies of this.
I’ve had the opportunity, in the last few hours since you gave it to me, to scan it. I would have to say a thank you for calling out the areas where we have made progress, but also highlighting the significant gaps, particularly around security by design. This is why we are very interested in continuing this conversation on AI Safety research priorities.
The second thing that we believe countries like Singapore can do, is to continue to invest in people. We are committed to ensuring that AI does not result in jobless growth. We will help our people stay relevant in the changing workforce and equip them to use AI safely. We do not think AI safety is the sole concern of engineers and computer scientists alone. We believe that it is also the concern of teachers, psychologists, public servants, cybersecurity experts, business leaders and even parents.
We believe a society that understands AI risks broadly and deeply will cope much better than one that does not. Digital literacy therefore becomes increasingly critical: how to verify information, how to recognise scams, how to question suspicious content, and how to use AI responsibly rather than blindly relying on it.
Third, governments need to continue building internal expertise. Public institutions need enough technical understanding to ask the right questions. If we do not, we are sunk – because we won’t even be able to assess for ourselves whether the risk levels that we are taking are acceptable. We need to evaluate risks and make sensible decisions. Governments may otherwise regulate too slowly or react in ways that are not effective.
Fourth, we will seek out like-minded countries and work with them on common challenges. Many AI risks will not respect national boundaries. Smaller countries may not individually shape global AI development, but together they can influence international norms, standards and expectations.
Now let me turn to what we ask of scientists, researchers and technology companies.
First, we ask for responsibility. The companies building the most powerful AI systems should recognise that they are no longer creating ordinary consumer products. These technologies may affect entire societies. Safety therefore cannot be treated as an afterthought.
Second, we ask for transparency. Governments and citizens need clear understanding of: what AI systems can do, what their limitations are, and what safeguards are in place. Trust becomes difficult when systems are opaque and unexplainable.
Third, we ask researchers to focus not only on making AI more powerful and capable, but also on making it more reliable and controllable. We need AI systems that are easier to test, easier to monitor, and less likely to produce harmful or misleading outcomes. Today’s discussions will be important in identifying critical areas for more attention and investment. We are encouraged by offers of funding to support the global research projects prioritised through the Consensus.
Earlier this morning, I met with Max Tegmark, and we were discussing how unexpectedly the work that begun 12 months ago has proven very timely. As the momentum has begun to shift, and interest has also begun to pivot, we are well placed to ride this change and hopefully to steer AI in a more safe direction.
We hope that these global research projects that are being prioritised and carried forward into action, will be a tangible way to move us from dialogue to action.
Fourth, we ask the global AI community to broaden participation. The countries shaping frontier AI today may be few, but the societies affected by AI will be many. Smaller countries should not merely be passive consumers of technologies developed elsewhere. Our experiences, constraints and perspectives matter too. I am glad that the UNDP is here, working with the Singapore AI Safety Hub and IMDA to connect today’s discussions with the UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance.
And finally, we ask for partnership. Countries like Singapore may not control the frontiers of AI development – we may never get that. But we can contribute meaningfully to areas such as trusted deployment, governance, cybersecurity, public-sector implementation, and real-world testing in complex urban environments. These are valuable capabilities in the AI age.
Singapore’s ambition is therefore not simply to become an AI hub, but one that is trusted to use it with care.
We aim to be home to talent who want to innovate quickly and responsibly, where impactful AI systems are tested and deployed to improve people’s lives and uphold public confidence.
We hope that you will continue to work with us to grow a hub where AI serves the public good, for Singapore and the world.
Thank you once again for being here.