MDDI 演讲稿 · 2026-06-17
张莉媚部长在亚洲经济峰会小组讨论上的发言
张莉媚部长在亚洲经济峰会小组讨论上的发言
要点
- • 张思乐部长将AI主权重新界定为三大支柱:公共部门自主运用AI以服务治理、通过实际使用AI获得制定规则的知情能力,以及基于性能、价格、安全性与韧性作出「智慧选择」,而非以供应商国籍为判断标准。
- • 新加坡主张建立多供应商生态系统以避免对单一提供商过度依赖,AI采购决策应以技术能否满足安全与韧性要求为核心,而非以供应商的国家来源为依据。
- • 数字经济伙伴框架协议(DEFA)被类比为数字经济领域的「航空服务协议」,东盟现有数据管理框架——包含跨司法管辖区数据交换的合同条款——为实际数据跨境流动提供底层互操作机制。
- • 电力供应不足被视为AI数据中心扩张的潜在瓶颈,东盟成员国正在讨论的东盟电网被认为是提升数字基础设施长期能源安全的关键手段。
- • 新加坡正通过与应用程序开发者合作,研究推出自愿性AI「营养标签」框架,要求开发者披露产品的适用场景与不适用场景,类比食品与药品的标签规范,并计划评估效果后再考虑是否强制推行。
- • 世界银行行长阿贾伊·邦加提出的「小型AI」概念——即可在2G或3G网络下于终端设备运行的轻量化模型——被引用为在区域内为弱势群体提供普惠、可负担AI接入的可行路径。
完整译文(中文)
MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期: 2026-06-21
论坛议题:"从基础设施到智能:将东南亚数字基础转化为AI规模"
Terence Lee(TIA):首先,Teo部长,您谈到了AI主权,以及这个词如何常常定义不清、需要重新框架。您举了几个可以如何重新框架的例子。请问您能否进一步阐述,新加坡或任何国家应如何重新定义AI主权并加以落实?
部长 Josephine Teo:非常感谢,Terence。在聆听Meutya部长演讲的过程中——顺便说一句,那是一场精彩的演讲——我认为其实也存在一些契合之处。主权并不是可以置之不理的东西。我要在一开始就说明这一点。这是一个重要的问题。
我们需要能够按照自己的意愿、为本国人民使用AI。仅靠构建和拥有AI技术栈的全部环节是否就能实现这一目标,是一个我认为我们需要正视并回答的问题。因为极少有国家能够构建、拥有并维护整个AI技术栈。其中涉及的组件实在太多太复杂。
因此,我们选择从三个维度来审视这个问题。第一是将AI用于公共利益和治理的能力。正如我此前在讨论所需能力时提到的,我重点关注的是组织能力和劳动力能力。事实上,公共部门自身对AI的使用同样至关重要。如果没有相关知识或能够运用AI提供公共服务的人才,就会存在巨大缺口。因此,这是你必须积累的能力。
另一个方面是,正因为你自己在使用AI,你会对如何治理AI、应制定哪些规则有更深入的了解;如果你需要依赖他人告诉你在落实AI时需要什么,那么你治理AI的能力就值得质疑。
但同样需要付出大量努力去培育的,是做出明智选择的自主能力。让我进一步阐述"明智选择"的含义,无论是对政府还是企业而言。当我们考虑引入何种技术时,有几个关键问题。第一,它性能如何?第二,它是否经济实惠?第三,我们还必须考虑安全性和韧性方面是否得到了妥善保障。将三者结合起来,你希望根据技术产品或供应商在多大程度上满足你的需求来做出选择。整体价值如何实现,应该比这来自A国还是B国更为重要。
选择的关键并不在于A国还是B国,而在于综合权衡之后,你能否更好地实现性能与经济性、安全性与韧性的最优组合。所以我认为,这就是我们希望达到的状态——能够说,我选择的依据不是它来自哪里,而是它能为我们做什么。这就是我所说的"明智选择"。
这与我们希望构建锚点的方式高度一致。你需要一个健康的生态系统,拥有众多不同的技术解决方案供应商和提供商,而不希望过度绑定或过度依赖其中任何一家。这与Meutya部长所说的观点一致——如果你实现了另外两个目标,就能获得这种自主设定条件的能力。这就是我的思考方式。
Terence Lee(TIA):Teo部长,就您早前关于采购AI技术以及围绕安全性和韧性做出明智选择的观点,能否进一步阐述,以及这一决策框架如何发挥作用?
部长 Josephine Teo:一家已实现数字化的企业拥有多套系统,而不只是单一系统。我相信在印度尼西亚,你们也有跟踪库存、文具存货、核心资产,乃至追踪资金状况的系统。这些系统各不相同,需要不同程度的保护。
系统的安全性和韧性取决于你的需求。如果你的要求非常高,那么在评估供应商时,你会询问他们如何管理系统,以及内置了哪些规则来防止无权访问你数据的人员获取数据。
在我看来,企业需要清楚哪些系统和数据集需要更高程度的安全保障。他们还需要知道,如果正在使用某个特定供应商的服务,而该服务由于某种原因不再可用,他们有哪些备选方案。这涉及韧性的问题——一旦发生中断,你是否具备快速切换或从中断中恢复的能力?
我认为这些是值得认真对待的重要问题,而不是简单地假设:只要供应商或提供商声称来自某个特定国家,就能保证安全性和韧性;或者认为向另一个国家的组织采购或与之合作,就必然会损害你的安全性和韧性。
我认为,明智选择意味着不只看表面,而是要从使用方的角度,真正了解其服务和产品是如何构建的。
Terence Lee(TIA):这对在场的AI供应商和AI研发者来说是一个值得深思的问题。
Terence Lee(TIA):我想谈谈数据流通问题。我认为这是两位部长在各自演讲中都提到的一个有趣议题。Meutya部长,您谈到了促进跨国数据流通;Teo部长,您提到了DEFA。那么,这具体是如何运作的?您认为推进路径是什么,企业可以期待什么?
部长 Josephine Teo:如果可以的话,我想借用民用航空领域的一个类比,来进一步补充Meutya部长所说的内容。
我们各自建设了机场,但这些机场的价值并不大,除非飞机能够在城市之间飞行。飞机能否在城市之间飞行,取决于国家之间的航空服务协议,而DEFA可以被理解为这类航空服务协议的数字等价物。
即便签订了航空服务协议,也可能出现这样的情景:飞机抵达新加坡,你说:"抱歉,你们飞机的舱门与我的登机廊桥不匹配。"或者你说:"你们的着陆系统使用的格式与我的空中交通管制系统不兼容,所以无法起降。"那么,签订航空服务协议又有什么意义呢?
DEFA是这一顶层协议,表明我们就数字经济之间的交互方式达成了共识。但数据流通的具体机制及相关协议仍有待厘清。
幸运的是,早在DEFA被提出和讨论之前,东盟内部就已建立了一套数据管理框架。我们就不同司法管辖区数据交换实体之间的合同条款达成了共识,因为我们必须承认各成员国的数据法律并不完全相同。但我们找到了一种方式,即便法律存在差异,也能实现数据的互联互通。下一步的工作是真正落实所有这些细节,确保当相当于飞机的数据从一个机场飞往另一个机场时,不会遭遇系统不兼容的问题。这就是大量艰苦工作之所在。
现在每天大约有三十个航班往返于新加坡和雅加达之间,由Garuda(鹰航)、新加坡航空及其他多家航空公司运营;我们都能顺畅地在两座城市之间飞行而不出任何问题,这并不是因为从未存在互操作性问题,而是因为这些问题已经得到了解决。因此,从现在到数据流通规则全面落地的这段时间,正是艰苦工作之所在。
Terence Lee(TIA):在这些投资持续涌入的背景下,您认为AI领域还有哪些方向需要更多工作、更多发展?您认为各自国家最迫切的领域是什么?
部长 Josephine Teo:对我而言,有两个方面。我们正通过数据中心大规模建设算力,但这些数据中心需要电力支撑,一个潜在瓶颈是电力供应不足。当然,还有用水方面的制约,但仅就电力而言,除了各方继续完善电网以支持数字基础设施发展之外,东盟内部还有一件令人振奋的事情正在推进。
东盟成员国正在讨论的东盟电网,有望帮助我们实现更好的能源安全保障——这是我们所有人都需要的。与此同时,它也有可能从更长远的维度,以更有效的方式满足我们的能源需求。我认为这是其中一个方向。
另一方面,随着AI应用在众多不同领域落地——尤其是消费者与AI交互的场景中——信任问题变得尤为重要。
我们走进这栋建筑,相信它是安全的。这是因为有人检查了喷水灭火系统,确保消防安全和建筑安全都得到了妥善处理。在家中,我们使用各种电器;上了汽车,也不会预期会发生意外。这些都是再平常不过的事情。我们之所以能有这种安全感和信任感,是因为这些产品经过了检测;但如今AI已触达数百万人的双手、思想和内心,而我们并不能真正确定它是否经过了妥善的测试。
所以,对我而言,问题在于:我们正在做哪些努力,以确保这项技术真正值得信赖?除了我已提到的一些举措之外,我们正在研究的下一步是类似"营养标签"的机制。如果你正在使用某个AI应用,应用开发者是否有责任告知你它的适用范围和局限性、它的设计用途和非设计用途?就像在商店购买一条面包,包装会清楚地告诉你里面含有什么;购买非处方药膏或药物,也会标明针对不同年龄段的建议剂量——不多不少。我认为,对于触达数百万用户、被多方实体使用的AI应用,我们需要类似的机制。
Terence Lee(TIA):能否进一步阐述"营养标签"的概念,以及它将会是什么样子?
部长Josephine Teo:我们正在与应用程序开发者沟通,询问他们在不泄露专有信息的前提下,能够向消费者披露哪些内容,以及如何以负责任的方式声明用户应当或不应当使用该技术。
新加坡处理问题的方式是:当我们不知道答案,或不清楚标签应当呈现怎样的形式时,我们会与业界沟通,询问他们能展示哪些内容来帮助用户。我认为这一对话进展顺利,我们已获得一些非常有价值的反馈。我们正在认真吸纳这些反馈,并希望与ASEAN及其他地区的同行探讨,他们是否认为此类标签同样有用。这些尝试目前只是起步阶段,但最终待时机成熟,很可能先以自愿性框架的形式推出,届时可以评估其是否有用且有效,再考虑下一步行动。
Terence Lee(TIA):随着AI投资涌入,您如何确保AI不仅惠及大型企业和中小企业(SMEs),也能惠及微型中小企业(micro-SMEs)、两国的Gojek骑手和Grab骑手?
部长Josephine Teo:这是历次技术浪潮都面临的挑战,无论是互联网、移动技术,还是此前的历次技术浪潮,皆是如此。始终是前沿企业获益最多——它们率先采用新技术,充分利用技术所能提供的一切,从而变得更具竞争力。它们在规模和体量上不断壮大,随后颠覆其他公司的业务,而大量公司——通常是规模较小的企业——则跟不上步伐。AI同样令人担忧这一问题。
另一方面,AI有一个潜在改变格局的特殊特性。以利用AI编程为例,虽然并不完美,但已能取得一定成效。昨天,我与几家印度尼西亚公司会面时,他们分享说自己是软件即服务(SaaS)公司,但拥有自己的工程师。于是他们开始思考:我每月花大量资金向SaaS提供商购买服务,只是处理一些简单的事情;但我的软件工程师借助Claude code或其他工具,就可以开发一款应用程序来处理行政事务,这样我们就不再需要向其他服务提供商购买服务了。
因此,这是规模较小的企业也能从这项技术中受益的一种方式。如果它们学会有效使用AI,就不必再过度依赖其他服务提供商,而依赖这些提供商对它们而言成本极为高昂。
但我非常认同Meutya部长指出的一点,那就是必须确保服务不足的群体也能从这项技术中受益。我早些时候分享的一些案例之所以简单得令人惊讶,是因为开发应用程序并不是最困难的部分,难的是理解他们的需求和局限。
在我们参观的那场展示活动中,有ASEAN青年参与——我记得一些青年告诉我,他们开发的应用程序使用了AI,但这是非常精简的AI,不需要大型服务器来运行。这种AI精简到可以在手机内部运行,处理在边缘端完成,只需2G或3G网络即可。因此,这些创新者能够以极少的投入和相当低的难度克服这些限制。
这正是我认为AI所具备的潜力,是此前历次技术浪潮所无法比拟的。你不需要大量投资就能惠及小型社区及其高度定制化的需求。这正是世界银行行长Ajay Banga所称的「小AI」。银行希望进行全面转型,或制造业企业希望利用具身AI让生产线实现超高效率,那是「大AI」。
他表示,有许多「小AI」的案例可以用来惠及我们地区的众多社区,让人们以经济实惠的方式获取AI。这也正因此与我们的思考方向相呼应——我们希望为人们保留以极为低廉的价格获取AI的空间,让他们无需自行构建。
Terence Lee(TIA):最后,请问两位一个简短的问题:如果可以用AI给贵国每位公民赋予一种超级能力,那会是什么?
部长Josephine Teo:我的答案不止一个。我所在的部门负责管理国家图书馆理事会,新加坡共有26座实体图书馆。我们知道,人们正被大量信息和内容所淹没。
幸运的是,我们的图书馆一直在不断自我革新。人们仍然会来到图书馆,也可以通过应用程序借阅书籍。我的愿望是,这个应用程序或我们的图书馆,能够每天为每位公民推荐一本书,并附上该书的摘要。这样,每个人每天都能从一本书中获得有价值的收获。如果一年365天都能做到这一点,每个人都会变得聪明许多。
我还有另一个愿望,这与SPH Media Trust有关。我们被新闻所淹没,世界各地充斥着大量令人心碎的消息,可能令人相当沮丧。SPH Media Trust能否实现内容个性化,确保每位读者每天都能收到一条好消息?
让我感到高兴的事,可能与让陈先生或慧芬感到高兴的事不同,所以不如拥有个性化的「今日好消息」。也许他们可以做到!
英文原文
MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期: 2026-06-21
Panel Title: “From Infrastructure to Intelligence: Turning Southeast Asia’s Digital Foundations into AI Scale”
Terence Lee (TIA): To start off, Minister Teo, you were talking about AI sovereignty, and how the word is often not well defined and needs to be reframed. You mentioned a few examples of how that could be done. Could you elaborate on how Singapore, or how any country, should go about reframing AI sovereignty and implementing this?
Minister Josephine Teo: Thank you very much, Terence. As I was listening to Minister Meutya’s presentation, an excellent presentation by the way, I thought that there were actually also points of alignment. Sovereignty is not something you disregard. I should say that at the outset. It is an important question.
There is a need for us to be able to use AI on our own terms in service of our people. Whether that is achieved solely through the building and ownership of everything along the AI stack is a question that I think we need to address and ask. Because very few countries will be able to build, own and maintain the entire AI stack. There are just too many different components involved.
So the way we choose to look at it is that there are three things you need to watch. First is the ability to use AI for the public good and for governance. So earlier when I discussed what capabilities are needed, I focused on organisational capabilities and workforce capabilities. Actually, the public sector's own use of AI is important. If you don't have the knowledge or the people that can use AI to deliver public services, there is a big gap. So that's something you have to build up.
The other aspect of it is that because you use it yourself, you are better informed as to how to govern and what rules to put in place; and if you have to rely on what other people tell you is needed in implementing AI, then your ability to govern AI can be questioned.
But the part that also needs a lot of effort to build up is the autonomy to make smart choices. I'll expand on what we mean by smart choices, whether it is the government, or whether it is a company. When we think about the choice of technology to be incorporated, there are a number of key questions. First, does it perform well? Second, is it affordable? Third, we must also consider whether the security and resilience aspects are well taken care of. Put the three together, and you want to make choices on the basis of how the technology product or supplier best meets your requirements. It should matter more how the overall value is achieved than whether this comes from country A or country B.
The choice is not so much between country A and country B. The choice is really whether, on balance, you are better able to achieve the combination of performance and affordability, security and resilience. So I think that’s what we want to be able to get to, to be able to say that I am not choosing on the basis of where it comes from, but on the basis of what it can do for us. That's what I mean by smart choices.
This flows quite consistently with how we want to build anchors. You need a healthy ecosystem, with many different suppliers and providers of technology solutions, and you don't want to be overly tied to or overly dependent on any one of them. This is aligned with what Minister Meutya was saying, that you can achieve this ability to set your own terms, if you achieve these two other goals. That’s how I think about it.
Terence Lee (TIA): Minister Teo, a follow up on your earlier point about buying AI technology and making smart choices around security and resilience. Could you elaborate on that and how that decision framework comes into play?
Minister Josephine Teo: A company that is digitalised has multiple systems. It doesn’t just have a single system. I’m sure in Indonesia, you have systems that keep track of inventory, stationary inventory, crown jewels, and even systems that track how much money you have. These systems are not the same, and you need different degrees of protection.
The security and resilience of a system depends on your requirements. If your requirements are very high, then, when you evaluate the vendor, you will ask questions on how they manage it and what rules are built in to protect your data from being accessed by people who have no business accessing it.
The way I see it is that companies need to be aware of which of their systems and datasets deserve a higher degree of security. They also need to know, if they are using a particular provider’s service and if that service is somehow no longer available to them, what options they have. That goes to the question of resilience, whether, if you have a disruption, you have the ability to switch quickly or to recover from the disruption?
I think these are important questions that deserve your attention, rather than just assuming that you will achieve security and resilience just because a vendor or provider claims to be from a particular country, or that purchasing from or partnering with an organisation from another country will compromise your security and resilience.
I think making smart choices means looking beyond just the façade but knowing how their services and products are built, from the perspective of those on the receiving end.
Terence Lee (TIA): A food-for-thought for AI vendors in the room and AI inventors.
Terence Lee (TIA): I want to touch on data flows. I think that was an interesting topic that was brought up in both speeches. Minister Meutya, you talked about facilitating data flows across countries, and Minister Teo, you mentioned the DEFA. So, how does that work? How do you see rolling out, and what can companies expect?
Minister Josephine Teo: If I could just expand on what Minister Meutya said, with an analogy from the civil aviation domain.
We’ve all built our own airports, but these airports are not very useful unless the airplanes can fly from one city to another. Whether you can fly from one city to another is a matter of air services agreements between countries, and DEFA should be thought of as the equivalent of an air services agreement.
Even if you have the air services agreement, consider this scenario: the airplane comes into Singapore, you say: “Sorry, you are using a different door to your aircraft, it doesn't fit into my aerobridge”. Or you say: “Your landing system uses a format that is different from what my air traffic control uses, so you can't fly.” Then what is the point of having the air services agreement?
DEFA is this top line agreement. It says that we agree on how there should be interactions between our digital economies. But the actual mechanisms, the agreements on the mechanisms for data flows, still have to be worked out.
Fortunately, long before DEFA was even thought about and discussed, within ASEAN, we already had a data management framework. We agreed on contractual clauses between data-exchanging entities in different jurisdictions because we must accept that our data laws are not identical. But we have a way of saying that even if they are not identical, they can connect and interoperate with each other. The next steps are to really flesh out all these detailed workings, so that when the equivalent of an aircraft flies from one airport to another, it doesn’t encounter the problem of incompatible systems. This is the hard work that goes on.
The fact that every single day there are, I'm guessing, maybe 30 flights between Singapore and Jakarta, operated by Garuda, Singapore Airlines and many other airlines; the fact that we can all fly comfortably from one city to the next without problems, is not because there weren't any interoperability issues. It's because the interoperability issues were settled. So, between now and the point where all the data movement rules are settled, that is where the hard work lies.
Terence Lee (TIA): With all these investments coming in, where do you see the areas in AI in which more work needs to be done, more developments need to happen? What are the urgent areas you see in the respective countries?
Minister Josephine Teo: For me, there are two. We are building a lot of compute capacity through data centres, but these data centres need to run on power, and one potential bottleneck is that we don’t have enough power. Of course, there is also the constraint of water, but on power alone, apart from each of us continuing to build up our grids to support the development of digital infrastructure, there is also something very exciting going on within ASEAN.
The ASEAN power grid that is being discussed amongst the ASEAN member states could potentially help us to achieve better energy security, which we will all need. And at the same time, it can potentially support our energy needs in a more effective way over the longer term. I think that’s one area.
The other part that I should say is that as AI applications are being implemented across many different domains, particularly in consumer interactions with AI, the question of trust becomes really important.
We come into this building, trusting that it will be safe. That is because somebody checks the sprinkler system and makes sure that fire safety and building safety, have been taken care of. At home, we use many different appliances. We get into a car, not expecting something bad to happen. These are simple things. The only reason we are able to have this sense of security and trust is because these products have been tested; but today AI is reaching the hands, the heads, and the hearts of millions of people, and we are not really sure whether it has been properly tested.
So, the question for me is: what efforts are we making to ensure that this technology can truly be trusted? Apart from some of the efforts that I have talked about, the next step we are looking at is the equivalent of nutrition labels. If an AI application is being used by you, should the application developer be responsible for telling you what it is good for and what it is not, what it is meant for, and what it is not? Just like when you buy a loaf of bread in a shop, it tells you exactly what is in the bread. If you buy an ointment or medication off the shelf, it also tells you the dosage you are supposed to take for your age group – not more, not less. I think we will need something similar for AI applications that reach millions of people and are used by multiple entities.
Terence Lee (TIA): Could you elaborate on the nutrition labels, and what that will look like?
Minister Josephine Teo : We are engaging with application developers to ask them what they can tell consumers that does not give away proprietary information, and what would look like a responsible way for them to declare what the user should and should not use the technology for.
The way we approach things in Singapore is, when we don’t know the answer, or don’t know exactly what the label should look like, we engage with the industry to ask them what they can show that will help the user. And I think the conversation is going well, we have gotten some very useful feedback. We are taking this feedback on board and would love to discuss with our colleagues in ASEAN and other parts of the world whether they would find this kind of label useful as well. These attempts are baby steps, but ultimately, when ready, it will likely start as a voluntary framework. We can then assess whether it is useful and effective, before we consider next steps.
Terence Lee (TIA): With AI investments coming in, how do you ensure that AI benefits not just the large companies, the SMEs, but also the micro-SMEs, the Gojek riders, the Grab riders, in both countries?
Minister Josephine Teo: That’s a challenge with successive waves of technology, whether it's the Internet, mobile, or even previous waves. It's always the frontier companies that benefit most. They are quick to adopt, make full use of what the technology can offer, and then become even more competitive. They grow in size and scale, then disrupt other companies’ businesses, and you have a long tail of companies, generally the smaller ones, who can't keep up. That is a worry with AI too.
On the other hand, there is one particular feature of AI that is potentially quite game changing. Take the fact that you can use AI to code. It's not perfect, but you get somewhere. Yesterday, when I met with some Indonesian companies, they shared that they are Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) companies. But they have their own engineers. So they are thinking to themselves, I'm paying a SaaS provider a lot of money every month to do simple things for me, but my software engineer, with the help of Claude code or some other tool, can create an app to take care of administrative functions so we no longer have to buy services from other service providers.
So that's one way in which even smaller companies can benefit from this technology. If they learn how to use AI effectively, they do not need to be so dependent on other service providers, which would be very costly for them to access.
But I really like what Minister Meutya pointed out, that there is a need to ensure that underserved communities benefit from this technology. Some of the examples I shared earlier were remarkably simple because creating the application was not the most difficult part. It is about understanding their needs and constraints.
At the showcase we attended, where the ASEAN youths, I remember some of the youths telling me that the app that they created uses AI, but it is AI that is very lean. It doesn't need a big server to run. It is AI that is so lean it can sit within the phone, processing is done at the edge, and only 2G or 3G is required. So these innovators were able to overcome these constraints with little investment and not a lot of difficulty.
That's what I think AI potentially can do that previous waves of technology could not. You don’t need very heavy investments to benefit small communities and their very bespoke needs. It is what the World Bank president, Mr Ajay Banga, calls “small AI”. A bank wanting to do complete transformations, or manufacturing companies wanting to use embodied AI to make their production lines super-efficient, that’s “big AI”.
He says there are many examples of “small AI” that we can use to benefit the many communities in our region and enable people to access AI in an affordable way. And that's why it links back to what we are thinking of, which is that we would like to own and leave room for people to access very affordable AI, so that they do not need to build their own.
Terence Lee (TIA): To wrap up, just a quick question for the both of you. If you could use AI to give each citizen a superpower in your countries, what would that be?
Minister Josephine Teo: I have more than one. My Ministry looks after the National Library Board, and we have 26 physical libraries in Singapore. We know that people are flooded with information and content.
Fortunately, our libraries have continued to reinvent themselves. People still visit our libraries, and they can also borrow books through an application. What I would like is if the application, or our library, can introduce one book to each citizen every day with a summary of the book. That way, everyone learns something valuable from a book every day. If we could do this 365 days a year, everyone would become a lot smarter.
I have another wish, and it concerns the SPH Media Trust. We are flooded with news, and there is a lot of heartbreaking news around the world that can be rather depressing. Can SPH Media Trust personalise content to ensure each reader receives one piece of good news every day?
Something that makes me happy may be different from what makes Mr Chan or Hui Fen happy, so let’s have a personalised “good news of the day”. Maybe they can do that!