MDDI 演讲稿 · 2025-03-11
部长杨莉明在微软与SGWiT国际妇女节2025活动上的演讲
部长杨莉明在微软与SGWiT国际妇女节2025活动上的演讲
要点
- • 微软与NTUC学习中心合作,目标为新加坡10万名工人提供人工智能相关技能培训。
- • 新加坡人工智能从业者队伍2024年增长25%,正沿着五年内规模翻三倍的目标轨道推进。
- • 新加坡将于2025年推出《网络安全(救济与问责)法案》,并设立新机构为网络伤害受害者(多为女性)提供支持。
- • 东南亚女性仅占技术岗位的20%至30%、技术领导层的8%;全球具备人工智能技能者中女性不足三分之一,专业人工智能岗位中约为20%。
- • 微软在新加坡扩展「AI Pinnacle」计划,重点帮助中小企业加速采用人工智能。
- • 「RELAUNCH」计划于2024年11月由政府与NTUC学习中心联合发起,帮助女性重返科技职场,目前已逾500名女性受益。
- • 新加坡自研大语言模型MERaLiON基于涵盖东南亚逾1200种语言与方言的SEA-LION框架构建,正被整合进微软旗下工具。
完整译文(中文)
MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期: 2026-06-21
大家下午好。妇女节快乐!
感谢 Andrea Della Mattea 女士与我们分享微软为这一地区带来的令人振奋的进展。我还要感谢李慧莉女士、孙素美博士,以及我的同事李婉诗女士——她一直致力于推动新加坡的 SG Women in Tech 运动。
我很高兴能参与此次活动,尤其是因为微软在众多方面一直是新加坡政府的优秀合作伙伴,双方合作由来已久。事实上,上周在国会,我谈到了微软与 NTUC LearningHub 合作,为新加坡 10 万名员工提升 AI 相关技能的努力。
在国会,我也分享了我们希望采取哪些举措来壮大 AI 劳动力队伍。
现在退后一步,思考这些公告对于女性发展意味着什么,是有益的。我们确知,在发展 AI 劳动力方面,还有许多工作有待完成。幸运的是,我们在扩大 AI 用户群体方面正取得良好进展。在扩大 AI 从业者群体(即担任科技专业职位的员工)方面,我们也在按计划推进。我们曾设定一个适度的目标:在五年内将新加坡的 AI 从业者人数增至三倍,去年该群体增长了 25%。我们仍处于增长曲线的早期阶段,希望增速能够加快,对此我有充分理由保持乐观。
在拓展 AI 机遇时保持开放包容,对我们而言至关重要。这意味着我们希望女性以及没有科技背景的人,也能把握这些 AI 机遇。我们已通过一些项目看到,向更多工作者开放机遇是可行的,我们希望继续推进。
上周在国会,我们还谈到今年将推出一项名为《网络安全(救济与问责)法案》的新立法。这对女性为何重要?因为我们在上网时,不可避免地有时会遭遇网络伤害。网络伤害的受害者往往是女性,她们理应得到我们的支持。随着这项新立法的出台,我们还将设立一个新机构来支援此类受害者。
这只是上周国会众多支持女性发展公告中的两项。
看到业界积极主动、倾力推动全经济范围 AI 应用,令人深受鼓舞。这是因为政府所做的一切好事——投资基础设施、提升劳动力技能——若没有 AI 的广泛普及,都将付诸东流。因此,以负责任、可持续的方式扩大需求,始终是我们心中的重要考量。
因此,微软宣布扩大 AI Pinnacle 计划、推动企业(尤其是中小企业)广泛采用 AI——而中小企业将从这一变革性技术中获益良多——对此我们热诚欢迎。
不过,我想指出一个你们已熟知的事实:科技行业中男性多于女性;而在科技行业内部,技术职位往往由男性而非女性担任。
a)东南亚的数据如何?女性占技术职位从业者的 20% 至 30%。这一比例尚可,但仍有提升空间。
b)当我们审视领导层,即技术团队的领导者时,女性仅占 8%。我相信你们会同意我的看法:女性的能力远不止于此。
c)在 AI 等快速增长的领域,情况亦是如此。从全球来看,具备 AI 技能的工作者中,女性不足三分之一。若聚焦于 AI 专业职位,这一比例约为 20%。
我一贯主张男性是我们的盟友。我必须明确指出,我们并不是对技术职位中的男性有意见,也不认为男性在以某种方式阻碍女性成功。这不过是承认:无论出于何种原因,差距确实存在,我们可以将其视为更好地支持女性和女童的机遇。基于此,我非常高兴地看到微软将 Code without Barriers 计划扩展至新加坡。
我们关注的问题之一,是科技行业女性离开劳动力市场的现象。这是因为科技发展日新月异,待她们准备好重返职场时,技能往往已经过时,面临着技能未能跟上的巨大压力。为此,去年十一月,我宣布了与 NTUC LearningHub 合作推出的 RELAUNCH 计划,旨在帮助女性更自信地回归科技职场。自此以来,已有逾 500 名女性从 RELAUNCH 中受益。
让我们继续思考还能做些什么,因为所有这些举措叠加起来,将有助于提升各类职位的多元化程度,无论是技术还是非技术职位,无论是高级还是初级职位。
除性别包容性之外,我们对这一地区丰富的种族、文化和语言多样性也有深刻认识,并深知在我们开发的任何 AI 模型中,都需要体现这种多样性。
a. MERaLiON 基于 SEA-LION 构建,SEA-LION 全称为 South East Asian Languages in One Network(东南亚语言统一网络)。它是新加坡自主研发的大型语言模型(LLM),其根本目标是探索如何实现文化代表性。
b. 这是因为大型语言模型(LLM)主要以英语为主。然而在东南亚,有逾 1,200 种语言和方言。若你的聊天机器人基于一个不理解本地语言的 LLM 进行训练,可想而知会引发严重问题。
c. 东南亚有其独特的口语表达方式,我们有自己的沟通方式,而一个模型的好坏,取决于它所服务的语言的丰富程度。
我很高兴,此次合作将把 MERaLiON 集成到微软的工具中,从而覆盖最广泛的用户群体。这意味着你们的客户将获得更好的服务。
我也恰好见到了参与 MERaLiON 研发的团队。我问他们:“这个大型语言模型如何体现同理心?”研究人员告诉我,它已开始展现出辨别情绪的迹象,例如感知到对方语气是否带有烦躁。客户在致电客服时往往情绪烦躁,该模型能够捕捉这类信号并作出恰当回应。这只是众多精彩应用之一。
我很高兴,我们今天所见证的许多项目里程碑,都是由极具才华的女性推动实现的。其中包括 MERaLiON 背后的首席研究员 Nancy 和 Ai Ti。我还要说,微软团队一直拥有非常出色、积极进取的女性。感谢慧莉和 Andrea 所展现的卓越领导力。
你们,以及在座的所有女性,都是我们能为所在团队带来力量的鲜活典范。你们深刻地提醒我们,女性在职场、在董事会、在我们为众多社群提供的产品中,能够发挥多么重要的作用。我真诚希望,无论身在何处,我们都能继续鼓励更多女性成为领导者。
在这积极的氛围中,我再次感谢你们的邀请,祝愿大家度过一个收获满满、充满启迪的国际妇女节。
英文原文
MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期: 2026-06-21
Good afternoon, everyone. Happy International Women’s Day!
Thank you, Ms Andrea Della Mattea, for sharing with us the exciting developments that Microsoft is bringing to this part of the world. I also want to acknowledge Ms Lee Hui Li, Dr Sun Su Mei and my colleague, Ms Lee Wan Sie who has been championing the SG Women in Tech movement in Singapore.
I am delighted to take part in this event, not least because Microsoft has been an excellent partner to the Singapore Government in so many aspects; and this goes a long way back. In fact, last week in Parliament, I spoke about the effort of Microsoft, in partnership with NTUC LearningHub, to scale up 100,000 workers in Singapore with AI relevant skills.
In Parliament, I also shared what we were hoping to do to strengthen our AI workforce.
It is useful to now take a step back and reflect what these announcements mean in the context of women's development. We know for a fact that in developing the AI workforce, there is still so much that needs to be done. Fortunately, we are making good progress in terms of growing the pool of AI users. We are also on track in growing the pool of AI practitioners, who are workers in tech specialist roles. We had set out a modest target of tripling the pool of AI practitioners in Singapore over the course of five years, and last year the pool grew 25%. We are still at the early part of the curve. We hope that it picks up pace, and I have every reason to be optimistic about that.
It is very important to us to be open and inclusive when expanding AI opportunities. By that we mean we want women, as well as those with no tech background, to enable them to take on these AI opportunities. We have seen through some of the programmes that it is possible to avail opportunities to more workers, and we want to continue that.
In Parliament last week, we also spoke about introducing a new legislation called the Online Safety (Relief and Accountability) Bill this year. Why is this important to women? Because inevitably, when we go online, we sometimes encounter online harms. The victims of online harms are often women, and they deserve our support. With this new legislation, we will also set up a new agency to support such victims.
Those were two of the many announcements in Parliament last week that support women's development.
It is very encouraging that we see an industry that is motivated and forward-leaning in supporting economy-wide AI adoption. This is because all the good things that the Government does – invest in infrastructure, skill up our workforce – will come to naught if there is no widespread AI adoption. So, growing demand in a responsible and sustainable way has always been at the back of our minds.
Therefore, Microsoft’s announcement on expanding your AI Pinnacle programme to drive AI adoption in enterprises, particularly with SMEs that stand to gain so much from this transformative technology, are most welcome.
I would, however, like to highlight something that is already well known to you. It is the fact that there are more men than women in the tech sector; and within the tech sector, technical roles are more often than not performed by men rather than women.
a) What do the statistics look like in Southeast Asia? Women account for 20 to 30% of those employed in technical roles. This is decent but can be better.
b) When we look at the leadership level, leaders of technical teams, only 8% are women. Now I believe you will agree with me that women are more capable than that.
c) This is also the case in fast-growing areas like AI. Globally, of workers that have AI skills, less than one-third are females. When we look closer at specialist AI roles, it is around 20%.
I am always a proponent of the idea that men are our allies. I must state categorically that we do not have a problem with men in technical roles, or we think that men are somehow preventing women from succeeding. It is simply to acknowledge that for whatever reasons, there are gaps, and we can see them as opportunities for us to better support women and girls. On that basis, I'm very happy about Microsoft expanding your Code without Barriers programme in Singapore.
One of the things that we are concerned about are women in tech leaving the workforce. This is because tech develops so quickly, and by the time they are ready to return to the workforce, their skills are often obsolete, and they face a tremendous pressure of not having kept up in their skills. Hence, In November last year, I had also announced a collaboration also with NTUC LearningHub, called RELAUNCH. This was to empower women to return more confidently to the tech workforce. Since then, more than 500 women have already benefited from RELAUNCH.
Let's continue to think of how much more we can do, as all these initiatives add up and help to increase diversity in all roles, whether technical or non-technical, and senior or not-so senior.
Beyond gender inclusivity, we are also familiar with the rich racial, cultural and linguistic diversity in our part of the world, and the need to represent them in any AI model that we develop.
a. MERaLiON is built on SEA-LION, which stands for South East Asian Languages in One Network. It's Singapore’s own LLM and its fundamental objective was to see how we could achieve the objective of cultural representation.
b. This is given that LLMs are primarily in English language. But in Southeast Asia, there are more than 1,200 languages and dialects. If your bot is trained on an LLM that does not understand local languages, you can imagine the serious problem it can cause.
c. SEA has our own colloquial expressions. We have our own ways of getting the message across, and a model is only as good as the richness of the languages that it seeks to serve.
I'm glad that this partnership will put MERaLiON into Microsoft’s tools, which are delivered to the broadest range of users. This means that your customers are going to be better served.
I also happen to meet the team that was involved in MERaLiON’s development. I asked them, “How is the large language model empathetic?” The investigators told me that it is beginning to show signs of being able to discern emotions, such as if we sound irritated. It's often that customers are irritated when they call customer service. The model is able to pick up signals like that and respond appropriately. That is just one of the wonderful applications.
I'm glad that many of the milestones we are witnessing in today’s projects have been driven by very capable women. These include the Principle Investigators behind MERaLiON, Nancy and Ai Ti. I must also say that the Microsoft team has always had very capable and forward leaning progressive women. Thank you to Hui Li and Andrea for the leadership that you have exercised.
You, as well as all the women in this room, are living examples of the strengths that we can bring to every team that we are part of. You are great reminders of the important role that women can play in the workplace, in the boardroom, in the products that we deliver to multiple communities. I sincerely hope we will all continue to encourage more women to be leaders, wherever you are.
On that positive note, I thank you once again for inviting me, and I wish you a fruitful, inspiring, International Women's Day celebration.