Friday, 2024 November 22

In ‘Smart Nation’ Singapore, a shift to ‘Smart and Secure’

Singapore’s ambition to be the leading ‘Smart Nation’ saw a setback last week when it came to light that hackers stole 1.5 million non-medical records and 160,000 prescription histories from Singapore’s national healthcare group SingHealth.

This was deemed Singapore’s most serious cyber attack to date and it’s a reminder of the risks that come with concerted efforts to collect and store data to provide smarter services. While the jury is still trying to figure out what went wrong, Singapore pushes on in with its Smart Nation agenda, which includes spending more than US$100 million on big data analytics capabilities and artificial intelligence (AI) research.

AI plays an integral role in Singapore’s Smart Nation efforts, a sentiment echoed by Tan Kok Yam, Deputy Secretary managing the initiative at the Prime Minister’s Office. The government has joined hands with several private sector firms to further AI research and solve real-world problems.

Southeast Asian ride-hailing app Grab is the latest example of tech companies partnering the Singapore government to further AI research. By pouring money and resources into efforts like these, Singapore aims to be at the cutting edge of global innovations in AI.

Last Wednesday, Grab announced a joint research lab with the National University of Singapore (NUS) to solve urban transportation issues. Both entities are said to be spending S$6 million (around US$4.4 million) on the lab, without detailing who’s putting in what amount.

The Grab-NUS AI Lab launch

Grab said the lab’s researchers will help it map out traffic patterns based on its data and identify ways to directly impact mobility and liveability of cities not just in Singapore, but across Southeast Asia.

Grab CEO Anthony Tan pointed out that travel time is something the new AI lab will look at, because shared transportation solutions like those offered by Grab could help significantly reduce travel time at peak hours.

The AI lab will also train PhD students enrolled at NUS by letting them create new AI solutions for real-world challenges using Grab’s data.

Spending on Singapore’s competitiveness

Tan Eng Chye, the President of NUS, said he hoped that these types of collaborations would, over time, help build a healthy pipeline of experienced data scientists and AI researchers.

AI labs based on link-ups between private companies and universities are a positive move with long-term effects on Singapore’s competitiveness, argues Lee Jin Hian, Founder of Evie, an AI-based scheduling assistant. “I think Singapore has not only an opportunity to be a centre of excellence in AI, but also [a chance to] sell made-in-Singapore products to the world. This wouldn’t have been possible with manufacturing, but digital products powered by AI are a strategic asset that can help grow [gross domestic product],” he told KrASIA, referencing Software-as-a-Service companies like Atlassian and Xero.

Malaysian entrepreneur Lim Meng Hui, the co-founder of AI-based video analytics software SmartPeep, is equally bullish on Singapore’s effort to boost the AI scene with its weekly events and initiatives to train engineers. “This is something we can hardly find in Malaysia and Hong Kong,” he said, pointing out that having these labs in the country will help create more jobs for undergraduates and attract foreign experts to come to Singapore.

In February this year, Alibaba co-established a research institute with NTU in Singapore to explore the uses of AI in healthcare and city planning. Local telco Singtel also committed S$42.4 million (around US$31 million) into a corporate lab for AI and data science in Nanyang Technological University (NTU) last December, looking to “develop applications for use in the areas of public safety, smart urban solutions, transportation, healthcare and manufacturing.”

All this is part of a “national programme” of AI-related efforts, AI Singapore, set up by the National Research Foundation. Started in 2017, the government pledged to invest a total of S$150 million (around US$109 million) in the first five years to use AI in addressing major challenges, promoting the use of AI and machine learning, and advancing AI technologies. AI research out of Singapore is already the second most cited in the world after Switzerland, beating the number of cited studies coming out of Hong Kong and the US. 

Smart Nation risks

While new AI-based consumer tech companies with global scale have yet to emerge out of Singapore, the government’s investments have been paying off in terms of raising Singapore’s ‘Smart Nation’ profile.  

In a 2017 global smart city index compiled by Intel and Juniper Research, Singapore scores the top spot in all four of its categories: Mobility, Health, Safety and Productivity.

Ranking 20 cities, including London, New York, Tokyo and Seoul, the report points out that Singapore has implemented breakthrough ‘smart’ solutions to curb traffic issues, help with an ageing population, reduce the likelihood of crime, and use data in city-planning decisions.

The Smart Cities report also references Singapore’s surveillance technologies to detect criminal activity. For example, Singapore’s Ministry of Home Affairs partners with Japanese tech firm NEC to run trials in “picking out criminal suspects from a crowd” using AI alongside video surveillance. Meanwhile, all public buses in Singapore have been equipped with sensors that let the Land Transport Authority and bus operators monitor the vehicle’s location, arrival times and traffic accidents.

Buses in Singapore

But with so much data being collected privacy and security are also becoming concerns.

In the recent SingHealth case, hackers were said to get hold of non-medical personal particulars including name, NRIC number, address, gender, race and date of birth and outpatient medicine prescriptions. The sophisticated attack also targeted Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s medical data, which has led some experts to think that this was orchestrated by a foreign nation.

In a Facebook post, Lee acknowledged the risks of computerising medical records, and that despite the government’s “best efforts, it might be compromised”. However, he added, Singapore cannot revert to storing medical records “with paper and files”, and that the country has to move forward in building a “secure and smart nation”.

Editor: Nadine Freischlad

KrASIA Connection
KrASIA Connection
KrASIA Connection features translated and adapted high-quality insights published on 36Kr.com, the largest and most influential technology portal in Chinese language with over 150 million readers across the globe.
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