Tuesday, July 22

But despite some investments, development has been slow in Indonesia compared to other parts of the region.

Nvidia was involved with Indonesia’s biggest tech company GoTo Gojek Tokopedia for a large language model service last year, and supplied its chips to the telecommunications company Indosat.

Microsoft also said last year it would invest US$1.7 billion over the next few years into expanding cloud services and AI in Indonesia.

“We’re opening up to all global tech companies to get into the industry of AI development in Indonesia,” Nezar said.

Separately, Indonesia is also pitching foreign firms on its critical minerals, which are needed for hardware development, in order to secure a bigger share of the global semiconductor supply chain, he added.

Indonesia has offered the United States the chance to jointly invest in a critical minerals project as part of its tariff negotiations. Washington has sought to find alternative suppliers to China, which dominates the sector but in April added some rare earths to its export restriction list in retaliation for US tariffs.

Damar Juniarto, an analyst from research centre PIKAT Demokrasi, which monitors AI safety in Indonesia, said the country was not ready to be an AI developer owing to a lack of infrastructure such as chips, and a lack of AI skills in the workforce.

Nezar said there remained risks of misinformation, intellectual property and data leaks. He did not detail how the roadmap would address those issues. 

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/indonesia-ai-roadmap-foreign-investment-5251421

Share.

Leave A Reply

four × one =

Exit mobile version