Synapse - Africa’s 4IR Trade & Innovation Magazine - 1st Quarter 2021 Issue 11

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INDUSTRY

WEF LAUNCHES GLOBAL AI ACTION ALLIANCE TO ACCELERATE ADOPTION OF TRANSPARENT, INCLUSIVE AI In a bid to harness the transformative potential of artificial intelligence (AI) by accelerating the adoption of trusted, transparent and inclusive AI systems globally, the World Economic Forum (WEF) in January launched the Global AI Action Alliance.

T

he alliance is a multi-stakeholder collaboration platform and project incubator designed to accelerate the adoption of inclusive, trusted and transparent artificial intelligence (AI) globally and across industry sectors. The project brings together more than 100 leading companies, governments, international organisations, non-profits and academics united in their commitment to maximising the societal benefits of AI. The WEF said the alliance builds on over three years of successful efforts to create interoperable governance protocols for the development and use of AI technologies. The Forum added that the alliance will collaborate closely with the Forum’s Industry Action Groups and its Data for Common Purpose Initiative (DCPI) to ensure that AI governance reflects best practices in data governance and is interoperable globally and across industry sectors. The Global AI Action Alliance is overseen by a steering committee comprised of top global leaders from industry, government, academia and civil society co-chaired by IBM CEO and chairman Arvind Krishna, and Patrick J.McGovern Foundation president Vilas Dhar.

The initiative is also supported by a grant from the Patrick J.McGovern Foundation. The WEF said members of the alliance will work together to identify and implement the most promising tools for ensuring that AI systems are ethical and serve all of society, including groups historically underserved by AI. The platform will enable alliance members to participate in real-time learning, pilot new approaches to ethical AI, scale adoption of best practices, and undertake collective action to ensure that AI’s benefits are shared by all. How it’ll work The WEF said participating organisations support the alliance through an institutional commitment to its mission as well as active participation in one or more working groups. These member-driven communities

of action focus on priority governance topics, collaborating in real-time to: 1. Aggregate the most relevant tools and practices for addressing key governance challenges 2. Accelerate their adoption at scale across priority sectors and geographies 3. Drive real-time learning and rapid scaling of proven tools and approaches 4. Catalyse collective action to address key governance gaps and create global interoperability Participating organisations join the alliance by committing to its mission institutionally and participating actively in its global efforts. Members will designate one or more executives to contribute actively to the alliance’s Working Groups on behalf of their organisation and in line with their institutional priorities. Global AI Action Alliance members will lead in developing and delivering the activities of a Working Group, collaborating with its co-champions to set the agenda and drive real-time learning and action. The alliance’s members will nominate a qualified individual to provide on secondment to the World Economic Forum’s AI team, where they play an integral role in building the alliance and driving action. ai

1ST QUARTER 2021 | SYNAPSE

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WEBB FONTAINE TO OPEN AI R&D CENTRE IN AFRICA

1min
page 49

ALTRON BECOMES SA’S FIRST NPN COMPUTE DGX PARTNER

1min
page 49

Synthesis to open local office in Mauritius

1min
page 57

How much are SA mines investing annually in digital technologies?

4min
pages 54-55

Need for legal & regulator frameworks for AI governance in Africa: UNESCO

2min
page 56

AI tool developed to identify informal settlements

2min
page 53

InstaDeep, BioNTech partner to develop novel immunotherapies

2min
page 50

Africa could benefit $2-billion per year from Earth Observation

2min
page 52

WEF launches Global AI Action Alliance

2min
page 51

Introducing MLCommons

4min
pages 46-47

AfyaRekod, IndygeneUS partner on health data platform

1min
page 48

Servicetrace to train 100 Kenyan developers in RPA

1min
page 44

Bantu language spellchecker, Android keyboard launched

1min
page 45

ITU launches open research group on autonomous networks

2min
page 43

Wits, York University launch Africa-Canada AI & Public Health Data Consortium

3min
pages 36-37

IBM launches Digital4Agriculture initiative

4min
pages 40, 42

2020 Space-tech Innovation Challenge Winners

2min
page 38

Wits could spawn the next tech giant. New VC explains how

6min
pages 31-32

Kenya’s AICE to train 1000 AI engineers in 3 years

4min
pages 33-34

Envisionit Deep AI scoops two categories at AppsAfrica awards

1min
page 21

How AI is taking on locust swarms in East Africa

3min
pages 28, 30

Lacuna Fund invests in African agricultural datasets for AI

8min
pages 16-18

African projects selected for $10-million data.org challenge

3min
page 12

The Baobab Network joins The Deal Room

2min
page 6

3.2% increase in funding raised by African AI/IoT startups

1min
page 14

UP launches Engineering 4.0 facility

4min
pages 19, 24

Ghana’s OZÉ raises $700k seed round

1min
page 13

Gro Intelligence raises $85-million Series B round

2min
page 8

SA’s Aerobotics raises $17-million to scale AI for agriculture

1min
page 10
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