Korean and Chinese AI Reliability Experts Hold ‘TRAIN Symposium’
The national alliance “TRAIN”, established by the private sector to enhance the reliability of artificial intelligence (AI), announced on the 24th that it will host the “3rd TRAIN Symposium” at COEX in Seoul on November 1.
Experts in the field of AI reliability from Korea and China, including THINKFORBL, an AI reliability technology company operating TRAIN Korea, will participate in the event. The symposium is expected to serve as an opportunity to explore potential cooperation between the two countries and share their respective efforts in AI reliability policies, institutional frameworks, and standardization.
Speakers from Korea will include Eric Davis, Director of AI Technology Cooperation at SK Telecom; Kim Kyung-hoon, AI Safety Leader at Kakao; a policy representative from the Strategic Planning Division at LG AI Research Institute; Noh Young-bin, Head of the AI Governance Insight Team at NC; and Cho Il-kyung, Head of the Industrial AI Innovation Center at KTL.
From China, the presenters will include Gu Xiaodong, Professor of Computer Science at Shanghai Jiao Tong University; Li Li, Professor of Software Engineering at Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics; Xie Xiaofei, Professor of Computer Science at Singapore Business University; and Zhang Yan, General Director of the Digital Government Product Division at China Unicom.
Yao Baojing, Secretary-General of the Shanghai Software Industry Association (SSIA), and Xu Jing, Deputy Secretary-General, will also visit Korea to meet and exchange views with Korean industry representatives.
The first TRAIN Symposium was held in Pangyo, Gyeonggi Province, in February last year, followed by the second symposium in Bangkok, Thailand, in October of the same year.
A THINKFORBL official stated, “The symposium will include a close-up session focused on field application and mutual learning rather than simple subject presentations. It will bring together policymakers, academics, researchers, and industry professionals from both countries to connect regulations, standards, education, and industrial practices in one flow.”
https://www.meconomynews.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=120567
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