logo
Nvidia-backed startup CEO urges Japan to push Defense AI development

Nvidia-backed startup CEO urges Japan to push Defense AI development

The Mainichi24-05-2025

TOKYO (Kyodo) -- The top executive of a leading Japanese artificial intelligence startup said the Japanese government should focus more on the development of its own AI technology for defense applications in an increasingly deglobalized world.
David Ha, the chief executive of Sakana AI K.K., backed by investors such as U.S. chip giant Nvidia Corp., said his company sees growth potential in working with the Japanese government in the defense sector since the country's security environment is becoming severe with "many adversaries around its neighbors."
"Not many startups in Japan want to work in (the) defense side and (with) governments," Ha said at a recent press conference at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan.
It presents "an opportunity for our company to engage with the governments on developing defense-related solutions using AI," said the CEO at the Tokyo-based startup known as a unicorn -- an unlisted company valued at more than $1 billion.
Technology plays a key role in bolstering information technology infrastructure, and AI is a core part of such technology to make information systems and cyber security more secured and efficient, the former researcher at Google LLC said.
Since the United States has become more U.S.-centric, there is a potential for AI to become "a bargaining chip for other countries," if its services and models are so powerful, Ha said.
Japan's Defense Ministry has been exploring greater use of AI in the defense sector, outlining its basic policy last year on fields such as detection and identification of military targets, command and control, and logistic support.
But the policy stated there are limits to AI, particularly in situations without precedents, as AI learns from past data, and concerns over credibility and misuse remain as well.
Sakana AI, established by Ha and two other co-founders in 2023, was awarded in March at a competition for defense innovation co-sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense's Defense Innovation Unit and Japan's Acquisition, Technology and Logistics Agency, by presenting a system to predict pandemics and a system to detect AI-generated images.
The name "Sakana" means "fish" in Japanese. The company's logo reflects its concept of using collective intelligence made of many small intelligences for their AI development by drawing inspiration from nature, like how small fish form a huge group.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Japan telecom giant NTT Docomo to end own emoji after 26 yrs
Japan telecom giant NTT Docomo to end own emoji after 26 yrs

Kyodo News

timean hour ago

  • Kyodo News

Japan telecom giant NTT Docomo to end own emoji after 26 yrs

KYODO NEWS - 19 minutes ago - 10:40 | All, Japan Japanese telecom giant NTT Docomo Inc. will retire its set of original emoji whose release 26 years ago helped shape the visual language of today's digital communications. The carrier's Android smartphones and feature phones marketed from June will not come with the Docomo emoji set. Announcing the decision in late May, the firm said they had "fulfilled their role" while noting that Google's emoji had become more common globally. The new mobile phones will adopt Noto Color Emoji by Google or Samsung emoji instead, it said. The Docomo emoji were introduced in 1999 with the company's i-mode service, an Internet-capable mobile phone system that the company also plans to terminate, in 2026. Emoji became massively popular in Japan as an element of texting, especially among teenagers in the 2000s, with some creating emoji-only messages, before taking root globally. In 2016, NTT Docomo's set of 176 emoji was included in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, with the museum stating, "Filling in for body language, they reassert the human within the deeply impersonal, abstract space of electronic communication."

Japan, EU eye launch of 'competitive alliance' scheme to boost trade
Japan, EU eye launch of 'competitive alliance' scheme to boost trade

The Mainichi

time2 hours ago

  • The Mainichi

Japan, EU eye launch of 'competitive alliance' scheme to boost trade

BRUSSELS (Kyodo) -- Japan and the European Union are preparing to launch an "alliance" framework to beef up their companies' competitiveness by promoting trade and economic security cooperation, diplomatic sources said Saturday, facing concerns over U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs and Chinese trade practices. The creation of the "Japan-EU Competitiveness Alliance" is expected to be announced at a regular summit meeting being arranged for July, when Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba is likely to host European Council President Antonio Costa and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, they said. The move will further align both sides' efforts to uphold a rules-based economic order, building on cooperation through a free trade agreement that removes tariffs and other trade barriers between the two economies, which account for 20 percent of the world's gross domestic product. Under the framework, Japan and the EU will work together to diversify supply chains for rare earth minerals in the face of China's export restrictions on the elements crucial for the production of smartphones and other high-tech products, according to the sources. They will also align subsidy conditions for environmental technology such as electric vehicle and hydrogen production to promote fair competition for manufacturers and reduce development costs. On the trade front, the two sides will seek to promote reform of the World Trade Organization that is deemed dysfunctional, with the United States dissatisfied with the global body's response to addressing Chinese trade practices and other issues. They will also seek to collaborate with the "Global South" emerging and developing economies as partners sharing values of free and fair trade as well as the rule of law, the sources said. The EU is also eager to cooperate with a vast trans-Pacific free trade agreement involving Japan and 10 other nations, plus Britain that joined the accord in 2023. Some inside the bloc have called for joining efforts in rulemaking, as members of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership weigh better business environment for digital trade and climate change countermeasures.

Kyodo News Digest: June 8, 2025
Kyodo News Digest: June 8, 2025

Kyodo News

time3 hours ago

  • Kyodo News

Kyodo News Digest: June 8, 2025

KYODO NEWS - 7 minutes ago - 09:02 | All, Japan, World The following is the latest list of selected news summaries by Kyodo News. ---------- Japan, EU eye launch of "competitive alliance" scheme to boost trade BRUSSELS - Japan and the European Union are preparing to launch an "alliance" framework to beef up their companies' competitiveness by promoting trade and economic security cooperation, diplomatic sources said Saturday, facing concerns over U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs and Chinese trade practices. The creation of the "Japan-EU Competitiveness Alliance" is expected to be announced at a regular summit meeting being arranged for July, when Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba is likely to host European Council President Antonio Costa and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, they said. ---------- Japan opposition lawmaker says rice reserves mostly go to chickens TOKYO - A lawmaker of Japan's main opposition party said Saturday that government rice reserves recently put on sale are mostly consumed by chickens, doubling down on remarks that could be perceived as insensitive to people who have snapped up the old rice due to cheaper prices. Kazuhiro Haraguchi of the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan made the remarks at a gathering in southwestern Japan to shore up support ahead of the upper house election, even after Yuichiro Tamaki, leader of another opposition party, apologized a week ago for likening the stockpiles to "animal feed." ---------- Tennis: Oda, Kamiji win French Open wheelchair singles PARIS - Japan's Tokito Oda won his third consecutive French Open wheelchair tennis singles title Saturday, defeating Britain's Alfie Hewett 6-4, 7-6(6). Earlier in the day, Japanese compatriot Yui Kamiji claimed her fifth wheelchair singles title and first in five years with a 6-2, 6-2 victory over Aniek van Koot of the Netherlands. ---------- Japan, U.S. yet to find common ground on tariffs but want quick deal WASHINGTON - Japan and the United States have "yet to find common ground" on tariff issues, Tokyo's top negotiator said Friday, indicating that there remain many differences between the sides, but they still aim to clinch a win-win deal in mid-June. After holding talks with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick in Washington, Ryosei Akazawa told reporters that he believes "further progress" was made. ---------- Over half of rice producing firms feel store rice prices "too high" TOKYO - Over half of large-scale rice producers feel that store prices for rice are "too high," a recent survey conducted by an association of agricultural corporations showed, indicating that many of them share concerns with consumers about the elevated cost of the staple food in Japan. As households increasingly complain about rice prices that have doubled over the past year, more than 40 percent of respondents worried that consumers may start shunning the product. ---------- New South Korea President Lee to make diplomatic debut at G7 summit SEOUL - Newly elected South Korean President Lee Jae Myung has accepted an invitation to the upcoming Group of Seven summit taking place in Canada later this month, the presidential office said Saturday. Lee's attendance at the G7 meeting, to be held over three days from June 15 in Alberta, Canada, will mark his debut on the diplomatic stage. He took office on Wednesday following his victory in the country's 21st presidential election. Video: Parade at Hyakumangoku Festival in Ishikawa Prefecture

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store