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Saturday, March 8, 2025

Malaysia’s AI chip leap, Shot in the Arm for chip sector

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia is heading for a fundamental shift in semiconductors and technology with a move to produce AI chips locally, says the Prime Minister.

Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim described the partnership deal inked yesterday with UK-based Arm Limited as the start of a second semiconductor wave.

“Through a comprehensive partnership with Arm, we have conceived one of the most ambitious technological plans Malaysia has ever seen – to pioneer Made by Malaysia AI chips.

“These chips will be designed, manufactured, tested and assembled here, and sold to the rest of the world,” he said in his keynote address at the launching ceremony of strategic collaborations in the semiconductor industry here.

The partnership has three key features, which includes establishing comprehensive training programmes for 10,000 IC design engineers to create a robust talent pipeline for local semiconductor industries. 

“All relevant agencies in the public and private sectors, education institutions and universities must focus and start this programme immediately,” Anwar said. 

Looking to the future: Anwar posing together with (from left) Chief Secretary to the Government Tan Sri Shamsul Azri Abu Bakar, Investment, Trade and Industry Minister Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Abdul Aziz, Rafizi, Arm chief executive officer Rene Haas, Arm executive vice-president and chief commercial officer Will Abbey and Arm North America sales vice-president CK Tseng at the launch of Malaysia’s silicon vision strategic collaboration in semiconductor industry in Kuala Lumpur. — FAIHAN GHANI/The StarLooking to the future: Anwar posing together with (from left) Chief Secretary to the Government Tan Sri Shamsul Azri Abu Bakar, Investment, Trade and Industry Minister Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Abdul Aziz, Rafizi, Arm chief executive officer Rene Haas, Arm executive vice-president and chief commercial officer Will Abbey and Arm North America sales vice-president CK Tseng at the launch of Malaysia’s silicon vision strategic collaboration in semiconductor industry in Kuala Lumpur. — FAIHAN GHANI/The Star

Selected Malaysian companies will also have access to Arm’s technology and intellectual property (IP) portfolio. 

“The partnership will also facilitate the development of locally designed semiconductor products, advancing the nation’s goal of producing more advanced chips in Malaysia,” he said. 

The Prime Minister said Arm will also set up its first Asean office in Kuala Lumpur, with the aim of expanding outreach to the Asean, Australia and New Zealand markets. 

Anwar acknowledged the cross-ministerial efforts by the Investment, Trade and Industry Ministry, Malaysian Investment Development Authority (Mida), and the Finance and Economy ministries for working to make the partnership a reality. 

“Together, these ministries have worked diligently to secure Malaysia’s position as a semiconductor leader. 

“I am confident that we will create economic multipliers that are not confined by the beautiful shores of Malaysia,” he remarked. 

The landmark MOU and contract with Arm seeks to establish an ecosystem-wide partnership on semiconductors.

The projected ecosystem impact of a complete Arm Compute Subsystem lifecycle is approximately RM133bil. 

Economic spillovers are expected in innovation, job creation, wage growth, exports and investment.

Earlier, Economy Minister Datuk Seri Rafizi Ramli told Bloomberg Television that the 10-year agreement aimed to push Malaysia beyond its traditional role in chip assembly and testing, enabling local companies to design and develop their own semiconductors to compete in the global market.

Meanwhile, the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) said Anwar would be chairing special state development meetings with key state government leaders and agencies.

Anwar’s senior press secretary Tunku Nashrul Abaidah said the Prime Minister had made it clear that the agenda to eradicate hardcore poverty remains his top priority.

“Since this agenda was announced in Budget 2023, he has mobilised all political secretaries to the states to ensure that efforts and assistance are systematically delivered to hardcore poor groups.

“These efforts include increasing the income of targeted groups, providing job opportunities, improving access to education, healthcare and housing, as well as enhancing the living standards and well-being of impoverished households.

“As of Dec 31 last year, Putrajaya, Negri Sembilan, Melaka and Perlis have successfully achieved zero hardcore poverty, and this success will be extended to the other states,” Tunku Nashrul said during the daily PMO briefing yesterday.

Anwar: Jobs, innovation and growth expected with latest shift




KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s deal with SoftBank Group Corp-owned British firm Arm Holdings PLC is seen as a strategic move to propel the country up the semiconductor value chain and foster an intellectual property (IP)-based ecosystem, industry experts say.

Rakuten Trade head of equity sales Vincent Lau said the Bursa Technology Index is expected to gain some support from this development with Arm and provide a cushion for the sector amid broader market uncertainties.

The local technology sector has been under pressure, with the technology index down by about 25% year-to-date.

“The collaboration is an ambitious yet positive first step to move up the value chain. It also adds to the ongoing momentum in the technology sector beyond just the data centre theme.

“While market volatility persists, this initiative could provide some stability.

“There are also signs that the technology sector is approaching a bottom, with some stocks having dropped to levels seen during the Covid-19 pandemic period,” he told StarBiz.

Yesterday, Malaysia inked a memorandum of understanding and contract with Arm to establish an ecosystem-wide partnership on semiconductors.

This first-of-its-kind collaboration grants Malaysia access to Arm’s high-performance, power-efficient compute platform, Arm Compute Subsystem (CSS), the flexible licensing programme, Arm Flexible Access, among others.

As part of the deal, Arm will also train 10,000 semiconductor talents.

At the heart of this initiative is the government’s vision to build Malaysia’s first artificial intelligence chips in advanced industries, using a local-first approach at every part of the supply chain.

Further, Arm is also planning to set up an office in Malaysia in support of the government’s mission, which aims to expand outreach to Asean and Australia and New Zealand markets.

Economy Minister Datuk Seri Rafizi Ramli said this collaboration represents a shift from the traditional approach of relying on grants and tax exemptions to attract foreign direct investment into Malaysia’s semiconductor industry.

“For decades, Malaysia has built a robust semiconductor sector by attracting multinational corporations to set up their operations here.

“However, much of this has been focused on back-end processes such as assembly and testing, which account for only 15% to 20% of the total value chain.

“The bulk of the value – around 60% – lies in front-end activities such as chip design,” he said during the panel session, “AI Leadership: The Power of IP Transfer in Malaysia”, at the Strategic Collaboration in Semiconductor Industry yesterday.

Rafizi added that the traditional approach has helped Malaysia become a manufacturing hub.

However, advancing to the next level, one driven by IP and high-value investments, poses significant challenges.

“Relying on local companies to organically develop research and development and IP capabilities would be costly and time-consuming.

“Instead of offering conventional tax breaks and capital subsidies, Malaysia is now using IP as an incentive,” he said.

Malaysia will be spending US$250mil over a decade to acquire Arm’s chip design plans for local manufacturers.

The projected ecosystem impact of one complete Arm CSS lifecycle is about US$30bil.

“I want to see a Malaysian-designed chip enter the global market within the next five to seven years,” Rafizi said.

Malaysia Semiconductor Industry Association President Datuk Seri Wong Siew Hai also applauded the government’s plan, which is in support of the National Semiconductor Strategy launched last year.

Wong said the key challenge moving forward is the plan’s execution and talent. He noted that while the country has talents, there are still gaps in expertise that need to be addressed.

“To bridge this gap, we must bring in foreign expertise, and if Arm can help Malaysia in that aspect, that is good.

“Alongside talent development, market demand is another key factor.

“Do we have customers for locally designed chips?” he asked.

Meanwhile, QES Group Bhd managing director and president Chew Ne Weng said while the tie-up with Arm will give Malaysia a push towards a higher value chain, the only concern will be regarding the talent pipeline and the stability of energy and water resources if wafer fab foreign direct investment were to come in a big way.

“These are the gaps that the government needs to address quickly. It will not be an easy feat for companies to tape-out (the final design stage before chip manufacturing).

“However, it is achievable by leveraging the expertise of existing integrated circuit design firms and foreign-owned companies.

“A longer runway could be necessary but we need to start somewhere,” he said.

Arm partnership set to reshape technology sector
Technology 16h ago

Arm partnership set to reshape technology sector




Wong (left) presenting a token of appreciation to Chow (right) as Ahmad Fuzi looks on. — LIM BENG TATT/ The Star

Harmful deepfakes on the rise

 

Google’s ai being used to create illegal material, aussie authories told



SYDNEY: Google has informed Australian authorities that it received more than 250 complaints globally over nearly a year that its artificial intelligence (AI) software was used to make deepfake terrorism material.

The Alphabet-owned tech giant also said it had received dozens of user reports warning that its AI programme, Gemini, was being used to create child abuse material, according to the Australian esafety Commission.

Under Australian law, tech firms must supply the commission periodically with information about harm minimisation efforts or risk fines.

The reporting covered April 2023 to February 2024.

Since Openai’s CHATGPT exploded into the public consciousness in late 2022, regulators around the world have called for better guardrails so that AI can’t be used to enable terrorism, fraud, deepfake pornography and other abuse.

The Australian esafety Commission called Google’s disclosure “world-first insight” into how users may be exploiting the technology to produce harmful and illegal content.

“This underscores how critical it is for companies developing AI products to build in and test the efficacy of safeguards to prevent this type of material from being generated,” esafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said.

In its report, Google said it received 258 user reports about suspected Ai-generated deepfake terrorist or violent extremist content made using Gemini, and another 86 user reports alleging Ai-generated child exploitation or abuse material.

It did not say how many of the complaints it verified.

A Google spokesperson said it did not allow the generation or distribution of content related to facilitating violent extremism or terror, child exploitation or abuse, or other illegal activities.

“We are committed to expanding on our efforts to help keep Australians safe online,” the spokesperson said by email.

“The number of Gemini user reports we provided to esafety represent the total global volume of user reports, not confirmed policy violations.”

Google used hatch-matching – a system of automatically matching newly-uploaded images with already-known images – to identify and remove child abuse material made with Gemini.

But it did not use the same system to weed out terrorist or violent extremist material generated with Gemini, the regulator added.

The regulator has fined Telegram and X, for what it called shortcomings in their reports.

X has lost one appeal about its fine of A$610,500 (Rm1.71bil) but plans to appeal again.

Telegram also plans to challenge its fine.- , Reuter

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Beware of AI-driven crimes





OWNERS TO PAY FOR TENANTS' CRIMES, Beware who you rent to, Police to hold owners, JMBs, and security firms accountable for scam centres

 

Suspicious individuals: Comm Ramli showing the suspects from the raids on three call centres during a press conference at CCID headquaters in Kuala Lumpur. — AZHAR MAHFOF/The Star

KUALA LUMPUR: Property owners can no longer collect a big, fat deposit and rent in advance, and then sit back and enjoy the money without bothering about their property.

They will now be held responsible for any crime committed at their premises, say police.

Joint management bodies (JMB) of high rise residences and security companies can also be charged in court should they fail to report any suspicious or criminal activity at property under their care.

“These people can no longer claim ignorance when crimes occur at these premises,” Commercial Crime Investigation Department (CCID) director Comm Datuk Seri Ramli Mohamed Yoosuf said.

“Some security companies, owners and JMBs know about criminal activities including the existence of scam call centres. But they feign ignorance.

“It is quite alarming that scam syndicates now prefer to set up call centres at condominium units, especially the luxury ones,” he told a press conference at CCID headquarters yesterday.

Comm Ramli said investigations into call centres will no longer be focused solely on criminals but also the owners, JMB and security companies.

“We will propose that all three parties be charged under Section 120(B) of the Penal Code for criminal conspiracy.”

Scam syndicates often pay rent for up to a year in advance or even buy residential units in cash, he said.

“Owners are just happy to get such a big payment, but they must also be responsible for all activity at their premises or buildings,” he said.

He was commenting on the matter following recent raids at three condominiums here which had been used as scam calls centres.

“I urge all parties, especially owners of premises, to conduct KYC (know your customer) before allowing anyone to rent or buy such premises.

“It is their owners’ responsibility to ensure no criminal activity occurs at these premises,” he said.

On the raids, Comm Ramli said 11 Chinese nationals were detained at the three condominiums along Jalan Tun Razak on Feb 26.

“In the first case, three men and a woman were detained while various items, including laptops and mobile phones, were seized.

“The syndicate had a lucky draw scheme targeting Chinese nationals and using QR codes. They had been operating for about two months,” he said.

In the second raid, two men aged 31 and 40 were detained for running a scam targeting online gamers, Comm Ramli said.

“They targeted victims from China and Singapore and used Telegram to advertise their bogus online games.

“Victims had to make payments in US dollars before they could register. However, they could not access the games after payments were made,” he said.

In the third raid, five men aged between 33 and 35 were held.

One of them was the supervisor while the four others were customer service officers.

Investigations showed the syndicate was running an investment scam, targeting Chinese nationals using the  “mycaifuhao.eastmoney.com” platform, he said.

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Bukit Aman to hold owners, JMBs, and security firms accountable for scam centres



KUALA LUMPUR: Bukit Aman is taking a firm stance against scam call centres by pushing for property owners, joint management bodies (JMBs), and security companies to be held liable if such activities are found on their premises.

Bukit Aman Commercial Crime Investigation Department (CCID) director Comm Datuk Seri Ramli Mohamed Yoosuf said these entities could no longer claim ignorance if illegal activities take place in their rented buildings or units.

“We received intelligence that some security companies, owners, and JMBs were aware of criminal or suspicious activities happening on their premises,” he told a press conference at CCID headquarters on Wednesday (March 5).

He said it was alarming that scam syndicates often chose luxury condominium units as their operational bases.

Investigations will no longer focus solely on the scammers themselves but also on the property owners, JMBs, and security companies that allow such illegal activities to take place.

“We will not hesitate to propose charges against these entities under Section 120(B) of the Penal Code for criminal conspiracy,” he said, adding that prosecution could be based on statements recorded during investigations.

His comments followed three recent raids on condominium units in Kuala Lumpur that were being used as scam call centres.

Ramli urged property owners to conduct proper background checks before renting out their units to avoid being implicated.

"I urge all parties, especially owners of premises, to conduct KYC (know your customer) before allowing anyone to rent or use such premises.

“Excuses such as not realising criminal activity was happening will no longer be accepted. As owners, it is their responsibility to ensure no such activities occur,” he said.

He added that scam syndicates often paid lump sums for up to a year’s rent or even bought residential units in cash, making it even more crucial for owners to verify the nature of their tenants’ activities.

“Owners might be happy receiving such large payments, but they must also ensure they know what their premises are being used for,” he said.

On February 26, police conducted raids on three condominiums along Jalan Tun Razak and detained 11 Chinese nationals suspected of operating scam call centres.

In the first raid, three men and a woman from China were arrested for running a lucky draw scam targeting Chinese nationals. Police seized four laptops and six mobile phones. The syndicate had been operating for about two months.

In the second raid, two Chinese men aged 31 and 40 were detained for operating a scam targeting online gamers from China and Singapore. The suspects used Telegram to promote bogus online games, requiring victims to make payments in US dollars before registering. However, victims were unable to access the games even after making payments.

The third raid saw five Chinese men, aged between 33 and 35, arrested for running an investment scam. One of them was identified as the supervisor, while the other four acted as customer service officers. Police seized four computers, six mobile phones, and a laptop.

Investigations revealed that the syndicate had been operating from the condominium for a year, using the “mycaifuhao.eastmoney.com” platform to lure victims. Those interested were given a link and ID through the Mosgram application and joined a live investment class.

Ramli said the case is being investigated under Section 420/120(B) of the Penal Code and the Immigration Act.

With scam call centres becoming increasingly sophisticated, authorities are stepping up efforts to ensure that those facilitating these illegal operations—whether intentionally or through negligence—are held accountable.

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