Resolution No.57: People should be put at centre of AI governance

Assessing the role of AI, Minister of Science and Technology Nguyen Manh Hung emphasised that it is an “intellectual infrastructure.” More than an applied technology, AI is increasingly becoming a form of national infrastructure, comparable to electricity, telecommunications or the Internet.

nguyen-manh-hung.jpg
Minister of Science and Technology Nguyen Manh Hung (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) - The Law on Artificial Intelligence (AI) recently adopted by the 15th National Assembly at its 10th session not only establishes a legal framework for the research, development and application of AI in Vietnam, but also clearly reflects the country’s choice of a proactive and responsible approach to technology governance.

Built on the principle of placing people at the centre, regarding ethics as the foundation and managing AI based on risk levels, the law seeks to strike a balance between promoting innovation and mitigating potential negative impacts on society. With mechanisms such as risk classification, labelling of AI-generated content, protection of children and vulnerable groups, and the integration of ethical requirements from the design stage, it is expected to become a key instrument for safeguarding human rights, strengthening digital trust and shaping the sustainable development of AI in Vietnam. This move also aims to realise the Politburo’s Resolution No.57 on breakthroughs in science and technology development, innovation, and digital transformation.

A step forward in AI development, application and governance

Assessing the role of AI, Minister of Science and Technology Nguyen Manh Hung emphasised that it is an “intellectual infrastructure.” More than an applied technology, AI is increasingly becoming a form of national infrastructure, comparable to electricity, telecommunications or the Internet. Whoever masters AI will gain a significant advantage in production and business, healthcare, education, national governance and even defence and security. Vietnam, he stressed, must develop its own AI infrastructure and is moving swiftly to build a national AI supercomputing centre and open AI data platforms.

Hung also stressed the importance of popularising AI, likening AI literacy to past nationwide efforts to eradicate illiteracy or promote foreign language learning. In the future, every Vietnamese citizen could have a personal AI assistant, significantly enhancing collective intelligence even as population growth stabilises. What was once available only to senior officials at high cost is now becoming accessible to ordinary citizens.

According to the minister, the adoption of the AI Law represents the first institutional step in the field. As a concise, framework-based law, it focuses on principles and governance while allowing flexibility in implementation. Rather than regulating AI models, which evolve rapidly as a result of innovation, the law governs AI applications, usage behaviours and associated risks, in line with international practice and without constraining creativity.

Tran Van Son, Deputy Director of the National Institute of Software and Digital Content Industry under the Ministry of Science and Technology, said the law marks a major advance in building a comprehensive legal corridor for AI. As AI continues to develop rapidly and exert wide-ranging socio-economic impacts, the law is designed not only to encourage innovation but also to proactively address ethical, social and legal risks.

A human-centred approach runs throughout the law, defining AI as a tool that serves people and remains under human control. This approach is reflected in three core pillars: institutionalising AI ethics, applying risk-based management, and establishing mechanisms to protect citizens’ legitimate rights and interests.

Protecting citizens, children and vulnerable groups

Protecting citizens, especially children and vulnerable groups, is a central priority of the AI Law. It requires mandatory labelling of AI-generated content in both human-readable and machine-readable formats, enhancing transparency and enabling early detection of misinformation, fraud and manipulation.

The law also strictly prohibits the use of AI to exploit the vulnerabilities of children or the elderly. AI products intended for children must meet higher safety standards, as defined in the forthcoming National AI Ethics Framework. To support implementation, the Ministry of Science and Technology is preparing technical infrastructure, unified labelling standards and tools to identify harmful AI content, helping schools and families better protect children in the digital environment./.

VNA

See more

An expert speaks at the International Conference on Semiconductors (ICOS) 2026 (Photo: VNA)

ICOS 2026 highlights pathways for Vietnam’s semiconductor development

This was the first international, specialised semiconductor conference held in central Vietnam and the first time the country hosted a large-scale academic forum dedicated exclusively to this sector. Organised in line with international standards, it featured plenary sessions, technical presentations and industry forums, reflecting major research trends shaping the semiconductor sector.

In Vietnam, 5G technology infrastructure has begun to be widely deployed by domestic network operators (Photo: VNA)

5G technology expansion expected to boost Vietnam’s digital economy

The Ministry of Science and Technology reported that by 2025, 5G had been commercialised nationwide, covering more than 90% of the population. Viettel alone has deployed 30,000 5G base stations, achieving 90% outdoor coverage and 70% indoor coverage, exceeding its commitments to the Government.

At a display of UAVs (Photo: VNA)

HCM City pilots UAVs for delivery services

HCM City aims to promote UAV use in urban delivery - a promising field contributing to smart logistics and postal services for e-commerce, smart cities and high-tech public services, while fostering UAVs as a strategic technology sector underpinning the innovation ecosystem.

Viettel's virtual assistant for searching administrative units helps shorten time and simplify searches for people. (Photo: Viettel)

Viettel’s virtual assistant among Top 10 technology products

The accolade recognises the mastery of core technologies by the Viettel Artificial Intelligence and Data Services Centre (Viettel AI), while reaffirming the group’s capacity to successfully deploy “Make in Vietnam” artificial intelligence solutions in international markets.

Workers are operating a robotic wafer conveyor assembly line in the semiconductor industry. (Illustrative image. Photo VNA)

Innovation – Driver for new development phase

The draft action programme of the Party Central Committee to implement the Resolution of the 14th National Party Congress identifies the shift to a new growth model, economic restructuring, and accelerated industrialisation and modernisation, with science, technology, innovation and digital transformation as the core engines, as key tasks.

Participants at the 5th ASEAN Digital Ministers Meeting (ADGMIN) in Thailand. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi to host 6th ASEAN Digital Ministers’ Meeting in January

Held annually on a rotating basis among ASEAN member states, the meeting plays a key role in shaping strategic orientations, formulating policies and promoting digital cooperation within ASEAN, while strengthening collaboration with partners and international organisations amid rapid digital and digital-economy transformation globally.

(Illustrative photo: Viettel)

Viettel records breakthrough in first 5G Advanced trial

The achievement, marked as Vietnam’s first 5G Advanced trial, was made possible by carrier aggregation (CA) technology, enabling mobile devices to operate across multiple frequency bands simultaneously instead of a single band.

A biotechnology laboratory of the International University at Vietnam National University-Ho Chi Minh City. (Photo: VNA)

Resolution 57: Role of intellectuals in advancing science and technology research

Prof. Dr. Tran Dai Lam, Director of the Institute of Materials Science at the Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology (VAST), emphasised that intellectuals should nurture national responsibility and ambition, be ready to take on challenges, evaluate research outcomes by international standards, and engage in collaboration across different sectors.

Professor Vu Minh Khuong, of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy (right), talks to a Vietnam News Agency correspondent in Singapore. (Photo: VNA)

Resolution 57 - catalyst for scientific and technological breakthroughs

The resolution also seeks to create stronger mechanisms to mobilise social and private resources and support an innovation ecosystem; link digital transformation in the public sector with the modernisation of national governance; and prioritise the development of elite human resources and internationally-standard research infrastructure.

Workers produce electronic components (Photo: VNA)

Science, technology drive Vietnam’s rising global profile: expert

Assoc. Prof. Le Duc Anh from Tokyo University held that for fast and sustainable development, Vietnam should prioritise science – technology and innovation as the main driver of productivity, focusing on sectors with high spillover effects such as semiconductors, AI, data, new energy and materials, biomedical technology, automation – robotics, and cybersecurity.