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This Week in AsiaLifestyle & Culture

Why Vietnam’s landmark AI law is first major regulatory test for Southeast Asia

Southeast Asia’s first law on AI could raise the bar from voluntary guidelines to binding legal frameworks across the region, analysts say

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A girl checks her phone next to Communist Party and Vietnamese flags in Hanoi on February 27. Vietnam’s new artificial intelligence law went into effect on March 1. Photo: AFP
Sam Beltran
Vietnam’s new law regulating artificial intelligence could become Southeast Asia’s first real test of whether governments in the region are ready to move from voluntary guidelines to binding regulation, a shift analysts say could reshape how companies deploy AI across the region.

The legislation, which took effect on Sunday, introduces a risk-tiered model where AI providers – both local organisations and foreign entities with a presence in the country – must classify their systems as low, medium or high risk based on guidelines from the Ministry of Science and Technology.

Companies must also explicitly label AI-generated content such as deepfakes and disclose to customers whether they are interacting with an AI bot instead of a human agent.

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Vietnam’s National Assembly passed the law in December. The approach, which resembles the European Union’s AI Act, places a strong emphasis on accountability, transparency and safety.

The Southeast Asian nation joins a small cohort, including the EU and South Korea, that have enacted legislation for AI, even as countries around the world move to implement guidelines and regulations on generative AI use.

A Vietnamese shopkeeper uses her phone while waiting for customers at a grocery store in Hanoi on February 27. Photo: AFP
A Vietnamese shopkeeper uses her phone while waiting for customers at a grocery store in Hanoi on February 27. Photo: AFP

The law “paves the way for Vietnam to deeply integrate with international standards while maintaining digital sovereignty”, the government said in a December report.

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