Search Results
Results found for empty search
- AI as a Juristic Entity | Glossary of Terms | Indic Pacific | IPLR
AI as a Juristic Entity Explainers The Complete Glossary AI as a Juristic Entity Date of Addition 26 Apr 2024 It means Artificial Intelligence may be recognised in a specific context, space, or any other frame of reference, such as time, through the legal and administrative machineries of a legitimate government. This idea was proposed in the 2020 Handbook on AI and International Law (2021). Even in the Section 2 (13) (g) of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, the definition of "every artificial juristic person" is available, which means providing specific juristic recognition to artificial intelligence in a personalised sense. Related Long-form Insights on IndoPacific.App Artificial Intelligence Governance using Complex Adaptivity: Feedback Report, First Edition, 2024 Learn More Legal Strategies for Open Source Artificial Intelligence Practices, IPLR-IG-004 Learn More Ethical AI Implementation and Integration in Digital Public Infrastructure, IPLR-IG-005 Learn More Reimaging and Restructuring MeiTY for India [IPLR-IG-007] Learn More Previous Term Next Term terms of use This glossary of terms is provided as a free resource for educational and informational purposes only. By using this glossary developed by Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP (referred to as 'The Firm'), you agree to the following terms of use: You may use the glossary for personal and non-commercial purposes only. If you use any content from the glossary of terms on this website in your own work, you must properly attribute the source. This means including a link to this website and citing the title of the glossary. Here is a sample format to cite this glossary (we have used the OSCOLA citation format as an example): Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP, 'TechinData.in Explainers' (Indic Pacific Legal Research , 2023) You are not authorised to reproduce, distribute, or modify the glossary without the express written permission of a representative of Indic Pacific Legal Research. The Firm makes no representations or warranties about the accuracy or completeness of the glossary. The glossary is provided on an "as is" basis and the Firm disclaims all liability for any errors or omissions in the glossary. You agree to indemnify and hold the Firm harmless from any claims or damages arising out of your use of the glossary. If you have any questions or concerns about these terms of use, please contact us at global@indicpacific.com
- Data as Noise | Glossary of Terms | Indic Pacific | IPLR
Data as Noise Explainers The Complete Glossary Data as Noise Date of Addition 22 Mar 2025 The concept that data sets contain unwanted, meaningless information (noise) that can interfere with model training and analysis. Noise can manifest as random variations, misclassifications, uncontrolled variables, or superfluous information unrelated to the target phenomenon. Almost all real-world data sets contain some degree of noise, which can adversely affect the results of data mining analysis and unnecessarily increase storage requirements. Types of noise include random noise (extra information with no correlation to underlying data), misclassified data (incorrectly labeled information), uncontrolled variables (unaccounted factors affecting the data), and superfluous data (completely unrelated information). Techniques for addressing noisy data include filtering (removing unwanted data), data binning (sorting data into categories to reduce variance), and linear regression (determining correlations between variables). Machine learning algorithms can be particularly susceptible to noise, potentially leading to "garbage in, garbage out" scenarios if data quality is poor. Related Long-form Insights on IndoPacific.App Averting Framework Fatigue in AI Governance [IPLR-IG-013] Learn More NIST Adversarial Machine Learning Taxonomies: Decoded, IPLR-IG-016 Learn More AI Bias & the Overlap of AI Diplomacy and Governance Ethics Dilemmas Learn More Previous Term Next Term terms of use This glossary of terms is provided as a free resource for educational and informational purposes only. By using this glossary developed by Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP (referred to as 'The Firm'), you agree to the following terms of use: You may use the glossary for personal and non-commercial purposes only. If you use any content from the glossary of terms on this website in your own work, you must properly attribute the source. This means including a link to this website and citing the title of the glossary. Here is a sample format to cite this glossary (we have used the OSCOLA citation format as an example): Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP, 'TechinData.in Explainers' (Indic Pacific Legal Research , 2023) You are not authorised to reproduce, distribute, or modify the glossary without the express written permission of a representative of Indic Pacific Legal Research. The Firm makes no representations or warranties about the accuracy or completeness of the glossary. The glossary is provided on an "as is" basis and the Firm disclaims all liability for any errors or omissions in the glossary. You agree to indemnify and hold the Firm harmless from any claims or damages arising out of your use of the glossary. If you have any questions or concerns about these terms of use, please contact us at global@indicpacific.com
- Global Legalism, Volume 1 | Indic Pacific | IPLR
Liked our Work? Search it now on IndoPacific.App Get Searching Our Research Know more about our Knowledge Base, years of accumulated and developed in-house research at Indic Pacific Legal Research. Search our Research Treasure on IndoPacific.App. :) Global Legalism, Volume 1 Get this Publication 2020 ISBN 978-93-5396-497-9 Author(s) Carolina Rodrigues Madeira da Costa, Christina Velentza, Diogo Luiz Chagas Santos, Hemant Prasad, Ishita Thakur, Keertana Venkatesh, Mini Saxena, Nandini Agarwal, Nikhil Dongol, Nivedita Raju, Petra Gumplova, Sangeet Khurana, Sulekha Agarwal, Trushita Srivastava, Vivian Rodrigues Madeira da Costa, Yifang Ye Editor(s) Abhivardhan, Arushi Alka Bajpai, Bulbul Khaitan, Dr Koagne Zouapet Apollin, Luisa Fernanda Cañas Arandia, Nivedita S, Ritu Agarwal, Sara Arafa, Shobhitabh Srivastava, Udomo Ali IndoPacific.App Identifier (ID) GLA1 Tags Comparative Law., Environmental law, Human Rights, India, International Law, International Organizations, International Trade, Investment Law, South Asia Related Terms in Techindata.in Explainers Definitions - A - E CEI Classification Class-of-Applications-by-Class-of-Application (CbC) approach Definitions - F - J GAE Indo-Pacific International Algorithmic Law Definitions - K - P Multi-alignment Multipolar World Multipolarity Permeable Indigeneity in Policy (PIP) Phenomena-based concept classification Definitions - Q - U Strategic Autonomy Strategic Hedging Technophobia Definitions - V - Z WANA WENA Whole-of-Government Response Related Articles in Techindata.in Insights 4 Insight(s) on Government Affairs 1 Insight(s) on India-US Relations 1 Insight(s) on governance 1 Insight(s) on Indic Pacific 1 Insight(s) on India 1 Insight(s) on strategic sectors . Previous Item Next Item
- [AIACT.IN V5] Draft Artificial Intelligence (Development & Regulation) Act, 2023, Version 5 | Indic Pacific | IPLR
Liked our Work? Search it now on IndoPacific.App Get Searching Our Research Know more about our Knowledge Base, years of accumulated and developed in-house research at Indic Pacific Legal Research. Search our Research Treasure on IndoPacific.App. :) [AIACT.IN V5] Draft Artificial Intelligence (Development & Regulation) Act, 2023, Version 5 Get this Publication 2025 ISBN Not Applicable Author(s) Abhivardhan Editor(s) Not Applicable IndoPacific.App Identifier (ID) AIACT5 Tags Abhivardhan, Accountability, AI applications, AI Development, AI Education, AI Ethics, AI Future, AI governance, AI Impact, AI Industry, AI Innovations, AI literacy, AI regulation, AI Research, AI Resources, AI Solutions, AI Technology, AI Tools, AI Training, AI Trends, aiact.in, AIACT.IN V4, Artificial Intelligence, Compliance, content provenance, Data ethics, Employment, ethics code, Governance, high-risk AI, India, Indic Pacific, Legal Framework, Machine Learning, National Ethics Code, penalties, risk classification, Strategic Sectors, Transparency, Version 5.0, watermarking Related Terms in Techindata.in Explainers Definitions - A - E AI as a Concept AI as an Object AI as a Subject AI as a Third Party Accountability Deepfakes Definitions - F - J General intelligence applications with multiple short-run or unclear use cases as per industrial and regulatory standards (GI2) General intelligence applications with multiple stable use cases as per relevant industrial and regulatory standards (GI1) Generative AI applications with one standalone use case (GAI1) Intended Purpose / Specified Purpose Definitions - K - P Manifest Availability Multivariant, Fungible & Disruptive Use Cases & Test Cases of Generative AI Parameters Privacy by Default Privacy by Design Proprietary Information Definitions - Q - U SOTP Classification Technology Transfer Transformer Model Definitions - V - Z Whole-of-Government Response Related Articles in Techindata.in Insights 34 Insight(s) on AI Ethics 8 Insight(s) on AI Governance 8 Insight(s) on AI regulation 7 Insight(s) on AI literacy 3 Insight(s) on Abhivardhan 3 Insight(s) on AIACT.in . Previous Item Next Item
- Artificial Intelligence Hype Cycle | Glossary of Terms | Indic Pacific | IPLR
Artificial Intelligence Hype Cycle Explainers The Complete Glossary Artificial Intelligence Hype Cycle Date of Addition 26 Apr 2024 An Artificial Intelligence hype cycle is perpetuated to influence or generate market perception in a real-time scenario such that a class of Artificial Intelligence technology as a product / service is used in a participatory or preparatory sense to influence or generate the hype cycle. This definition was proposed in Deciphering Artificial Intelligence Hype and its Legal-Economic Risks, VLiGTA-TR-001 (2022). Related Long-form Insights on IndoPacific.App Deciphering Artificial Intelligence Hype and its Legal-Economic Risks [VLiGTA-TR-001] Learn More Artificial Intelligence Governance using Complex Adaptivity: Feedback Report, First Edition, 2024 Learn More Legal Strategies for Open Source Artificial Intelligence Practices, IPLR-IG-004 Learn More Ethical AI Implementation and Integration in Digital Public Infrastructure, IPLR-IG-005 Learn More Reimaging and Restructuring MeiTY for India [IPLR-IG-007] Learn More Legal-Economic Issues in Indian AI Compute and Infrastructure, IPLR-IG-011 Learn More Normative Emergence in Cyber Geographies: International Algorithmic Law in a Multipolar Technological Order, First Edition Learn More Previous Term Next Term terms of use This glossary of terms is provided as a free resource for educational and informational purposes only. By using this glossary developed by Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP (referred to as 'The Firm'), you agree to the following terms of use: You may use the glossary for personal and non-commercial purposes only. If you use any content from the glossary of terms on this website in your own work, you must properly attribute the source. This means including a link to this website and citing the title of the glossary. Here is a sample format to cite this glossary (we have used the OSCOLA citation format as an example): Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP, 'TechinData.in Explainers' (Indic Pacific Legal Research , 2023) You are not authorised to reproduce, distribute, or modify the glossary without the express written permission of a representative of Indic Pacific Legal Research. The Firm makes no representations or warranties about the accuracy or completeness of the glossary. The glossary is provided on an "as is" basis and the Firm disclaims all liability for any errors or omissions in the glossary. You agree to indemnify and hold the Firm harmless from any claims or damages arising out of your use of the glossary. If you have any questions or concerns about these terms of use, please contact us at global@indicpacific.com
- AI-based Anthropomorphization | Glossary of Terms | Indic Pacific | IPLR
AI-based Anthropomorphization Explainers The Complete Glossary AI-based Anthropomorphization Date of Addition 26 Apr 2024 AI-based anthropomorphization is the process of giving AI systems human-like qualities or characteristics. This can be done in a variety of ways, such as giving the AI system a human-like name, appearance, or personality. It can also be done by giving the AI system the ability to communicate in a human-like way, or by giving it the ability to understand and respond to human emotions. This idea was discussed in the 2020 Handbook on AI and International Law (2021), Deciphering Artificial Intelligence Hype and its Legal-Economic Risks, VLiGTA-TR-001 (2022), Deciphering Regulative Methods for Generative AI, VLiGTA-TR-002 (2023) and Promoting Economy of Innovation through Explainable AI, VLiGTA-TR-003 (2023). Related Long-form Insights on IndoPacific.App Regulatory Sovereignty in India: Indigenizing Competition-Technology Approaches [ISAIL-TR-001] Learn More Deciphering Artificial Intelligence Hype and its Legal-Economic Risks [VLiGTA-TR-001] Learn More Artificial Intelligence Governance using Complex Adaptivity: Feedback Report, First Edition, 2024 Learn More Legal Strategies for Open Source Artificial Intelligence Practices, IPLR-IG-004 Learn More Ethical AI Implementation and Integration in Digital Public Infrastructure, IPLR-IG-005 Learn More Reimaging and Restructuring MeiTY for India [IPLR-IG-007] Learn More Artificial Intelligence and Policy in India, Volume 5 [AIPI-V5] Learn More Legal-Economic Issues in Indian AI Compute and Infrastructure, IPLR-IG-011 Learn More Decoding the AI Competency Triad for Public Officials [IPLR-IG-014] Learn More The Global AI Inventorship Handbook, First Edition [RHB-AI-INVENT-001-2025] Learn More Artificial Intelligence, Market Power and India in a Multipolar World Learn More Previous Term Next Term terms of use This glossary of terms is provided as a free resource for educational and informational purposes only. By using this glossary developed by Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP (referred to as 'The Firm'), you agree to the following terms of use: You may use the glossary for personal and non-commercial purposes only. If you use any content from the glossary of terms on this website in your own work, you must properly attribute the source. This means including a link to this website and citing the title of the glossary. Here is a sample format to cite this glossary (we have used the OSCOLA citation format as an example): Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP, 'TechinData.in Explainers' (Indic Pacific Legal Research , 2023) You are not authorised to reproduce, distribute, or modify the glossary without the express written permission of a representative of Indic Pacific Legal Research. The Firm makes no representations or warranties about the accuracy or completeness of the glossary. The glossary is provided on an "as is" basis and the Firm disclaims all liability for any errors or omissions in the glossary. You agree to indemnify and hold the Firm harmless from any claims or damages arising out of your use of the glossary. If you have any questions or concerns about these terms of use, please contact us at global@indicpacific.com
- AI Washing | Glossary of Terms | Indic Pacific | IPLR
AI Washing Explainers The Complete Glossary AI Washing Date of Addition 17 Oct 2025 A deceptive marketing practice where companies exaggerate, misrepresent, or falsely claim artificial intelligence capabilities in their products and services to mislead investors, consumers, and stakeholders about technological sophistication. The phenomenon parallels greenwashing in environmental claims and has attracted regulatory scrutiny from agencies like the SEC and FTC for fraudulent misrepresentation. AI washing creates market distortions by inflating valuations, undermining legitimate AI innovation, and eroding public trust through the proliferation of products labeled as "AI-powered" despite lacking meaningful machine learning functionality. Related Long-form Insights on IndoPacific.App Deciphering Artificial Intelligence Hype and its Legal-Economic Risks [VLiGTA-TR-001] Learn More Normative Emergence in Cyber Geographies: International Algorithmic Law in a Multipolar Technological Order, First Edition Learn More Artificial Intelligence, Market Power and India in a Multipolar World Learn More Previous Term Next Term terms of use This glossary of terms is provided as a free resource for educational and informational purposes only. By using this glossary developed by Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP (referred to as 'The Firm'), you agree to the following terms of use: You may use the glossary for personal and non-commercial purposes only. If you use any content from the glossary of terms on this website in your own work, you must properly attribute the source. This means including a link to this website and citing the title of the glossary. Here is a sample format to cite this glossary (we have used the OSCOLA citation format as an example): Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP, 'TechinData.in Explainers' (Indic Pacific Legal Research , 2023) You are not authorised to reproduce, distribute, or modify the glossary without the express written permission of a representative of Indic Pacific Legal Research. The Firm makes no representations or warranties about the accuracy or completeness of the glossary. The glossary is provided on an "as is" basis and the Firm disclaims all liability for any errors or omissions in the glossary. You agree to indemnify and hold the Firm harmless from any claims or damages arising out of your use of the glossary. If you have any questions or concerns about these terms of use, please contact us at global@indicpacific.com
- Automation | Glossary of Terms | Indic Pacific | IPLR
Automation Explainers The Complete Glossary Automation Date of Addition 19 Jan 2025 A system designed to execute predefined, rule-based tasks automatically without human intervention. Automations excel at deterministic tasks, delivering reliable and consistent outcomes within clearly programmed parameters. They are fast, efficient, and predictable but lack adaptability to new or unforeseen scenarios. Related Long-form Insights on IndoPacific.App Regularizing Artificial Intelligence Ethics in the Indo-Pacific [GLA-TR-002] Learn More An Indian Perspective on Special Purpose Acquisition Companies [GLA-TR-001] Learn More Deciphering Artificial Intelligence Hype and its Legal-Economic Risks [VLiGTA-TR-001] Learn More Reinventing & Regulating Policy Use Cases of Web3 for India [VLiGTA-TR-004] Learn More The Policy Purpose of a Multipolar Agenda for India, First Edition, 2023 Learn More Artificial Intelligence Governance using Complex Adaptivity: Feedback Report, First Edition, 2024 Learn More Legal Strategies for Open Source Artificial Intelligence Practices, IPLR-IG-004 Learn More Artificial Intelligence and Policy in India, Volume 4 [AIPI-V4] Learn More Ethical AI Implementation and Integration in Digital Public Infrastructure, IPLR-IG-005 Learn More Reimaging and Restructuring MeiTY for India [IPLR-IG-007] Learn More Impact-Based Legal Problems around Generative AI in Publishing, IPLR-IG-010 Learn More Legal-Economic Issues in Indian AI Compute and Infrastructure, IPLR-IG-011 Learn More Normative Emergence in Cyber Geographies: International Algorithmic Law in a Multipolar Technological Order, First Edition Learn More AI Bias & the Overlap of AI Diplomacy and Governance Ethics Dilemmas Learn More Artificial Intelligence and Policy in India, Volume 6 [AIPI-V6] Learn More Previous Term Next Term terms of use This glossary of terms is provided as a free resource for educational and informational purposes only. By using this glossary developed by Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP (referred to as 'The Firm'), you agree to the following terms of use: You may use the glossary for personal and non-commercial purposes only. If you use any content from the glossary of terms on this website in your own work, you must properly attribute the source. This means including a link to this website and citing the title of the glossary. Here is a sample format to cite this glossary (we have used the OSCOLA citation format as an example): Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP, 'TechinData.in Explainers' (Indic Pacific Legal Research , 2023) You are not authorised to reproduce, distribute, or modify the glossary without the express written permission of a representative of Indic Pacific Legal Research. The Firm makes no representations or warranties about the accuracy or completeness of the glossary. The glossary is provided on an "as is" basis and the Firm disclaims all liability for any errors or omissions in the glossary. You agree to indemnify and hold the Firm harmless from any claims or damages arising out of your use of the glossary. If you have any questions or concerns about these terms of use, please contact us at global@indicpacific.com
- AI as a Legal Entity | Glossary of Terms | Indic Pacific | IPLR
AI as a Legal Entity Explainers The Complete Glossary AI as a Legal Entity Date of Addition 26 Apr 2024 It means Artificial Intelligence may be recognised in a statutory sense, or a regulatory sense, a legal entity, with its own caveats, features and limits as prescribed by law. This idea was proposed in the 2020 Handbook on AI and International Law (2021). Related Long-form Insights on IndoPacific.App Artificial Intelligence Governance using Complex Adaptivity: Feedback Report, First Edition, 2024 Learn More Legal Strategies for Open Source Artificial Intelligence Practices, IPLR-IG-004 Learn More Ethical AI Implementation and Integration in Digital Public Infrastructure, IPLR-IG-005 Learn More Reimaging and Restructuring MeiTY for India [IPLR-IG-007] Learn More Legal-Economic Issues in Indian AI Compute and Infrastructure, IPLR-IG-011 Learn More Decoding the AI Competency Triad for Public Officials [IPLR-IG-014] Learn More Reckoning the Viability of Safe Harbour in Technology Law, IPLR-IG-015 Learn More The Global AI Inventorship Handbook, First Edition [RHB-AI-INVENT-001-2025] Learn More Artificial Intelligence, Market Power and India in a Multipolar World Learn More Previous Term Next Term terms of use This glossary of terms is provided as a free resource for educational and informational purposes only. By using this glossary developed by Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP (referred to as 'The Firm'), you agree to the following terms of use: You may use the glossary for personal and non-commercial purposes only. If you use any content from the glossary of terms on this website in your own work, you must properly attribute the source. This means including a link to this website and citing the title of the glossary. Here is a sample format to cite this glossary (we have used the OSCOLA citation format as an example): Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP, 'TechinData.in Explainers' (Indic Pacific Legal Research , 2023) You are not authorised to reproduce, distribute, or modify the glossary without the express written permission of a representative of Indic Pacific Legal Research. The Firm makes no representations or warranties about the accuracy or completeness of the glossary. The glossary is provided on an "as is" basis and the Firm disclaims all liability for any errors or omissions in the glossary. You agree to indemnify and hold the Firm harmless from any claims or damages arising out of your use of the glossary. If you have any questions or concerns about these terms of use, please contact us at global@indicpacific.com
- App Crappers | Glossary of Terms | Indic Pacific | IPLR
App Crappers Explainers The Complete Glossary App Crappers Date of Addition 21 Oct 2025 Software applications or components produced using automated coding agents or AI-assisted tools, often exhibiting limited scalability for complex, enterprise-level requirements. In software engineering, a term for programs generated through rapid, minimally supervised development processes, typically relying on generative AI models, which may necessitate additional refinement for production environments. Usage: "The team evaluated app crappers from AI coding tools but opted for a structured SDLC for enterprise deployment." Origin: Coined by Chamath Palihapitiya, first documented in an X post on October 19, 2025 . Related Long-form Insights on IndoPacific.App Ethical AI Implementation and Integration in Digital Public Infrastructure, IPLR-IG-005 Learn More NIST Adversarial Machine Learning Taxonomies: Decoded, IPLR-IG-016 Learn More Normative Emergence in Cyber Geographies: International Algorithmic Law in a Multipolar Technological Order, First Edition Learn More Previous Term Next Term terms of use This glossary of terms is provided as a free resource for educational and informational purposes only. By using this glossary developed by Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP (referred to as 'The Firm'), you agree to the following terms of use: You may use the glossary for personal and non-commercial purposes only. If you use any content from the glossary of terms on this website in your own work, you must properly attribute the source. This means including a link to this website and citing the title of the glossary. Here is a sample format to cite this glossary (we have used the OSCOLA citation format as an example): Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP, 'TechinData.in Explainers' (Indic Pacific Legal Research , 2023) You are not authorised to reproduce, distribute, or modify the glossary without the express written permission of a representative of Indic Pacific Legal Research. The Firm makes no representations or warranties about the accuracy or completeness of the glossary. The glossary is provided on an "as is" basis and the Firm disclaims all liability for any errors or omissions in the glossary. You agree to indemnify and hold the Firm harmless from any claims or damages arising out of your use of the glossary. If you have any questions or concerns about these terms of use, please contact us at global@indicpacific.com
- Data-related Definitions in DPDPA | Glossary of Terms | Indic Pacific | IPLR
Data-related Definitions in DPDPA Explainers The Complete Glossary Data-related Definitions in DPDPA Date of Addition 15 Nov 2025 “data” means a representation of information, facts, concepts, opinions or instructions in a manner suitable for communication, interpretation or processing by human beings or by automated means; “Data Fiduciary” means any person who alone or in conjunction with other persons determines the purpose and means of processing of personal data; “Data Principal” means the individual to whom the personal data relates and where such individual is— (i) a child, includes the parents or lawful guardian of such a child; (ii) a person with disability, includes her lawful guardian, acting on her behalf; “Data Processor” means any person who processes personal data on behalf of a Data Fiduciary; “Data Protection Officer” means an individual appointed by the Significant Data Fiduciary under clause (a) of sub-section (2) of section 10; “digital personal data” means personal data in digital form; “personal data” means any data about an individual who is identifiable by or in relation to such data; “personal data breach” means any unauthorised processing of personal data or accidental disclosure, acquisition, sharing, use, alteration, destruction or loss of access to personal data, that compromises the confidentiality, integrity or availability of personal data; “processing” in relation to personal data, means a wholly or partly automated operation or set of operations performed on digital personal data, and includes operations such as collection, recording, organisation, structuring, storage, adaptation, retrieval, use, alignment or combination, indexing, sharing, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, restriction, erasure or destruction; “Significant Data Fiduciary” means any Data Fiduciary or class of Data Fiduciaries as may be notified by the Central Government under section 10; “specified purpose” means the purpose mentioned in the notice given by the Data Fiduciary to the Data Principal in accordance with the provisions of this Act and the rules made thereunder; [Source: Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 ] Related Long-form Insights on IndoPacific.App Auditing AI Companies for Corporate Internal Investigations in India, VLiGTA-TR-005 Learn More Decoding the AI Competency Triad for Public Officials [IPLR-IG-014] Learn More Normative Emergence in Cyber Geographies: International Algorithmic Law in a Multipolar Technological Order, First Edition Learn More Previous Term Next Term terms of use This glossary of terms is provided as a free resource for educational and informational purposes only. By using this glossary developed by Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP (referred to as 'The Firm'), you agree to the following terms of use: You may use the glossary for personal and non-commercial purposes only. If you use any content from the glossary of terms on this website in your own work, you must properly attribute the source. This means including a link to this website and citing the title of the glossary. Here is a sample format to cite this glossary (we have used the OSCOLA citation format as an example): Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP, 'TechinData.in Explainers' (Indic Pacific Legal Research , 2023) You are not authorised to reproduce, distribute, or modify the glossary without the express written permission of a representative of Indic Pacific Legal Research. The Firm makes no representations or warranties about the accuracy or completeness of the glossary. The glossary is provided on an "as is" basis and the Firm disclaims all liability for any errors or omissions in the glossary. You agree to indemnify and hold the Firm harmless from any claims or damages arising out of your use of the glossary. If you have any questions or concerns about these terms of use, please contact us at global@indicpacific.com
- AI Knowledge Chain | Glossary of Terms | Indic Pacific | IPLR
AI Knowledge Chain Explainers The Complete Glossary AI Knowledge Chain Date of Addition 5 Mar 2025 A structured sequence of information transformation processes that enable AI systems to convert raw data into actionable insights through interconnected stages of knowledge acquisition, representation, reasoning, and application. Knowledge chains encompass both the technical pathways within AI systems and the human-AI information exchanges that facilitate meaningful interpretation of AI outputs. Robust knowledge chains maintain logical coherence between information elements while providing transparent connections between premises and conclusions. Related Long-form Insights on IndoPacific.App The Policy Purpose of a Multipolar Agenda for India, First Edition, 2023 Learn More Artificial Intelligence Governance using Complex Adaptivity: Feedback Report, First Edition, 2024 Learn More Legal Strategies for Open Source Artificial Intelligence Practices, IPLR-IG-004 Learn More Ethical AI Implementation and Integration in Digital Public Infrastructure, IPLR-IG-005 Learn More Reimaging and Restructuring MeiTY for India [IPLR-IG-007] Learn More The Legal and Ethical Implications of Monosemanticity in LLMs [IPLR-IG-008] Learn More Impact-Based Legal Problems around Generative AI in Publishing, IPLR-IG-010 Learn More Indo-Pacific Research Ethics Framework on Artificial Intelligence Use [IPac AI] Learn More Previous Term Next Term terms of use This glossary of terms is provided as a free resource for educational and informational purposes only. By using this glossary developed by Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP (referred to as 'The Firm'), you agree to the following terms of use: You may use the glossary for personal and non-commercial purposes only. If you use any content from the glossary of terms on this website in your own work, you must properly attribute the source. This means including a link to this website and citing the title of the glossary. Here is a sample format to cite this glossary (we have used the OSCOLA citation format as an example): Indic Pacific Legal Research LLP, 'TechinData.in Explainers' (Indic Pacific Legal Research , 2023) You are not authorised to reproduce, distribute, or modify the glossary without the express written permission of a representative of Indic Pacific Legal Research. The Firm makes no representations or warranties about the accuracy or completeness of the glossary. The glossary is provided on an "as is" basis and the Firm disclaims all liability for any errors or omissions in the glossary. You agree to indemnify and hold the Firm harmless from any claims or damages arising out of your use of the glossary. If you have any questions or concerns about these terms of use, please contact us at global@indicpacific.com

