The Controversy Over the Public Nature of AI: 'Private
Profit vs. Social Cost'
ㅣKarl Yang, Founder & Executive Director of KoSIF ㅣ
The entire world is in an
uproar over Artificial Intelligence (AI). Moving far beyond mere technological
progress, AI has now transformed into a massive physical infrastructure that
shakes the very foundations of our communities, affecting everything from
electricity, water resources, and labor markets to capital markets and
educational institutions.
Perhaps we have been treating
AI as a form of "magic that can be consumed infinitely."
In reality, however, while
giant tech corporations amass staggering wealth through AI, the social and
ecological costs incurred to keep its engines running are quietly being shifted
onto the shoulders of ordinary citizens.
The Reality of "Physical Exploitation" and
Digital Enclosure
The AI industry has currently
entered a stage of "physical exploitation." The data centers required
to sustain Large Language Models (LLMs) swallow up the planet’s energy like a
black hole. The International Energy Agency (IEA) warned that by 2026, the
electricity consumption of data centers will exceed 1,000 TWh—an amount
equivalent to the total electricity consumption of Japan. Furthermore, the
massive volume of water poured in to cool down the heat generated during
computation threatens the water security of local communities. AI appears to
exist in a virtual space, but in truth, it drives carbon emissions and resource
depletion.
The critical point we must
focus on here is the ownership of "data”, the core fuel that runs this
massive machine. Today’s AI has grown by learning from the countless records
and intellectual assets generated by citizens in their daily lives.
Yet, the resulting power of
intelligence and the financial returns are monopolized by a handful of Big Tech
companies. This is nothing less than a "digital enclosure"—extracting
data, which is a shared resource belonging to all of us, and converting it into
private profit.
Ultimately, an irrational
structure of "privatizing profits and socializing costs" is freezing
into place. While corporations generate wealth using citizens' data, they pass
the external costs—such as power grid congestion and environmental destruction—onto
the society at large.
Reclaiming Data Sovereignty and the Public Good
We must look at AI once again
through the lens of data sovereignty. Data is not the exclusive property of
corporations; it is a right belonging to citizens, and the value generated from
it must be funneled back into the public interest. Leaving AI entirely to the
whims of a free market compromises the very sovereignty that underpins
democracy.
Therefore, treating AI from
the perspective of a "public good" is an urgent historical task that
can no longer be delayed. This does not mean grinding technological innovation
to a halt. Rather, it means holding corporations that utilize data and
resources accountable for their social impact.
Just like the carbon emissions
trading system, we need to clearly define a global cap on the maximum resources
used for AI. Concurrently, a portion of the profits derived from data
utilization should be reclaimed—in the form of a "data dividend" or a
public fund—and used as financial capital for a just transition.
Setting Democratic Priorities
Furthermore, we must establish
a "democratic priority list" for the utilization of AI resources. Top
priority for resource allocation should be granted to domains directly tied to
human survival, such as solving the climate crisis or public healthcare.
Conversely, strict brakes must
be applied to resource consumption in areas with low public value, such as
indiscriminate targeted advertising or algorithmic labor control. This means
pacing technological advancement based on "community dignity" and
"data sovereignty," rather than market efficiency alone.
The climate crisis has left us with a stern lesson: infinite growth with unpaid costs eventually triggers the collapse of the entire system. The true threat of AI lies not in intelligence itself, but in the logic that legitimizes the exploitation of public resources like data and the environment. Only when we reach a collective consensus on whom it is used for and how far it should go can technology truly become progress for everyone.