YS Tech at the UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance

Contributing a deployer-side voice to the first forum where every nation has a seat at the table on how AI will be governed.

On 6 and 7 July 2026, the United Nations convened the first Global Dialogue on AI Governance in Geneva, established by the General Assembly to bring all 193 member states into the design of AI’s global rulebook for the first time. YS Tech is proud to be among the invited contributors to the Dialogue.

Our contribution reflects the reality we work in every day. YS Tech deploys AI, digital infrastructure, and cybersecurity for governments and enterprises around the world: the institutions that will live with AI systems long after they are built. We brought that deployment-side perspective to a conversation that has so far been shaped largely by the small number of economies that build the technology.

Why YS Tech Was Invited to Contribute

Only about 30 countries host the data centres that train and run advanced AI. The rest of the world will buy these systems, install them, and run them: in hospitals that read scans, banks that approve loans, ministries that deliver services, and utilities that balance grids.

YS Tech operates at exactly that point of deployment. Our contribution to the Dialogue argues that governance written only for the builders of AI leaves most institutions on earth unprotected at the moment AI begins making decisions about real people, and it proposes practical mechanisms to close that gap.

Alongside our contribution, our Co-Founder and CEO Anuuj Chauhan published the op-ed “Most of the World Will Deploy AI, Not Build It,” setting out the full argument.

Read the Op-Ed

Our Contribution: The Open AI Governance and Deployment Framework

YS Tech submitted a formal initiative, built on three mechanisms:

Enforceable Obligations in the AI Contract

Governance should live where a deployer still has leverage: procurement. We propose that before any AI system goes live in a critical institution, the vendor must document what the model was trained to do and where it fails, provide logs the institution can inspect, deliver a tested way to switch the system off without halting operations, and carry a share of liability when a deployment causes harm.

Shared, Independent Audit Bodies

No plausible amount of training will place a model evaluation team inside every clinic and utility. We propose building that capability once, outside them: independent, publicly funded audit bodies that any deployer can call on to test a system before it goes live and while it runs, funded like infrastructure, beside the compute and connectivity emerging economies are told they need.

An Open, Cross-Border Rulebook

An open governance framework that anyone can read, adopt, and map onto the regulatory regimes taking shape in the European Union, the United States, India, and China. A deployer proves itself once against the open standard, and that proof travels across jurisdictions instead of being rebuilt for each one.

Capacity Building for Deployer Institutions

Paired with the framework, our initiative proposes AI governance capacity training and a standing practitioner policy dialogue, so the institutions deploying AI in emerging markets help shape the rules they will live under.

What We Aim to Achieve

  • Bring the deployer’s perspective into global AI rulemaking, alongside the builder’s
  • Advance practical, contract-level governance that institutions can adopt today
  • Support the Dialogue’s goal of bridging AI divides through capacity building and open, interoperable frameworks
  • Position emerging markets as co-creators of AI governance, not consumers of it

Thought Leadership and Ongoing Dialogue

Our engagement with the Dialogue continues beyond the Geneva session, toward the second session in 2027, across four themes:

Governance at the Point of Deployment. Rules that reach the hospital, the bank, and the ministry, not only the lab.

Procurement as Policy. The AI contract as the most immediate governance instrument emerging markets possess.

Audit as Infrastructure. Shared assurance institutions, funded like the compute and connectivity they safeguard.

Open Rules That Travel. Interoperable frameworks that let a deployer prove itself once, everywhere.

Let’s Connect

YS Tech welcomes conversations with governments, enterprises, multilateral institutions, and civil society organisations working on AI governance and deployment. If our contribution to the Global Dialogue resonates with your work, we invite you to connect with us.

If you are working on AI governance for the institutions that will deploy it, we invite you to connect with us.