Microsoft's John Khiangte warns that growing fragmentation in global AI regulations is weakening international cyber collaboration. He called for foundational standards and international harmonisation to combat borderless cyber threats effectively.
Fragmented AI Regulations Hinder Collaboration
Growing fragmentation in global Artificial Intelligence (AI) regulations and standards could weaken international cyber collaboration and make coordinated responses to cyber threats increasingly difficult, John Khiangte, Director of Government Affairs at Microsoft, said today.

"What we are increasingly seeing, and because of the volatile nature of the global geopolitics and everybody sort of trying to regulate the AI systems in their own way, we are seeing that it is increasingly becoming fragmented. And when fragmentation happens, it is difficult for collaboration to happen," Khiangte said while addressing FICCI's CyberComm 2026.
Call for Foundational Standards
Khiangte said there is a need to establish foundational standards for AI infrastructure and deployment systems, particularly in areas such as governance, quality assurance and secure-by-design principles.
"For us to decide what should be the standard that goes into the infrastructure of the assembly, there are some basics out there in terms of governance, in terms of quality and those things should definitely be there and secure that design. So these are the basic standards that needs to be taken," he said.
Borderless Nature of Cyber Threats
Highlighting the borderless nature of cyber threats, he said cyberspace functions beyond geographical boundaries, making international coordination essential.
"To explain that a little bit, what happens is in a cyberspace, everyone is your neighbour. Cyber criminals don't respect geographical boundaries for them. And so every incident is global in that nature," he said.
Challenges in International Cooperation
Referring to India's bilateral cooperation frameworks, Khiangte said the country has signed multiple agreements to strengthen cybersecurity collaboration, but differing standards and definitions across countries can create difficulties for authorities during cyber incidents and investigations.
"What happens is that if those standards are different, if those minimum criteria are different, there are definitional differences, then it becomes difficult for authorities to work together," he said.
Need for Harmonised Standards
He further said countries should define sovereign minimum standards for AI systems while also ensuring harmonisation at the international level.
"There are basic requirements like explainability, secure by design, model provenance and so on. But I think at the same time, countries have to work together so that there is a harmonization, so that collaboration can happen," Khiangte said.
Adversaries Collaborating 'At Scale'
He also warned that cyber criminals and nation-state threat actors are increasingly collaborating "at scale", making harmonised standards and coordinated responses more important than ever.
"Cyber criminals are the ones, from our vantage point, we are seeing that, and not just cyber criminals, nation threat actors and cyber criminals are collaborating at scale," he said. (ANI)
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Asianet Newsable English staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)