Why TAIVote?

Just as Taiwan's semiconductors have influenced the global AI technology development, this 'technology island' is now nurturing an epoch-making 'Taiwan Model' AI governance. We believe that the AI Basic Law should be 'human-centered for all humanity.' Therefore, we have partnered exclusively with World to utilize the most advanced technology to create TAIVote, collecting opinions from 'real humans' across countries as one of the important references for Taiwan's AI Basic Law formulation. This ensures that this important legislation, which could influence the world, incorporates authentic global public opinion while being forward-looking and innovative.

Why TAIVote unique?

TAIVote is the first application of the World API for national-level legislation and public policy governance since its public release. The Legislative Yuan of the Republic of China (Taiwan) is the world's first parliament to utilize the most advanced information technology to collect public opinions. Taiwan's AI Basic Law will proceed to inter-party negotiations and three readings, and opinions from TAIVote will serve as one of the important references for negotiations, making every vote in TAIVote highly significant. Taiwan's AI Basic Law will become the world's first digital governance law that can ensure opinions are '100% from real humans' and guarantee 'one person, one vote, equal value for all votes,' unaffected by fake bot accounts, thanks to TAIVote. We believe Taiwan's innovative legislative experience and emerging technology application can provide international reference.

Technical Support

Jointly developed by the Legislative Yuan Technology Exchange Association (ETEA) and World

Taiwan's AI Basic Law

Taiwan's AI Basic Law is currently under review in the Legislative Yuan and has not yet been officially passed. You can learn more about the detailed legislative process and related information through the following link.

Do you support restricting AI from replacing human jobs?

Yes, I support
51%
32 votes
No, I do not support
49%
31 votes

Do you support the Taiwanese government allocating an 'AI Equality' budget to fund AI-related training courses and paid software usage for teachers and students at all educational levels?

Yes
94%
59 votes
No
6%
4 votes

Do you support the Taiwanese government making the development mechanisms, budgets, and processes of 'Sovereign AI' transparent, and actively incorporating public participation and external verification?

Yes, I support
95%
60 votes
No, I do not support
5%
3 votes

Do you support Taiwan participating in the establishment of an international AI development transparency organization to help all countries jointly address and manage AI development safety issues?

Yes, I support
97%
61 votes
No, I do not support
3%
2 votes

How do you think copyright should be attributed for AI-generated content?

Not copyrightable
17%
11 votes
The AI itself
6%
4 votes
Developer or owner
21%
13 votes
User
48%
30 votes
Public domain
8%
5 votes

Do you support the Taiwanese government amending copyright laws, as Japan has done, to allow generative AI models to use any Taiwanese copyrighted content (such as text, images, and videos) for training without authorization from copyright holders?

Yes, I support
78%
49 votes
No, I do not support
22%
14 votes