Kazakhstan Opens Over 200 Datasets and Launches Platform for AI Development

@МИИЦР РК
In a significant move to accelerate domestic technological advancement, the Ministry of Digital Development, Innovation and Aerospace Industry of Kazakhstan has unveiled new state support measures for the IT community. The initiative focuses on providing developers with two critical resources: access to extensive government data and powerful computing infrastructure for training artificial intelligence models.
The measures were presented during an open dialogue with representatives from businesses, startups, and independent developers. The event highlighted the government's shift towards becoming a service partner for the tech sector, aiming to remove barriers between public information resources and development teams.
Vice Minister Dmitry Munn emphasized a new proactive approach. "Startups and companies can now not only use ready-made datasets but also directly request specific information needed for their products from the ministry," he stated. If a model requires specialized data for training, developers can submit a request, and the ministry will assist in preparing the necessary dataset.
The cornerstone of this data access is the newly launched Ashyq Data portal. Developed by the Ministry in collaboration with JSC "NIT," it serves as a centralized "showcase" of anonymized data, integrating over 120 state databases. Currently, around 200 datasets are freely available on the portal, with weekly updates. These range from real estate analytics to medical indicators, with 73 of them being exclusive collections published for the first time.
Recognizing that data alone is insufficient for creating serious AI products, authorities also introduced a platform to provide computational power. Advisor to the General Director of Astana Hub Ilyas Makashev presented AlemLLM—a service that allows companies to access computing resources for training neural networks through a convenient application system. A live demonstration showed how quickly developers can register and begin using the platform's resources for their projects.
The meeting also outlined where AI could be most beneficial for the state in the coming years. Aliya Ospanova, General Director of the Center for Support of Digital Government, shared plans for digitizing public services over the next three years. This transparency helps businesses understand future demand and identify the country's most pressing tasks.
"Our key task is to ensure transparency in digitalization and provide equal access to data for the entire IT market," Ospanova noted. "We have published ready-made business processes and approved IT plans of government agencies so that every IT company can see which data attributes are already digitized."
The event concluded with an active discussion where IT business representatives asked detailed questions about technical aspects of data acquisition, cooperation mechanisms, and practical steps for launching joint pilot projects. Speakers provided comprehensive answers and confirmed that such meetings would become regular. This dialogue signals the state's readiness to act as a reliable resource provider, aiming to make Kazakhstan's path from an AI idea to a working service significantly shorter and clearer.
Source: www.gov.kz