• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Visit Mawphor
Highland Post
Govt. of Meghalaya
  • Home
  • Meghalaya
    • All
    • East Garo Hills
    • East Jaintia Hills
    • East Khasi Hills
    • Eastern West Khasi Hills
    • North Garo Hills
    • Ri Bhoi
    • South Garo Hills
    • South West Garo Hills
    • South West Khasi Hills
    • Statewide
    • West Garo Hills
    • West Jaintia Hills
    • West Khasi Hills
    FIR against Forest Dept official

    High Court directs Govt to crack down on overweight vehicles

    Govt could lower bid price for vacant Polo shopping mall contract

    Govt could lower bid price for vacant Polo shopping mall contract

    2 dead identified in Pynursla rockslide

    2 dead identified in Pynursla rockslide

    Teachers group rejects pension scheme

    Teachers group rejects pension scheme

    State Govt has to spend Rs 100 cr for Umroi airport expansion

    Groundwork on Umroi Airport expansion soon

    Plea for repairs at Selsella Rajonggola Govt LP School

    Plea for repairs at Selsella Rajonggola Govt LP School

    M’laya and Arunachal PUCs discuss strengthening legislative cooperation

    M’laya and Arunachal PUCs discuss strengthening legislative cooperation

    Creativity & innovation celebrated at PRIME Ignite

    Creativity & innovation celebrated at PRIME Ignite

    Earth Day celebrated in NEHU

    Earth Day celebrated in NEHU

    Trending Tags

    • North East
    • National
      Oppn parties to vote against delimitation provisions in Constitution amendment bill: Kharge

      Distress address rather than national address: Congress slams Modi

      Opp parties committed ‘sin of foeticide’ by killing quota bill, women will severely punish them: PM

      Opp parties committed ‘sin of foeticide’ by killing quota bill, women will severely punish them: PM

      Women quota bill defeated in LS; Govt vows to continue fight

      Women quota bill defeated in LS; Govt vows to continue fight

    • Health
    • Editorial
    • Sports
    • Writer’s Column
    • Letters to the Editor
    No Result
    View All Result
    • Home
    • Meghalaya
      • All
      • East Garo Hills
      • East Jaintia Hills
      • East Khasi Hills
      • Eastern West Khasi Hills
      • North Garo Hills
      • Ri Bhoi
      • South Garo Hills
      • South West Garo Hills
      • South West Khasi Hills
      • Statewide
      • West Garo Hills
      • West Jaintia Hills
      • West Khasi Hills
      FIR against Forest Dept official

      High Court directs Govt to crack down on overweight vehicles

      Govt could lower bid price for vacant Polo shopping mall contract

      Govt could lower bid price for vacant Polo shopping mall contract

      2 dead identified in Pynursla rockslide

      2 dead identified in Pynursla rockslide

      Teachers group rejects pension scheme

      Teachers group rejects pension scheme

      State Govt has to spend Rs 100 cr for Umroi airport expansion

      Groundwork on Umroi Airport expansion soon

      Plea for repairs at Selsella Rajonggola Govt LP School

      Plea for repairs at Selsella Rajonggola Govt LP School

      M’laya and Arunachal PUCs discuss strengthening legislative cooperation

      M’laya and Arunachal PUCs discuss strengthening legislative cooperation

      Creativity & innovation celebrated at PRIME Ignite

      Creativity & innovation celebrated at PRIME Ignite

      Earth Day celebrated in NEHU

      Earth Day celebrated in NEHU

      Trending Tags

      • North East
      • National
        Oppn parties to vote against delimitation provisions in Constitution amendment bill: Kharge

        Distress address rather than national address: Congress slams Modi

        Opp parties committed ‘sin of foeticide’ by killing quota bill, women will severely punish them: PM

        Opp parties committed ‘sin of foeticide’ by killing quota bill, women will severely punish them: PM

        Women quota bill defeated in LS; Govt vows to continue fight

        Women quota bill defeated in LS; Govt vows to continue fight

      • Health
      • Editorial
      • Sports
      • Writer’s Column
      • Letters to the Editor
      No Result
      View All Result
      Highland Post
      No Result
      View All Result
      Home Writer's Column

      The Machine Thinks In English

      HP News Service by HP News Service
      April 9, 2026
      in Writer's Column
      0
      The battle for ballot in the North-East
      0
      SHARES
      118
      VIEWS

      By Danny K. Rajee

      I remember one of my friends stated that she thinks in English. It was 2007, we were presenting our papers in New Delhi. Later I realised that even machines are created to think in English and Machine Learning’s genesis is the English language. I kept telling myself, “The Machine thinks in English!”

      That moment has stayed with me because it made me ask a question I haven’t been able to shake since: what would any of this have looked like if English hadn’t become the world’s shared tongue?

      The answer, I suspect, is that it would have looked a great deal slower, messier, and far less accessible to most of humanity.

      We are living through one of the most consequential technological shifts in human history. Artificial intelligence is no longer a science fiction premise. It writes code, drafts legal documents, assists surgeons, tutors schoolchildren in rural villages, and translates bureaucratic forms for refugees who speak six words of the host country’s language. It does all of this with a fluency that would have seemed miraculous to anyone born before the internet age. And almost all of it runs on the backbone of English.

      This isn’t an accident. English is the dominant language of scientific publishing — well over half of the world’s peer-reviewed research is written in it. It is the language of global commerce, of aviation, of diplomacy in rooms where thirty nationalities are trying to agree on something. When the engineers who built the foundational large language models went looking for data to train their systems, they found it overwhelmingly in English. Wikipedia, Common Crawl, Reddit, news archives, academic papers, legal filings, novels, manuals — the sheer tonnage of high-quality English text gave these systems something no other language could match: depth.

      That head start matters enormously. The models that emerged from that training understand nuance, context, sarcasm, ambiguity, and metaphor in English in ways they simply cannot yet replicate in Swahili, Bengali, or even Mandarin, despite Mandarin being spoken by more people. Language models are, at their core, statistical pattern-recognition engines. The more text you feed them in a language, the better they get at that language. English had centuries of a printing press, a century of mass literacy, and decades of internet dominance. It arrived at the AI era with an enormous structural advantage.

      For those of us who grew up speaking English as a first language, this can be easy to take for granted. But travel to a village in Assam or a township outside Nairobi, and the stakes become immediately clear. A farmer in Meghalaya who can type a question in English to an AI assistant gets a detailed, nuanced, accurate response. The same farmer asking in Khasi — his mother tongue, the language he dreams in — might get something garbled, incomplete, or simply wrong. The machine, for all its sophistication, is still far more comfortable in the English tongue.

      We must keep this in mind: AI models are predominantly trained on English-centric data. While top AI models are multilingual, their proficiency varies significantly, leading to lower quality, less creative, and less accurate outputs in many other languages, especially in technical or specialized fields.

      This is a profound and uncomfortable irony that journalists, educators, and policymakers need to sit with honestly. English did not become the world’s lingua franca through merit alone. It arrived on the back of empire, of trade routes enforced by warships, of missionaries and administrators who told entire civilisations that their languages were inadequate. And now, in the twenty-first century, the technology that promises to democratise knowledge and opportunity is in many ways replicating that old hierarchy — rewarding fluency in English and penalising those who never had the chance to acquire it.

      At the same time, it would be dishonest to ignore what English-language AI has genuinely enabled for hundreds of millions of people. Students in West Africa who use AI chatbots to get feedback on their essays because their schools have no qualified English teachers. I have met small business owners in Southeast Asia who use AI to write professional emails to foreign clients, cracking open markets that were previously inaccessible to them. For these people, English and AI together are not instruments of exclusion — they are ladders.

      “The English language is nobody’s special property. It is the property of the imagination: it is the property of the language itself.”Derek Walcott

      The English language, whatever the complicated history attached to it, has become the operating system of global knowledge exchange. And in the age of AI, that role has intensified rather than diminished. To understand this technology — to use it effectively, to critique it meaningfully, to regulate it sensibly — you need to engage with it in English. The most important debates about AI safety, ethics, bias, and governance are happening in English-language journals, conferences, and policy documents. Those who cannot participate in that conversation are being shaped by decisions they had no hand in making.

      What is the writer’s responsibility in all of this? I think it is the same as it has always been: to name the thing clearly, without flattery and without panic. English is enormously powerful in the AI era. That power brings real benefits and real injustices, often simultaneously, often to the same person. English is a working global language.

      The machines learned to think in English. The question now is whether the rest of the world will be given a fair chance to be heard by them — and whether those of us who already speak the language will use our advantage to push for that, or simply enjoy the tailwind and say nothing.

      I have spent years speaking and writing about the world as it is. I would like, before I am done, to write a few stories about the world as it ought to be. A writer from the Hills of Shillong!

      HP News Service

      HP News Service

      An English daily newspaper from Shillong published by Readington Marwein, proprietor of Mawphor Khasi Daily Newspaper, who established the first Khasi daily in 1989.

      Related Posts

      The battle for ballot in the North-East
      Writer's Column

      US-India-Pakistan Diplomacy: No Shortcut to Hyphenation

      April 22, 2026
      The battle for ballot in the North-East
      Writer's Column

      Energy Saving Technologies in Agriculture: Practical Pathways for a Sustainable Future

      April 21, 2026
      The battle for ballot in the North-East
      Writer's Column

      Siang Mega Dam: Geopolitics vs. Heritage

      April 20, 2026
      The battle for ballot in the North-East
      Writer's Column

      A Commentary of Khasi Folklore- 17

      April 19, 2026
      The battle for ballot in the North-East
      Writer's Column

      A Clarion Call for Repeal of APFRA 1978

      April 19, 2026
      The battle for ballot in the North-East
      Writer's Column

      Clerics Should Not Trifle with Sacred

      April 18, 2026
      Load More
      Next Post
      Transforming teaching

      FCRA’s Predatory Turn

      Leave a Reply Cancel reply

      Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

      We’re on Facebook

      Advertisement

      • Trending
      • Comments
      • Latest
      Sonam & Raja were with 3 other tourists on day they vanished, says tour guide

      Sonam & Raja were with 3 other tourists on day they vanished, says tour guide

      June 7, 2025
      Tourist taxi association launches agitation against outside vehicles

      Tourist taxi association launches agitation against outside vehicles

      September 17, 2025
      Residents of 44 localities in Shillong drink unsafe water

      Residents of 44 localities in Shillong drink unsafe water

      October 3, 2023
      Bike taxi drivers ask Govt for offline option

      Rapido captains caught off guard by DTO, hired and fined

      July 7, 2024
      Local cabbies disagree with disruption of tourists’ entry

      Assam taxi operators warn of dire effects of ban from tourist sites

      1

      Illegal sand, boulder mining along Umiam River banned

      0

      WINS project launched at Loreto School

      0
      FIR against Forest Dept official

      High Court directs Govt to crack down on overweight vehicles

      0
      FIR against Forest Dept official

      High Court directs Govt to crack down on overweight vehicles

      April 22, 2026
      Govt could lower bid price for vacant Polo shopping mall contract

      Govt could lower bid price for vacant Polo shopping mall contract

      April 22, 2026
      The battle for ballot in the North-East

      US-India-Pakistan Diplomacy: No Shortcut to Hyphenation

      April 22, 2026
      Nepotism – the executioner of bright deserving minds.

      Earth Day: Small Steps, Big Impact

      April 22, 2026

      Recommended

      FIR against Forest Dept official

      High Court directs Govt to crack down on overweight vehicles

      April 22, 2026
      Govt could lower bid price for vacant Polo shopping mall contract

      Govt could lower bid price for vacant Polo shopping mall contract

      April 22, 2026
      The battle for ballot in the North-East

      US-India-Pakistan Diplomacy: No Shortcut to Hyphenation

      April 22, 2026
      Nepotism – the executioner of bright deserving minds.

      Earth Day: Small Steps, Big Impact

      April 22, 2026

      About Highland Post

      You’re visiting the official website of Highland Post, a leading and most circulated English daily of Meghalaya published by the Mawphor Group. Stay updated with our e-edition for latest updates from Meghalaya, North Eastern India and World as a whole.

      Registered office:
      Mavis Dunn Road, Mawkhar,
      Shillong-793001, Meghalaya
      Phone no: 0364-2545423
      Email: highlandpost.shg@gmail.com, editorhp2019@gmail.com

      Like Us on Facebook

      Follow Us on Twitter

      Tweets by HP

      © 2021 Highland Post – All Rights Reserved.

      • About
      • Advertise
      • Privacy & Policy
      • Contact
      No Result
      View All Result
      • Home
      • Meghalaya
        • East Garo Hills
        • East Jaintia Hills
        • East Khasi Hills
        • North Garo Hills
        • Ri Bhoi
        • South Garo Hills
        • South West Garo Hills
        • South West Khasi Hills
        • Statewide
        • West Garo Hills
        • West Jaintia Hills
        • West Khasi Hills
      • North East
      • National
      • International
      • Health
      • Editorial
      • Musey Toons
      • Sports
      • Writer’s Column
      • Letters to the Editor

      © 2021 Highland Post - All Rights Reserved.