Tag: India AI

  • India Ought to be at the Forefront of the AI Revolution: Sam Altman

    India is an “incredibly important” market for the massive artificial intelligence (AI) company, according to Sam Altman, founder and CEO of OpenAI. Altman stated that India ought to be among the front-runners of the AI revolution at a fireside chat with Ashwini Vaishnaw, the minister of information technology (IT), on Wednesday, February 5. He described the nation’s adoption of the technology thus far and the use cases that have been developed on top of the large language models (LLMs) that are already in place as “really quite amazing.”

    The CEO of OpenAI added that the country’s user base has tripled in the last 12 months, making it the company’s second-largest market worldwide. When asked what areas India should prioritise in the field of artificial intelligence, Altman stated that he truly wanted to reaffirm the remarks regarding the full-stack approach.

    However, given what Indians are creating with AI at every stage of the stack—chips, models, the stack, and all the amazing applications—India ought to be taking the lead. India ought to be one of the pioneers of the AI movement. Seeing what the nation has accomplished is quite astounding. Altman arrived in India late on the evening of February 4th while on a multi-country global tour.

    Meeting Government Heads and  the Big Players of Indian Startup Sector

    He met with several Indian company owners and venture capitalists earlier in the day, as well as IT Minister Vaishnaw. Additionally, he is anticipated to meet with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.  He has private meetings with startup founders such as Vijay Shekhar Sharma of Paytm, Gaurav Munjal of Unacademy, Srikanth Velamakanni of Fractal, Aloke Bajpai of ixigo, and Tushar Vashisht of HeathifyMe.

    Prominent investors Prayank Swaroop of Accel, Hemant Mohapatra of Lightspeed Venture Partners, and Rajan Anandan and Harshjit Sethi of Peak XV Partners also attended the conference. Pricing for Founders Bat in India According to a media reports, tech entrepreneurs primarily pitched the company for India-centric pricing at the founders’ meeting with Altman. Indian creators informed Altman that global pricing might not be effective in India and that major tech companies like Microsoft, Google, and Amazon already have pricing tailored to India.

    In order to guarantee that OpenAI’s products, including its APIs, are more reasonably priced for Indian developers and businesses, the founders also made a pitch to the CEO of the company. Although Altman refrained from making any commitments, he stated that the company is thinking about offering customised pricing for the Indian market. The CEO of OpenAI added that as the company develops more advanced and potent models, he anticipates expenses to drop “rapidly” over time.

    Cofounder Kunal Bahl of Snapdeal and Titan Capital acknowledged in a post on X that OpenAI product prices are “high” and that they must drop “dramatically” in order to be widely adopted. They acknowledge that the basic models can only go so far (“80-90% of the way”) and that a strong application layer will be required for particular industry/company contexts in order to raise it to 100%. For the numerous Indian businesses developing at the application layer, this is crucial,” Bahl continued.

    Tug of War Between Open AI and Chinese DeepSeek

    The tour takes place at a time when OpenAI is facing significant challenges due to the emergence of DeepSeek, a Chinese AI search engine platform that claims to have developed AI models that can compete with the best models from US firms like OpenAI, Meta, and Google at a far lower cost. India has one of the biggest populations and developer pools in the world.

    OpenAI will be able to increase its earnings by establishing a physical base in the nation. The trip coincides with a wave of copyright infringement cases against the AI giant for allegedly exploiting local digital platforms’ and book publishers’ content to train its chatbot ChatGPT without permission.

    Meanwhile, OpenAI has apparently started talking about data localisations in an effort to ward off any additional regulatory obstacles. The corporation wants to store its Indian consumers’ data in the nation itself as part of this. Since India is one of the company’s largest developer ecosystems, OpenAI is naturally seeking methods to increase its presence there.

    In preparation for the Digital Personal Data Protection Act of 2023, it has already started talking about ways to localise the data of its Indian citizens in domestic data centres. A person with knowledge of the development told Livemint that the drive to localise data operations is probably going to start soon.


    India’s Foundational AI Model to Be Ready in 10 Months: Vaishnaw
    India’s indigenous foundational AI platform will be ready within ten months, says Vaishnaw, marking a major step in the country’s AI self-reliance efforts.


  • Vaishnaw Claims India’s Local Foundational AI Platform to be Ready in Ten Months

    On February 4, Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw stated that a local foundational AI platform is anticipated in ten months, and that India may be able to develop its own high-end processing hardware, known as GPUs, in the next three to five years.

    Vaishnaw stated that the government will provide 18,000 top-tier GPU-based computing facilities for AI development to entities in the nation within the next few days and anticipates India’s own AI platform within ten months during a Budget Roundtable 2025 hosted by two renowned media houses.

    According to Vaishnav, the Ministry is considering three different solutions, each of which would include building the country’s own GPU using a chipset that is reasonably priced and either open source or licensed. The entire world has adopted this strategy, which will enable each nation to have its own GPU within three to five years.

    Surge in GPU’s Demand

    In the past, multimedia content processing involving several computational operations, such as gaming and video processing, was handled by GPUs (graphics processing units). However, the global demand for AI has caused a sharp increase in the demand for GPUs, and the US chip manufacturer Nvidia controls more than 80% of the industry. According to the minister, Indian Railways increased the confirmed ticket rate by 27% by leveraging AI models, and a number of start-ups have grown really effectively, albeit in comparison to ChatGPT.

    According to him, developing artificial intelligence models requires high-end computing equipment, which can only be purchased by wealthy individuals. However, the government has put in place a system that allows everyone to access computing infrastructure at a reasonable cost. Vaishnaw added that researchers, academicians, companies, institutions, and IITs may all access this computing capability and use it to launch foundational models.

    When asked whether India would have its own foundational model for AI, Vaishnaw responded, “10 months is the outer limit.”  According to him, there are numerous research papers that essentially discuss mathematical techniques that, for instance, the Chinese artificial intelligence company DeepSeek has employed to make the entire process extremely effective.

    Make In India Churning Jobs for Indians

    According to Vaishnaw, 12 lakh direct and indirect jobs have been created by the government’s mobile manufacturing division under the Make in India initiative. In order to demonstrate the degree of quality and accuracy attained by Indian electronic industries, he displayed a metallic object that was made up of numerous precisely linked pieces, without any apparent lines.

    He claimed that it took three years for a well-known Indian business to reach the high degree of accuracy needed by a vendor to supply parts for the production of Apple and Samsung’s high-end smartphones.

    India now produces a number of goods and parts needed in the mobile phone sector, such as chargers, battery packs, various mechanics, USB cables, keypads, display assemblies, camera modules, lithium-ion batteries, speakers and microphones, vibrator motors, and more, according to the minister.


    India Develops Its Own LLM to Tackle AI Challenges
    India is developing its own large language model (LLM) to strengthen its AI capabilities, ensuring technological independence and competitiveness in the global AI landscape.


  • MeitY Requests Ideas for Developing India’s Own AI Foundation Paradigm

    Abhishek Singh, additional secretary, Union Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), stated during his visit to GIFT City in Gujarat on 27 January that India is seeking proposals for developing its own foundational model in order to compete with foreign AI foundational models that serve as the basis for numerous applications such as ChatGPT and Gemini. He added that how India creates a basic model has been a major problem.

    At the moment, every core model that a nation uses, including ChatGPT, Llama 3, Gemini, and Claude, is foreign. China has now developed Deepseek and other models as well. To create an Indian foundational model, India must invest and offer financial assistance. The foreign fundamental models can provide incorrect or unsuitable answers because they were trained on western data sets and are not adapted to Indian languages and contexts.

    Speaking at the opening of the event, where Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel was also in attendance, Singh went on to say that the government is putting out a call for proposals to create a foundational model in India so that India can compete with the best in the world. Singh continued without revealing a deadline for the submissions, saying, “I am confident that some of the start-ups and innovators present today will be joining this challenge to build an Indian foundational model.”

    Foundational Model and Risks of AI

    One kind of artificial intelligence model that can handle a variety of jobs is the foundational model. These models can be used in a wide range of applications because they are developed by training on large and varied datasets. While AI has a lot of potential, Singh also believed that there are a lot of risks associated with it. The nation has witnessed how deepfakes and false information operate, as well as how incorrect AI reactions can lead to issues.

    To do this, the government is developing instruments for creating AI that is ethical, responsible, safe, and trustworthy. Tools for identifying algorithmic biases, false information in AI, and deepfakes are being developed by researchers and organisations. CoEs and any start-ups developing it will also have access to these technologies. Prime Minister Narendra Modi will visit Paris from February 10–11, when France and India will co-host the AI Action Summit, Singh said, adding that India was engaging “globally in the development of AI governance guidelines.”

    India to Set up 18000 Graphic Processing Units

    According to the additional secretary, India’s IndiaAI Mission aims to establish 18,000 Graphic Processing Units (GPUs) in order to create a high-end, scalable AI computing ecosystem that will assist researchers, academicians, students, and start-ups. In comparison to other nations, India has relatively few GPUs.

    In order to achieve its goal of setting up 10,000 GPUs, the government has held bids under the AI Mission and collaborated with the industry. It is aiming for 18,000 GPUs at very competitive prices, and it has opened the financial bids last week. Additionally, all researchers and startups will have access to these GPUs at a further discounted price. This will also help the start-ups operating in the CoE, Singh continued.


    How Artificial Intelligence Is Transforming Business
    Artificial Intelligence is a critical factor in the strategy of those who want to expand their business impact in this digital era to make a win.