Try GOLD - Free

India Must Build on Existing AI Systems

Hindustan Times Mumbai

|

March 28, 2025

Instead, it is racing to catch up on foundational models, which is yesterday's opportunity

- Vivek Wadhwa

India is pouring its energy into catching up with the US and China on building foundational Artificial Intelligence (AI) models. Government officials are discussing billion-dollar investments in data centers and computing infrastructure. Academics are calling for sovereign large language models (LLMs). Industry groups are lobbying for more public-private collaborations in model training. But all this focus is on yesterday's problem.

The world doesn't need more foundational models. It already has dozens. Open-source alternatives like DeepSeek, LLAMA, Qwen, and Mistral are freely available—and improving at a breakneck pace. DeepSeek recently released a model that rivals GPT-4 in reasoning benchmarks. Qwen, developed by Alibaba, has become a top-tier model for multilingual tasks. India doesn't need to build its own from scratch. It can take these models and run with them. The real opportunity isn't in recreating what already exists. It's in doing what India has always done best: Building on top of what's already there.

That's exactly how India became a superpower in IT services. It didn't invent the microchip, but it built billion-dollar firms that helped the world use microchips. It didn't create operating systems, but it became the global center for enterprise software development. India didn't pioneer cloud computing, but it gave rise to SaaS (software as a service) giants like Zoho and Freshworks. It didn't create banking infrastructure, but it built UPI—the world's most advanced payments platform.

MORE STORIES FROM Hindustan Times Mumbai

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Depreciation, high finance costs widen BSNL's losses

State-owned Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd (BSNL) reported a loss for the second straight quarter in the current fiscal year after a brief return to profitability in the last two quarters of fiscal 2025.

time to read

1 mins

November 19, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Apple shakes tech industry with 3D printed cases

Apple has achieved what its executives call a manufacturing breakthrough that could chart a course for the broader tech industry: the first consumer electronics with cases entirely 3D printed from 100% recycled aerospace-grade titanium powder.

time to read

2 mins

November 19, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Major web services go offline after glitch hits network firm

THE OUTAGE THAT HIT ON TUESDAY EVENING AFFECTED MAJOR WEBSITES, INCLUDING X, CHATGPT, MOODY'S AND SHOPIFY

time to read

1 min

November 19, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

'ACCOUNTABILITY AESTHETICS': THE OTT SPOTLIGHT ON MEN'S MENTAL HEALTH

On International Men's Day, here's how this OTT trend makes men's emotional intelligence aspirational, turning them into internet's favourite.

time to read

2 mins

November 19, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

How a tribal boy rose to become dreaded Maoist

Rise and fall of Madvi Hidma Commander's death is a decisive blow to the Maoist leadership

time to read

4 mins

November 19, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

WOMAN'S HEADLESS, NAKED BODY FOUND NEAR RAIL TRACKS

The decapitated body of a woman was found near a railway track in Uttar Pradesh’s Ballia district on Tuesday, police said.

time to read

1 min

November 19, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

SC recalls order that halted retrospective green permits

The Supreme Court on Tuesday, by a 2-1 majority, recalled its May 16 judgment that barred grant of ex-post-facto environment clearance (EC) to development projects, holding that the previous ruling failed to consider binding earlier precedent and thereby violated judicial discipline.

time to read

1 min

November 19, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Alarm grows on ultra-processed food popularity

Ultra-processed foods are directly linked to increased health risks for 12 diseases, including type 2 diabetes, obesity, depression and heart, kidney and gastrointestinal conditions, according to a major series published Tuesday in The Lancet, which also found that diets are now full of such foods, replacing fresh and minimally processed, traditional home-cooked meals globally.

time to read

3 mins

November 19, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Europe and the Indo-Pacific: Partners for a resilient future

When the European Union (EU) launched its Strategy for Cooperation in the Indo-Pacific in September 2021, the world looked different.

time to read

3 mins

November 19, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Role of rented i10 car in blast plot under lens

Investigators probing the deadly blast near Delhi's Red Fort suspect that a fifth vehicle —a rented Hyundai il0 -was used by the so-called “white collar” terror module to transport explosive material across Delhi-NCR in the days leading up to the attack.

time to read

1 mins

November 19, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size