Prøve GULL - Gratis
India will seek to shape the global AI order
The Statesman Delhi
|August 22, 2025
When India hosts the AI Impact Summit in February 2026, it will not just be another global meeting on artificial intelligence.
It is, in fact, the moment where India signals its readiness to move beyond declarations and frameworks and into the territory of delivery. After Bletchley Park, Seoul, and Paris, the global conversation has largely revolved around ethics, risk, and governance. Now, India wants to take the baton forward, bridging aspiration with implementation, especially for the Global South.
For India, this summit is as much about positioning as it is about purpose. It strengthens India's claim of being not just a consumer of AI innovation but a creator, regulator, and exporter of frameworks. Hosting the summit in New Delhi reflects a conscious attempt to consolidate leadership. India is no longer satisfied with merely participating in the global AI order; it seeks to shape it.
It also ties back to India's larger digital story: Aadhaar, UPI, DigiLocker, and now IndiaAI Mission, which democratizes access to compute power and indigenous language models. The summit demonstrates that India's innovation narrative is not restricted to fin-tech or digital governance; it's extending to the heart of future geopolitics: artificial intelligence.
The expected outcomes of the summit are significant and wide-ranging. India is likely to push for global standards for AI protocols, focusing on creating a standardized framework for AI deployment in communication and governance. Such a framework would include interoperability, risk assessment, and ethical safeguards, ensuring that the systems shaping public life are transparent, accountable, and aligned with democratic values.
Equally important will be the effort to bridge the global divide. One of the key outcomes may be a concrete roadmap enabling developing nations to access affordable AI infrastructure and datasets, addressing the Global South's long-standing complaint of being left behind in the AI revolution.
Denne historien er fra August 22, 2025-utgaven av The Statesman Delhi.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Statesman Delhi
The Statesman Delhi
Ind v SA: Rohit, Kohli return as selection puzzles take centre stage ahead of ODI series opener
India will enter Sunday's opening ODI against South Africa in Ranchi with more questions than answers, as the three-match series doubles up as an early and crucial checkpoint in India’s long-term 2027 ODIWorld Cup planning.
3 mins
November 30, 2025
The Statesman Delhi
University dormitories must be part of the earthquake conversation
The earthquake of November 21 once again exposed the serious weaknesses in Bangladesh's built environment.
2 mins
November 30, 2025
The Statesman Delhi
Russia moves to ratify key military pact ahead of Putin's visit
Ahead of the highly anticipated visit of Russian President Vladimir Putin to India to attend the 23rd Bilateral Summit, slated for 4-5 December, the lower house of Russia's parliament is set to ratify a crucial military pact with India.
1 min
November 30, 2025
The Statesman Delhi
Stokes determined to bounce back from Perth setback
As England gear up for the Brisbane day-night Ashes fixture, starting 4 December, skipper Ben Stokes states that they've identified the areas for improvement after their loss at Perth. Australia’s dominant win at Perth gave England plenty to think about, but Stokes isn’t giving up on his dreams of becoming the first England captain to win the Ashes Down Under since Andrew Strauss' victory in 2010-11.
2 mins
November 30, 2025
The Statesman Delhi
Russian strikes kill2in Kyiv as peace efforts gainmomentum
Russian drone and missile attacks on the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, killed at least two people inthe early hours of Saturday, local officials said. The attacks came just before a second round of peace negotiations was set to begin, as arenewed US-led push to end the war gathers steam this week.
1 min
November 30, 2025
The Statesman Delhi
Our Invisible Self~II
Theordinaryman’smemory cannot hold the consciousness of allexperiences, but the underlyingdivine power or memory retains everything. Put differently, an ordinary mortal may forget things, but his subconscious ‘self registers everything. However, his super-consciousness, with divine felicity, remembers everything. Through this timeless memory, He (God) wants us to remember our own divine origin and go back to it
6 mins
November 30, 2025
The Statesman Delhi
'Bereadylikesoldiers,' RajnathSingh tells civil servants at LBSNAA
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh on Friday hailed Operation Sindoor as amodel of seamless civil—military coordination, asserting that the effort showcased how administrative systems and the Armed Forces can work in perfect sync to deliver vital information and instil public confidence.
1 min
November 30, 2025
The Statesman Delhi
After 36 years, Bareilly man convicted of killing brother finally arrested
After evading the law for nearly 36 years, Pradeep Saxena, a resident of Shahi in Bareilly, was finally arrested.
1 min
November 30, 2025
The Statesman Delhi
BJP is running new campaign called 'one district, one mafia' in UP: Akhilesh Yadav
Samajwadi Party president Akhilesh Yadav has once again leveled serious allegations against the BJP government in Uttar Pradesh and alleged that they are giving patronage to the mafias.
1 min
November 30, 2025
The Statesman Delhi
Taxing Balance
Rachel Reeves’s latest Budget attempts something British chancellors before her rarely managed with conviction: mixing fiscal restraint with visible social compassion.
2 mins
November 30, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

