Facebook Pixel Made in India AI, for India and the world | Hindustan Times Jammu - newspaper - Bu hikayeyi Magzter.com'da okuyun
Magzter GOLD ile Sınırsız Olun

Magzter GOLD ile Sınırsız Olun

Sadece 9.000'den fazla dergi, gazete ve Premium hikayeye sınırsız erişim elde edin

$149.99
 
$74.99/Yıl

Denemek ALTIN - Özgür

Made in India AI, for India and the world

Hindustan Times Jammu

|

October 01, 2025

If India doesn't develop aatmanirbharta in AI, our future may involve having AI services powered by our own data, but owned by others, and then sold back to us

- Amitabh Kant

As Artificial Intelligence (AI) continues to transform and revolutionise the way we live and work, it’s essential to recognise its vast potential and harness its power to drive positive and constructive societal change. It is imperative for India to develop sovereign capabilities in this field for three primary reasons.

First, aatmanirbharta (self-reliance) will spur our domestic startup ecosystem and attract private sector investment. Other AI leaders are already seeing the benefits of this independence. For instance, China recently banned Nvidia chips to boost sovereign chip-making capacity.

Second, building AI attuned to the nuances, culture, history, and languages of India will make AI accessible and applicable to every Indian. Third, responsible sovereign capability in this field will become increasingly important for national security. For this, you need advanced models that keep clear records of where their data comes from (data-lineages) to prevent hidden malicious behaviour that could emerge at critical moments.

The essential ingredients for building this capability are threefold: Data, computing power, and skilled talent.

Today, Open AI’s ChatGPT in India reportedly has more monthly active users than in any other country. Open AI, which has raised around $40 billion in total funding, is burning $1-2 billion each month to attract users by giving services at zero cost. This predatory pricing is encouraged by US policies, which seek to import data and actively export AI.

Apart from user acquisition, companies are using our data to train more superior, closed-source AI models. If India doesn’t develop aatmanirbharta in AI, our future may involve having AI services powered by our own data, but owned by others, and then sold back to us. Instead, we should adopt the best features of global models, let them work within India, but set rules that encourage Indian and foreign investment.

Hindustan Times Jammu'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

Hindustan Times Jammu

It's blooming time

The body as a site of insurgency.

time to read

4 mins

April 26, 2026

Hindustan Times Jammu

Women’s rage finds a voice and vocabulary

You couldn’t have missed it — the outpouring of women’s anger across India this month.

time to read

2 mins

April 26, 2026

Hindustan Times Jammu

Bill for 3-year H-1B pause introduced in US Congress

A group of Republican lawmakers has introduced a bill in the US Congress for a three-year pause to the HI-B visa programme, contending that it has been hijacked to replace American workers with cheap foreign labour.

time to read

1 mins

April 26, 2026

Hindustan Times Jammu

Hindustan Times Jammu

Prose and cons of a beloved city

Allahabad has changed over and over. In her memoir, Mamta Kalia writes of the city she knew, one of ease, informality, literary genius

time to read

3 mins

April 26, 2026

Hindustan Times Jammu

Hindustan Times Jammu

Six appeal: On IPL and the era of boundary hunters

IN A DIFFERENT LEAGUE

time to read

3 mins

April 26, 2026

Hindustan Times Jammu

How institutions build credibility and sustain it

Institutions endure, but their character is shaped by those who lead them, and those leaders are shaped by the circumstances of their appointment

time to read

5 mins

April 26, 2026

Hindustan Times Jammu

Hindustan Times Jammu

The fever news channels catch on counting day

‘Kya lagta hai, kaun aayega iss baar?’

time to read

3 mins

April 26, 2026

Hindustan Times Jammu

The deferred FCRA bill calls for a quiet burial

It'sa paradox — to put it mildly — that justas the Bharatiya Janata Party was doing its best to reach out to Christian voters in Kerala, its government in Delhi tried to pass the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Bill.

time to read

3 mins

April 26, 2026

Hindustan Times Jammu

The many moods of Thundercat

BASS TO THE FUTURE

time to read

3 mins

April 26, 2026

Hindustan Times Jammu

Hindustan Times Jammu

First-word problems

What did the earliest writers write about? A new book explores letters about kings, pleas for help from a bereft mother, manuals on how to banish ghosts, as well as poems and fictional tales, classroom exercises and ancient doodles - all dating to before 1500 BCE

time to read

3 mins

April 26, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size