India will have its own equivalent of Chat-GPT Scientific advisor to GOI Ajay Sood

ANI April 11, 2025 212 views

India is strategically positioning itself in the global AI landscape by developing a unique, sector-specific large language model. Principal Scientific Advisor Ajay Sood emphasizes the importance of creating an indigenous AI solution rather than copying existing models. The government is crafting a flexible regulatory framework that promotes innovation while ensuring technological safety. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has also stressed the need for AI development that is rooted in local ecosystems and addresses potential risks like deepfakes and disinformation.

"We shouldn't be copying somebody else like Deep Seek. It is 40 billion parameter and sector-specific" - Ajay Sood
New Delhi, April 11: Principal Scientific Advisor to the Government of India, Ajay Sood on Friday assured that India will have its own "equivalent" of Chat-GPT. However, he advised that we shouldn't copy other large language models (LLMs) but rather be sector-specific with a parallel framework to be inventive.

Key Points

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India developing unique AI model tailored to national needs

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Government seeks innovation-friendly regulatory framework

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PM Modi emphasizes local ecosystem technology development

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Sector-specific AI approach to enhance technological capabilities

Speaking with ANI at the Carnegie 9th Global Tech Summit, Ajay Sood said, "India will have its own equivalent of Chat-GPT. We shouldn't be copying somebody else like Deep Seek. It is 40 billion parameter and sector-specific, and around the sector, there can be parallel frameworks, so that is the ingenuity, and that is the kind of thing we need to do rather than blindly follow what has been done."

Further speaking about regulatory framework for Artificial Intelligence, Sood said that idea is to adapt a techno-legal framework, which will be sector specific to not "kill" innovation. He emphasised that generic rules and regulations can kill innovation, adding that the government want to promote AI and at the same time make it safe.

"In terms of regulatory process, we have come out with AI governance, which takes care of transparency and ensures credibility. All that framework was ready. We did public consultation, and after that, we are finalising it. MeitY (Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology) is the nodal department and will be finalising this. Our idea in the regulatory framework is to use a techno-legal framework, and we will have sector-specific, not generic, rules and regulations that will kill innovation. We don't want to kill invation. We want to promote innovation, and at the same time, we want AI to be safe," Sood said.

In the AI Summit that happened in Paris back in February, PM Modi also said that India is building its own Large Language Model.

"India is building its own large language model, considering our diversity. We also have a unique public-private partnership model for pooling resources like compute power. It is made available to our startups and researchers at an affordable cost. India is ready to share its experience and expertise to ensure that AI future is for good and for all," the Prime Minister said.

PM Modi also highlighted potential risk of Artificial Intelligence such as deepfakes and disinformation and urged world leaders to democratise the technology and re-skilling the people.

PM Modi emphasised that the technology must be rooted in local ecosystem and should enhance trust and transparency making them more people-centric to tackle the concerns related to cyber security.

"We must develop open source systems that enhance trust and transparency. We must build quality data centres free from biases, we must democratize technology and create people centre applications. We must address concerns related to cyber security, disinformation and deepfakes. We must also ensure that technology is rooted in local ecosystems for it to be effective and useful." PM Modi said.

Reader Comments

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Rahul K.
This is exciting news! India needs its own AI solutions tailored to our diverse needs. The sector-specific approach makes so much sense. Can't wait to see what our researchers come up with 🇮🇳
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Priya M.
While I appreciate the initiative, I hope they allocate enough resources for this. Building LLMs requires serious computing power and expertise. Hope this isn't just another announcement that fizzles out.
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Amit S.
Finally! We shouldn't be dependent on foreign AI models. The techno-legal framework sounds promising if implemented well. Hope they focus on Indian languages too - we need AI that understands our linguistic diversity.
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Neha P.
Love the emphasis on making AI safe while promoting innovation. The deepfake issue is real - just yesterday I saw a fake video of a politician saying things he never said. We need safeguards 👏
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Sanjay T.
I'm cautiously optimistic. The public-private partnership model could work well if executed properly. But government projects often move slowly - hope this keeps pace with global AI developments.
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Kavita R.
The focus on local ecosystems is crucial! One-size-fits-all AI solutions from the West often don't work for our context. Hope they involve regional universities and startups in this initiative.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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