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India is hosting one of the developing world's biggest AI summits, aiming to shape how emerging nations use the technology. But can it lead amid the US–China rivalry?

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00:00From AI-powered robots to locally built chatbots, the summit floor reflects India's
00:07growing ambition to shape its own AI future. Among the highlights of this summit is a new
00:13generation of sovereign AI models like Bharat GPT. It's designed for local language and voice-first
00:20access, aiming to make technology more accessible across India, including in rural areas.
00:26We don't have to be dependent to other LLMs for creating the virtual assistants. So we thought
00:34of let's create our own. We have the required manpower to build it and we built it. So this
00:40summit offers us a wide range of customers, wide range of audience to whom we can showcase what we
00:47have built. The scale of the event is significant with more than 40 top tech executives, around 20
00:54world leaders and thousands of AI researchers attending. For India, it's both a technology
01:00showcase and a diplomatic moment. Officials here say their goal is to democratize artificial intelligence,
01:07making it accessible, affordable and relevant for developing nations.
01:12India is a natural leader of the global south. We are the largest country in terms of population,
01:19the range of things that we are working on here, which will make AI truly meaningful for people.
01:28The idea is to have impact, the idea is to privatize and, you know, make sure that public impact is
01:36created on a huge scale through the use of AI. For India, this summit is about gaining ground in the
01:42AI
01:42race and putting the country in the global spotlight. India is presenting something new,
01:48an approach that it calls the third wave in artificial intelligence. This framework differs
01:52from Chinese state-driven model and the corporate-led approach in the United States. Here, the focus is
01:58on using technology for public good. Officials say AI should improve everyday lives. Experts say that
02:04India's approach and its scale gives it an edge. With a vast digital population and rapidly growing data
02:11ecosystems, India sees itself as a testing ground for real-world AI applications, from language tools
02:18to public services. Government says AI can transform sectors like farming, education and healthcare.
02:26But alongside the optimism, there are debates about the future of work and whether automation could
02:32disrupt traditional job markets. So the biggest impact is always going to be at the routine type of
02:39activities which can now be automated and therefore their jobs will become a lot better and they will
02:45get elevated to the next higher level. Nobody is going to lose jobs, the jobs are going to get recreated.
02:50The path to leading the global south in AI may not be straightforward. India still faces challenges
02:56from semiconductor dependence to gaps in data center infrastructure. While the promises are ambitious,
03:03it remains to be seen whether the vision outlined at the summit can translate into real-world impact.
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