To host DeepSeek on Indian servers soon: Ashwini Vaishnaw
India is set to join the global AI race and release a generative AI model sometime in 2025, Union IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw told reporters gathered at the Utkarsh Odisha Conclave. According to the Economic Times of India,
Speaking to media, Vaishnaw said that the Indian AI model is a timely step as India is a trusted nation among the comity of nations and therefore it will help India emerge as a more reliable technological powerhouse of ethical AI solutions in the days to come.
India's IT minister has praised Chinese startup DeepSeek for shaking up the sector with its low-cost AI assistant, likening its frugal approach to his government's efforts to build a localized AI model.
Under the IndiaAI Mission, the government has also selected 18 application-level AI solutions for the first round of funding.
India has announced its global AI ambitions, aiming to create its own foundational model to compete with giants like ChatGPT. With 18,693 GPUs set for use, the country is focusing on cost-effective AI development aligned with Indian contexts,
Union minister Ashwini Vaishnaw has said that India is planning to build its own domestic large language model (LLM).
Police in India's northern Uttar Pradesh state dismissed rumours shared thousands of times on social media that they had arrested a Muslim man who dressed as a Hindu monk in an apparent bid to attack the Hindu mega-festival Kumbh Mela.
Chinese Artificial Intelligence (AI) start-up DeepSeek’s R1 model, which has disrupted the tech sector, holds lessons for India to develop the critical technology in cost-effective ways and without massive computational resources, the nation’s top researchers told The Indian Express.
NEW DELHI: In 2024, the government approved an investment of over Rs 10,300 crore for the IndiaAI Mission, a five-year initiative to develop India’s artificial intelligence (AI) ecosystem in the country. A major component of this mission is the ...
Countries are competing over Artificial Intelligence as though it were the new global arms race. This is not surprising if you look at what AI can do for nations. AI capabilities can boost the economies of nations.
As the increasing frequency and complexity of cyber threats expose 38% of professionals to significant risks affecting their operations, reputation, and financial performance, cybersecurity has become a top priority on the risk radar of Indian organisations,