India important market for AI & OpenAI: CEO Sam Altman
Deepseek overtook ChatGPT as the top-ranked free app on Apple's App Store, as the US tech industry -- that has long-justified injecting billions of dollars into AI investments -- watched in sheer disbelief last week.
PTI
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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw
NEW DELHI, 5 FEB
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman on Wednesday said that the country is
important for Artificial Intelligence and OpenAI, and added that India - with
its full stack model - should be among the leaders of the AI revolution.
Altman,
during a fireside chat with IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw, said OpenAI tripled
its users here in the last year. He gave a ringing endorsement to India's
efforts in building on AI at all levels of the stack, chips, models and
"the incredible applications".
"India
is an incredibly important market for AI in general, for open AI in particular,
it's our second biggest market. Tripled users here in the last year, but mostly
seeing what people in India are building with AI at all levels of the stack,
chips, models, you know, all of the incredible applications," Altman, who
is on a whirlwind India tour, said.
Altman
advocated India to go all out in its AI play. "I think India should be one
of the leaders of the AI revolution. But it's really quite amazing to see what
the country has done... embraced the technology and is building the entire
stack of things on top of it," Altman said.
Asked
about his advice, as India looks to have a global voice in AI and take a
leadership position, Altman said "it seems to me like it's working".
Altman's bullish view on India's AI efforts is a telling statement given that
he had faced a backlash in 2023, when he had expressed doubts about powerful AI
models emerging outside of the United State.
During
the fireside chat on Wednesday, IT Minister Vaishnaw said that innovation can
come from anywhere in the world "why shouldn't it come from India".
Altman's
visit, his second one in two years, comes at an interesting juncture when
OpenAI's (and indeed the western world's) dominance in artificial intelligence
has abruptly been challenged by Chinese upstart DeepSeek, which turned heads
with its low-cost AI model R1, built at less than USD 6 million and guzzling a
fraction of compute power when compared to popular models like ChatGPT.
Deepseek
overtook ChatGPT as the top-ranked free app on Apple's App Store, as the US
tech industry -- that has long-justified injecting billions of dollars into AI
investments -- watched in sheer disbelief last week.
AI
chipmaker and Wall Street superstar Nvidia shed USD 590 billion in market
capitalisation last Monday, suffering the single greatest one-day value wipeout
of any firm in history.
Ahead
of Altman's visit, a 2023 video of him -- where he had expressed doubts about
powerful AI models emerging outside of the United States -- has also
resurfaced.
The
US has been accelerating its AI efforts and just last month, President Donald
Trump announced up to USD 500 billion private sector investment to fund
artificial intelligence infrastructure.
The
new company, Stargate, which is being created in partnership with Oracle,
SoftBank and Microsoft-backed Open AI, would add to tech companies' large
investments in US data centres, huge buildings full of servers that provide
massive computing power.
On
Monday, Japanese technology giant SoftBank Group and OpenAI stepped up their AI
partnership with a 50:50 held company -- SB OpenAI Japan.
Altman's
visit also assumes significance as OpenAI is facing legal hurdles in India,
including cases involving claims of copyright breaches. OpenAI has, however,
reportedly maintained it only uses publicly available data and has argued that
Indian courts have no jurisdiction to hear the matter.
With
the global tech landscape becoming increasingly dynamic and complex, India is
fortifying its sovereign interests with its own AI model.
Last
week, India outlined global AI ambitions with plans to build its own
'foundational model' that could take on the might of ChatGPT, DeepSeek R1, and
others, as it lined up "most affordable" common compute facility
powered by 18,693 GPUs to be used by startups and researchers, for creating
Artificial Intelligence applications, and new algorithms.
IT
Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw announced that India is all set to launch its own
safe and secure indigenous AI model at an affordable cost. He said compared to
global models costing USD 2.5-3 per hour of usage, India's AI Model will cost
less than Rs 100 per hour (USD 1.16 per hour) after 40 per cent government
subsidy.
The minister had exuded confidence that India will build a foundational model that is world class, and that it will be able to compete with best models across the globe.
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