Dubai Telegraph - India chases 'DeepSeek moment' with homegrown AI models

EUR -
AED 4.320613
AFN 74.117478
ALL 96.442418
AMD 442.965175
ANG 2.105578
AOA 1078.829709
ARS 1631.774443
AUD 1.668892
AWG 2.11766
AZN 2.003369
BAM 1.955679
BBD 2.369854
BDT 143.792973
BGN 1.938418
BHD 0.443537
BIF 3489.384994
BMD 1.176478
BND 1.493183
BOB 8.130361
BRL 6.111998
BSD 1.176627
BTN 107.004588
BWP 15.579775
BYN 3.374149
BYR 23058.95917
BZD 2.366454
CAD 1.612345
CDF 2670.603737
CHF 0.913588
CLF 0.025881
CLP 1021.970374
CNY 8.127989
CNH 8.122983
COP 4344.566733
CRC 561.565398
CUC 1.176478
CUP 31.176654
CVE 110.259612
CZK 24.223667
DJF 209.533527
DKK 7.470983
DOP 72.325236
DZD 153.079714
EGP 55.958211
ERN 17.647163
ETB 183.110239
FJD 2.614428
FKP 0.875093
GBP 0.873288
GEL 3.152572
GGP 0.875093
GHS 12.930983
GIP 0.875093
GMD 86.485823
GNF 10323.495518
GTQ 9.028559
GYD 246.13065
HKD 9.194331
HNL 31.12895
HRK 7.53334
HTG 154.232463
HUF 379.81224
IDR 19863.646257
ILS 3.670574
IMP 0.875093
INR 106.960044
IQD 1541.498466
IRR 49559.115239
ISK 144.91877
JEP 0.875093
JMD 183.341041
JOD 0.834151
JPY 182.819978
KES 151.671279
KGS 102.882918
KHR 4731.628013
KMF 492.944817
KPW 1058.861969
KRW 1706.039445
KWD 0.360938
KYD 0.980523
KZT 587.303796
LAK 25213.446417
LBP 105367.416314
LKR 364.057568
LRD 217.092933
LSL 18.956474
LTL 3.473832
LVL 0.711639
LYD 7.443636
MAD 10.789373
MDL 20.208411
MGA 5035.689715
MKD 61.642991
MMK 2470.337876
MNT 4199.737452
MOP 9.471855
MRU 47.113698
MUR 54.612663
MVR 18.119725
MWK 2040.339594
MXN 20.22159
MYR 4.591822
MZN 75.188638
NAD 18.956151
NGN 1583.197898
NIO 43.297332
NOK 11.234642
NPR 171.213361
NZD 1.977153
OMR 0.452319
PAB 1.176622
PEN 3.952456
PGK 5.131749
PHP 68.26278
PKR 328.84913
PLN 4.222384
PYG 7607.498915
QAR 4.28889
RON 5.09568
RSD 117.427716
RUB 90.373636
RWF 1718.464899
SAR 4.4134
SBD 9.472597
SCR 15.643158
SDG 707.661228
SEK 10.671156
SGD 1.493066
SHP 0.882663
SLE 28.855141
SLL 24670.144354
SOS 671.27005
SRD 44.262655
STD 24350.709131
STN 24.49849
SVC 10.295497
SYP 13011.341119
SZL 18.949832
THB 36.715509
TJS 11.148624
TMT 4.129436
TND 3.416289
TOP 2.832676
TRY 51.582427
TTD 7.964509
TWD 37.189046
TZS 3035.311843
UAH 50.930528
UGX 4235.793008
USD 1.176478
UYU 45.657769
UZS 14370.297762
VES 468.528838
VND 30553.120901
VUV 140.037401
WST 3.177924
XAF 655.905435
XAG 0.014621
XAU 0.000235
XCD 3.179489
XCG 2.120669
XDR 0.816215
XOF 655.924947
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.592146
ZAR 18.926641
ZMK 10589.710396
ZMW 22.279248
ZWL 378.825278
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    -2.2500

    82.13

    -2.74%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.96

    +0.04%

  • RELX

    0.4700

    31.46

    +1.49%

  • AZN

    -2.2500

    204.2

    -1.1%

  • RYCEF

    0.4000

    18.2

    +2.2%

  • JRI

    0.0800

    13.13

    +0.61%

  • RIO

    0.7500

    97.09

    +0.77%

  • BCE

    0.2300

    25.8

    +0.89%

  • NGG

    0.0100

    90.28

    +0.01%

  • GSK

    -0.8444

    59.52

    -1.42%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    23.8

    +0.17%

  • VOD

    0.1200

    15.65

    +0.77%

  • BTI

    1.0900

    62.08

    +1.76%

  • BP

    -0.3308

    38.18

    -0.87%

India chases 'DeepSeek moment' with homegrown AI models
India chases 'DeepSeek moment' with homegrown AI models / Photo: Ludovic MARIN - AFP

India chases 'DeepSeek moment' with homegrown AI models

Fledgling Indian artificial intelligence companies showcased homegrown technologies this week at a major summit in New Delhi, underpinning big dreams of becoming a global AI power.

Text size:

But analysts said the country was unlikely to have a "DeepSeek moment" -- the sort of boom China had last year with a high-performance, low-cost chatbot -- any time soon.

Still, building custom AI tools could bring benefits to the world's most populous nation.

At the AI Impact Summit, Prime Minister Narendra Modi lauded three new models released by Indian companies, along with other examples of the country's rising profile in the field.

"All the solutions that have been presented here demonstrate the power of 'Made in India' and India's innovative qualities," Modi said Thursday.

One of the startups making a buzz at the five-day summit attended by world leaders and top technology CEOs was Sarvam AI, which this week released two large language models it says were trained from scratch in India.

Its models are optimised to work across 22 Indian languages, says the company, which received government-subsidised access to advanced computer processors.

The five-day summit, which wraps up Friday, is the fourth annual international meeting to discuss the risks and rewards of the fast-growing AI sector.

It is the largest yet and the first in a developing country, with Indian businesses striking deals with US tech giants to build large-scale data centre infrastructure to help train and run AI systems.

Another Indian company that drew attention with product debuts this week include the Bengaluru-based Gnani.ai, which introduced its Vachana speech models at the summit.

Trained on more than a million hours of audio, Vachana models generate natural-sounding voices in Indian languages that can process customer interactions and allow people to interact with digital services out loud.

Job disruption and redundancies, including in India's huge call centre industry, have been one key focus of discussions at the Delhi summit.

- 'Biggest market' -

The government-supported BharatGen initiative, led by a group based at a university in Mumbai, also released a new multilingual AI model this week.

So-called sovereign AI has become a priority for many countries hoping to reduce dependence on US and Chinese platforms while ensuring that systems respect local regulations including on data privacy.

AI models that succeed in India "can be deployed all over the world", Modi said on Thursday.

But experts said the sheer computational might of the United States would be hard to match.

"Despite the headline pledges, we don't expect India to emerge as a frontier AI innovation hub in the near term," said Reema Bhattacharya, head of Asia research at risk intelligence company Verisk Maplecroft.

"Its more realistic trajectory is to become the world's largest AI adoption market, embedding AI at scale through digital public infrastructure and cost-efficient applications," she said.

Prihesh Ratnayake, head of AI initiatives at think-tank Factum, told AFP that the new Indian AI models were "not really meant to be global".

"They're India-specific models, and hopefully we'll see their impact over the coming year," he said.

"Why does India need to build for the global scale? India itself is the biggest market."

And Nanubala Gnana Sai, a MARS fellow at the Cambridge AI Safety Institute, said that homegrown models could bring other benefits.

Existing models, even those developed in China, "have intrinsic bias towards Western values, culture and ethos -- as a product of being trained heavily on that consensus", Sai told AFP.

India already has some major strengths including "technology diffusion, eager talent pool and cheap labour", and dedicated efforts can help startups pivot to artificial intelligence, he said.

"The end-product may not 'rival' ChatGPT or DeepSeek on benchmarks, but will provide leverage for the Global South to have its own stand in an increasingly polarised world."

G.Mukherjee--DT