There is a recurring rhythm to human progress: a breakthrough is born as a luxury, matures into a commodity, and ultimately solidifies into infrastructure.
We saw it with electricity, we saw it with the internet, and in 2016, we saw India do it with money through the Unified Payments Interface (UPI). UPI took the friction out of digital finance, transforming it from a walled garden guarded by private banks into a digital public good.
Now, it appears India is attempting to do for intelligence what they did for payments.
The global narrative around Artificial Intelligence is currently dominated at one end by massive private moats. At the other end are various open source/open weight efforts.
Silicon Valley primarily approaches AI as a capital-intensive arms race. Trillion-dollar tech players ramp huge compute, train very large models, and rent out intelligence via by the drink APIs. This intelligence is a proprietary and monetized luxury.
Enter the “AI ka UPI” initiative and the IndiaAI Mission discussed by Ashwini Vaishnaw at this weekโs India AI Impact Summit.
Instead of treating AI as a product to be sold, India is architecting it as a Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI). The government is doing the heavy liftingโsubsidizing the compute, curating population-scale datasets, and building foundational models.
Currently, they are making over 38,000 GPUs available to startups and researchers at around โน65 (less than a dollar) an hour, a sheer fraction of the global cost. They are rolling out sovereign stacks like BharatGen and conversational models fluent in 22 regional languages.
“They are building an ‘orchestration layer’ for cognition.”
If a developer wants to build a voice-agent to help a rural farmer diagnose a crop disease, they don’t have to worry about the backend compute, the dataset acquisition, or paying a premium to a tech giant. They just plug into the public rails.
As I watch this unfold, I am struck by the philosophical shift it represents. We have become deeply conditioned to view AI through the lens of scarcity and subscription. But what happens when intelligence becomes a public utility?
It shifts the center of gravity of innovation. It becomes about who can solve the most acute, localized, human problems. The friction of creation drops to near zero. A bootstrapped team in a tier-two city can suddenly wield the same computational reasoning as a VC funded Silicon Valley startup.
There is also an element of sovereignty here. In the 21st century, relying on foreign infrastructure for your population’s cognitive processing seems akin to relying on a foreign nation for your electricity. True technological independence requires sovereign AIโmodels trained on indigenous data, reflecting local culture, nuances, and values, rather than the implicit biases of others.
The implications could be staggering. We are moving from an era where AI is an elite tool to an era where it is the invisible, ubiquitous fabric of daily life for over a billion people.
The true measure of AI’s ultimate impact won’t be found in benchmark scores on a server farm. It will be found in the quiet dignity of a citizen accessing global markets through a vernacular voice assistant, or a rural clinic predicting patient outcomes with public compute.
I look forward to following Indiaโs AI efforts as this and other AI initiatives are more clearly defined.
Questions to consider
1. The Value of Human Capital: If artificial intelligence becomes as ubiquitous, reliable, and cheap as public electricity, what uniquely human skills will become the new premium in a hyper-automated society?
2. Cognitive Sovereignty: How will the geopolitical landscape shift when emerging economies no longer need to import their “cognitive infrastructure” and inherent cultural biases from Western tech players?
3. The Centralization of Truth: When a government builds and curates the foundational AI models for over a billion people, where is the line between providing a democratized public good and engineering a centralized cultural narrative?
What else???
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