AI and Anti-Fraud Measures Key to India's Digital Growth: COAI Summit

The COAI DigiCom Summit 2026 concluded with stakeholders advocating for an AI-led, secure digital ecosystem. Government officials and industry leaders emphasized stronger collaboration to tackle spam and digital frauds. India's progress towards 6G and the role of AI in transforming networks were key highlights. The summit stressed the need for policy frameworks enabling innovation and sustainable monetization.

Key Points: AI, Anti-Fraud Key to Digital Growth: COAI Summit 2026

  • AI-led networks are reshaping telecom ecosystems
  • Stronger anti-fraud measures needed with ecosystem-wide approach
  • India gearing up for 6G-ready ecosystem amid 4G/5G progress
  • Need for fibre expansion, submarine cables, sovereign AI capacity
3 min read

AI-led networks, stronger anti-fraud measures key to digital growth: COAI DigiCom Summit

COAI DigiCom Summit 2026 calls for AI-led networks and stronger anti-fraud measures to secure India's digital ecosystem, with focus on 6G, 5G, and telecom innovation.

"As automation increases, ensuring security and trust will be paramount. - NK Bhola, Wireless Advisor"

New Delhi, April 25

The COAI DigiCom Summit 2026 called for an AI-led, secure and resilient digital ecosystem, with government officials, regulators and industry leaders emphasising stronger collaboration and proactive measures to tackle spam and digital frauds.

The summit concluded with stakeholders advocating "a secure, resilient and innovation-driven digital ecosystem, underpinned by next-generation telecom networks and emerging technologies such as Artificial Intelligence and 5G."

Highlighting India's telecom progress, NK Bhola, Wireless Advisor, said the country is "gearing up for a 6G-ready ecosystem" amid strong progress in 4G and 5G spectrum availability. He added that "as automation increases, ensuring security and trust will be paramount."

Industry leaders also stressed the growing role of artificial intelligence in transforming networks. Sajan Paul, General Manager - HPE Networking, India, noted that "artificial intelligence is reshaping networking, both in structure and operations," adding that the focus is now on embedding AI to enable "smarter, more efficient and transformative telecom ecosystems."

A panel discussion on building intelligent networks highlighted that "the future of telecom networks will be increasingly AI-led," with a shift towards compute-driven infrastructure and the need for collaboration across the ecosystem.

On policy and governance, Manish Sinha, Member (Finance), Department of Telecommunications, said artificial intelligence is emerging as a "key transformative force," but also flagged concerns around frauds and spam, stressing the need to "prioritize trust, security and human impact."

Another panel on tackling spam and digital frauds underscored that addressing the issue requires "a proactive, ecosystem-wide approach, combining AI-led detection... and stronger coordination across Government, industry and digital platforms."

On future technologies, Dr Punit Rathod of Qualcomm said the convergence of 6G and AI is driving "unprecedented demand for higher bandwidth," making additional spectrum critical for innovation.

Experts also highlighted that the next phase of connectivity will be driven by "5G Advanced," with increasing focus on enterprise and mission-critical applications, while calling for policy frameworks that enable innovation and sustainable monetisation models.

On infrastructure and manufacturing, Deb Kumar Chakrabarti, Member (Services), Department of Telecommunications, said telecom manufacturing remains a "strategic imperative for India," while stressing the need for cost-efficient and targeted production decisions.

Meanwhile, Dr Devesh Tyagi, CEO of NIXI, said that with India surpassing 1 billion internet users, the next phase of growth will be driven by Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities, highlighting the need to ensure service parity across regions.

The summit concluded with stakeholders highlighting that India has the "foundational strengths of scale, talent, capital and policy support to emerge as a global digital infrastructure hub," while emphasising the need to accelerate fibre expansion, invest in submarine cables and build sovereign AI capacity.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
They mention 'stronger coordination' but we've been hearing that for years. I still get 5 spam calls daily despite being on DND. Unless TRAI puts real penalties on telcos, nothing will change. AI detection alone won't fix this.
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Sarah B
Interesting to see India leapfrogging into 6G discussions while many suburban areas still lack stable 4G. Let's get the basics right first - fibre to villages, affordable data plans, then talk about AI-led networks. Priorities, please.
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Vikram M
The NIXI point about Tier 2/3 cities is crucial. I shifted from Mumbai to a small town last year and the digital divide is stark. 5G coverage maps say my area is 'ready' but actual speeds are laughable. Focus on real infrastructure, not just summit talks.
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Kavya N
Still waiting for the day when digital fraud victims get quick redressal. My father lost ₹15,000 to a spam call last year and the complaint process was a nightmare. If 'AI-led detection' means faster resolution, I'm all for it. But show results first. 😤
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David E
While the summit sounds impressive, I worry about data privacy implications of AI-led networks. Who controls all this data? How will it be secured? India needs a strong data protection law before deploying AI at this scale. Trust has to be earned.

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