Vishal Sikka Clarifies 2015 OpenAI Donation, Recalls Infosys AI Push

Former Infosys CEO Vishal Sikka clarified that a 2015 engagement with OpenAI was a philanthropic donation, not a strategic investment. He praised the recent AI Impact Summit, linking it to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's leadership and India's potential in AI. The context includes a reported Infosys proposal to invest $1 billion in OpenAI around 2015-16, which was later withdrawn and is now seen as a major missed opportunity. This episode highlights strategic debates within Infosys, where Sikka's AI-first vision reportedly faced resistance from co-founder Narayana Murthy.

Key Points: Sikka on Infosys's Missed OpenAI Investment & AI Summit Praise

  • 2015 OpenAI donation clarified as philanthropic
  • Missed $1B Infosys investment in OpenAI discussed
  • Sikka's AI-first push at Infosys faced internal resistance
  • AI Impact Summit praised as setting new standard
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Vishal Sikka clarifies 2015 proposed investment in OpenAI amid missed opportunity debate

Ex-Infosys CEO Vishal Sikka clarifies 2015 OpenAI donation as philanthropic, discusses missed $1B investment opportunity and praises India's AI leadership.

"It is a reflection of both the Prime Minister and the government's leadership and also what India can mean for AI - Vishal Sikka"

By Sahil Pandey, New Delhi, February 19

Former Infosys CEO and founder & CEO Vianai systems,Vishal Sikka on Thursday addressed the questions about an early association with OpenAI, clarifying that the engagement was philanthropic in nature.

Responding to a query of ANI, on whether an investment made in 2016 could have multiplied significantly in value, Sikka said, "We did give a donation to OpenAI back in 2015 and it was wonderful to work with them."

His remarks come amid renewed discussions around missed opportunities in India's technology sector during the formative years of the global AI boom.

Sikka praised the AI Impact Summit, calling it "incredible" and noting that it has "set a new standard in a gathering around AI." He said the event reflects both the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the broader vision of the government. "It is a reflection of both the Prime Minister and the government's leadership and also what India can mean for AI and of course what AI means for India," he said.

During his tenure between 2014 and 2017, Sikka had aggressively positioned Infosys to become an AI-first enterprise, advocating automation, platform-led transformation and deeper bets on emerging technologies.

However, the push reportedly ran into resistance from Infosys co-founder Narayana Murthy, who raised concerns over executive compensation, governance standards and cultural direction within the company.

Infosys proposal to invest up to USD 1 billion into OpenAI in 2015-16, a move that was later withdrawn, is now being discussed as a defining moment. With OpenAI now at the forefront of the generative AI revolution, such a stake would hypothetically have been valued at several multiples of the original amount.

While global technology firms doubled down on frontier AI research and product innovation, much of the Indian IT industry continued to rely heavily on labour arbitrage and traditional services models.

Today, as AI reshapes enterprise technology and operating models worldwide, the episode is increasingly viewed as a case study in strategic risk appetite and corporate boardroom alignment.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Hindsight is always 20/20. It's easy to call it a missed opportunity now. Back in 2015, OpenAI was just a research lab. Sikka had the right vision for Infosys to be AI-first, but internal politics and resistance to change held it back. A lesson for all Indian companies.
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Rohit P
Glad Sikka clarified it was a donation, not an investment. The narrative was getting twisted. The real issue is our IT industry's reliance on the old "body shopping" model. The AI Impact Summit is a good step, but we need more aggressive funding for homegrown AI research, not just praising events.
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Sarah B
Interesting to see the clash of visions between Sikka and Murthy. Murthy is a legend, but sometimes founders can be too conservative about new tech. Governance is important, but so is not missing the next big wave. Infosys could have been a leader, not a follower.
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Vikram M
The PM's vision for AI is strong, as Sikka said. But vision needs execution. We need our big IT firms to take real risks and build, not just provide services for global AI products. Let's hope we learn from this and don't miss the AI bus completely. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳
K
Kavya N
As someone in tech, this story hits hard. Many of us saw the AI revolution coming. But in Indian companies, getting approval for such a large, speculative investment is nearly impossible. The process is too slow. We need to move at the speed of tech, not the speed of bureaucracy.

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