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Updated Dec 12, 2025 · 23:01
Computer News Updated Dec 12, 2025

India's AI Leadership: How It's Shaping a Responsible Future for the Global South

Experts at a major tech summit are pointing to India as a crucial leader in developing responsible artificial intelligence for the Global South. They argue the country is uniquely positioned to balance frontier innovation from the US and China with practical, large-scale social impact. A key challenge highlighted is the uneven global access to the computing power needed to train and run advanced AI models. The discussion also stressed that for AI to be truly effective, it must be culturally aware and safe, as mistakes in real-world applications can have serious consequences.

India pivotal force in shaping responsible AI for Global South: Experts

New Delhi, December 11

Experts from academia and industry highlighted India as a pivotal force in shaping an inclusive and responsible AI future for the Global South.

From tackling disparities in compute access to ensuring culturally grounded AI systems and safe deployment at scale, speakers at the Carnegie Global Technology Summit Innovation Dialogue 2025 highlighted India's unique ability to bridge global innovation with local impact, positioning the country as both a testbed and a torchbearer for AI-driven social transformation.

CK Cheruvettolil, a Consultant at DGA-Albright Stonebridge Group, said access to the computing infrastructure that powers modern AI is unevenly distributed worldwide.

"So I'm here to talk about compute, specifically AI compute, and what the Global South can do to participate and take advantage of all the advances happening in AI," he said. "There is computing available around the world, but it's not evenly distributed. For the Global South to take advantage of compute, it really needs access to that compute."

Cheruvettolil praised India's emerging leadership at this global crossroads. Positioned between the US, which leads frontier-model development, and China's rapid expansion of open-source models, India offers what he calls a middle way: a nation with both the scale and the capability to deploy AI for social impact.

"India is very well positioned to bring AI to the masses and to be a leader for the Global South... to kind of balance what America is doing in frontier models and what China is doing as well," he noted.

Rodolfo Corona, an AI researcher at UC Berkeley, said, "When you port the benchmark between regions or cultures, certain notions of evaluation validity are going to be violated," he explained. "If I move the benchmark from a country in the global north to one in the south, the evaluation is no longer going to be as reliable."

"There are many elements of cultural components in the south that are simply not understood by actors in the north. Involving regional actors will be of great importance for the region to develop solutions for itself," Corona said.

He also highlighted India's convening power within the Global South. "It's been my perception that India has been instrumental in bringing together diverse actors from policy, academia, and industry... that glue process has been really encouraging to see."

On AI regulation, he said, "Yes, I think AI should be regulated to a certain extent. There are failure modes that can put users at risk--such as bias, exposure of personal information, and risky recommendations... AI is no different from social media in needing safeguards to protect local populations."

David Joseph Menezes, Director, Programs at People+Ai, said, "Between 2023 and now, AI has rapidly advanced in multilingual capacity. Now that AI can talk to people, what should it say? It's not enough to just understand the voice... it must responsibly respond, actually, to provide value."

Menezes emphasised that safety is not abstract in real-world deployments; errors have consequences.

"If a farmer asks a query and they get back wrong advice and act on it, it could result in crop failure for the year. Many people make decisions based on LLM responses. So the question is, is it reliable?"

Carnegie India hosted the Global Technology Summit Innovation Dialogue in New Delhi on December 11 as an official pre-summit event for the upcoming AI Impact Summit 2026, scheduled to be held in New Delhi from February 15 to 20, 2026.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Finally, someone is talking about the cultural component! AI trained on Western data will never understand the nuances of our languages, family structures, or social norms. India leading this charge for the Global South is not just good, it's essential.

David E

The point about uneven compute access is critical. It's not just about building models, but about who has the infrastructure to run them. If India can create affordable, scalable access, it will democratize AI in a way Silicon Valley hasn't.

Siddharth J

While the ambition is great, I hope this isn't just talk. We need to see concrete policies and investment in our own research institutions, not just relying on foreign tech. The "middle way" sounds good, but execution is everything. Let's build, not just convene.

Nisha Z

Multilingual AI that actually understands Hinglish, Tamil, Bengali... that's the dream! If AI can help my mother in her village get accurate info about govt schemes or healthcare in her language, that's real development. Jai Hind!

Rohit P

Regulation is a double-edged sword. We need safeguards against bias and privacy issues, yes, but we must not stifle innovation with excessive red tape. Hope the 2026 summit finds that balance. India's scale makes it the perfect testbed.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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