India’s high-profile AI Impact Summit in New Delhi drew Silicon Valley’s top brass and bold pledges, even as logistical snags, security confusion and minor scandals overshadowed the showcase. Alphabet’s Sundar Pichai and OpenAI’s Sam Altman extolled India’s advantages—deep technical talent and a vast consumer market—while the government set an ambitious target to attract $200 billion in AI investment over two years.
Operational hiccups ranged from unclear media access and gridlocked traffic to a last-minute Bill Gates no-show and a flap over a university’s robot dog that was actually made by a Chinese firm. A viral onstage moment—in which Altman and Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei appeared to skip a choreographed hand-hold—fed online chatter as the rivals’ tensions simmered after Anthropic’s Super Bowl jab.
Still, companies rolled out deals: OpenAI said it would be the first customer of Tata Consultancy Services’ data center business, and Google announced partnerships with researchers and educational institutions to advance its Gemini AI offerings in India. Despite the missteps, executive sentiment remained upbeat, underscoring India’s growing centrality to the global AI race.
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