Rajeev Chandrasekhar stated on Monday that startups were not covered by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology’s (MeitY) recent advice for artificial intelligence (AI) platforms. Instead, it was intended for larger platforms.
The advise was delivered to all AI platforms and intermediaries in the nation, including Google Gemini and Ola Krutrim, India’s first AI unicorn, according to Chandrasekhar, who briefed the media on it.
Ola Krutrim has declared that it will follow the rules.
The warning, according to Chandrasekhar, aims to stop unproven AI platforms from being used on the Indian internet.
The procedure for obtaining consent, labelling, and consent-based disclosure to users regarding unproven platforms is an insurance policy for platforms, he continued. If not, users may sue the platforms.
MeitY’s advise has requested authorization from social media middlemen and AI platforms prior to the introduction of AI products within the nation.
According to the advise, businesses who host unreliable or inadequately tested AI platforms and want to set up an online sandbox for testing must obtain government approval and declare the platform as “under-tested.”
In a different piece, Chandrasekhar stated: “It is important to advise anyone who are putting lab-level or undertested AI platforms online, causing harm or facilitating illegal content, to be aware that these platforms have explicit legal requirements under both IT and criminal law. Therefore, the easiest approach to protect yourself is to utilise labelling and explicit consent. If you run a large platform, you should also get government approval before deploying error-prone platforms.
“Laws are in place to ensure that the Indian Internet is safe and trustworthy.”
There was no response to an email addressed to Snap, Meta, or Google.
The government has requested that platforms make sure that the Indian voting process is not hampered by biases resulting from their AI models or platforms.
“When it comes to illegal content, the public Internet should not be confused with a sandbox,” the minister wrote in his piece.
Within 15 days following the advice, all affected platforms were requested to provide MeitY with an action-taken cum status report.
The Confederation of Indian Industry says that this is a positive development.
“But in order to fully realise AI’s potential, the right amount of regulation and innovation freedom are required,” a representative stated.
According to industry leaders, social media platforms may be more affected by this than e-commerce companies.
According to an industry official, “social media platforms like Google and Facebook use diversified data and have to be more cautious now, while e-commerce companies use data related to commerce, products, and customers.”
“But e-commerce businesses might also have to provide the government with their large learning models.”
Industry insiders speculated that Google’s Gemini chatbot, which is under fire in India for an answer it produced for Prime Minister Narendra Modi, may have been the catalyst for the advise.
The government’s desire to maintain control over several deepfakes that could affect the elections is the other factor. An official stated, “They want the social media platforms to shoulder some accountability.
The inquiries sent to Flipkart and Amazon went unanswered.
Confusing Artificial Intelligence “Bad move by India,” stated Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Aravind Srinivas on X.
Bindu Reddy, the CEO of Abacus AI, wrote on X, saying, “If you know the Indian government, you know this will a huge drag.”
Vaishnaw is in favour of AI advice.
The government’s advise, according to Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw on Monday, is a step towards ensuring that Artificial Intelligence (AI) models are appropriately educated prior to their public deployment, but it is not legally binding.
Speaking at a press conference, Vaishnaw stated, “The advice is not a regulatory framework, but an advisory to ensure that intermediaries and AI platforms test their models properly before deploying them, so as to ensure the safety and trust of Indian citizens.”
According to Vaishnaw, the rules only pertain to social networking sites and not other industries.
He stated that organisations focusing on AI in healthcare and agriculture will not be impacted by the recommendation. The minister added that platforms cannot absolve themselves of accountability for the prejudices that result from untrustworthy and unproven platforms.
“People apologise for not testing the model well enough. That is incorrect; these platforms must accept accountability for their actions,” he continued. Mishra Ashutosh