India minister highlights DeepSeek’s impact on AI industry
The new AI breakthrough amid global race.
India’s IT minister, Ashwini Vaishnaw, has praised the Chinese startup DeepSeek for its breakthrough in affordable AI, which has disrupted the sector with a powerful model costing just $5.5 million. He likened DeepSeek’s efficient approach to his government’s efforts to develop a local AI model through the IndiaAI mission, a $1.25 billion initiative to support AI startups and infrastructure development in India.
DeepSeek’s rapid success, claiming it took just two months to build its model using Nvidia’s H800 chips, has challenged the belief that China lags behind the US in AI. The startup’s app recently surpassed OpenAI’s ChatGPT in downloads on the Apple App Store, further highlighting its impact. Vaishnaw’s comments were seen as a response to remarks made by OpenAI’s CEO Sam Altman, who had previously expressed doubts about India’s ability to compete in the AI space with a $10 million budget.
Vaishnaw pointed out that while some questioned the government’s large AI investment, DeepSeek’s achievements prove that significant results can be achieved with more modest spending. As Altman prepares to revisit India in early February, his comments from last year continue to stir debate online, especially following DeepSeek’s unexpected success in the AI race.
Altman’s visit coincides with ongoing legal issues for OpenAI in India, as the company is engaged in a copyright dispute with local digital news and book publishers. The growing attention on AI developments in India underscores the shifting dynamics in the global AI race.