City
Epaper

Advisory on need for permission for AI deployment not applicable to startups: Rajeev Chandrasekhar

By ANI | Updated: March 4, 2024 12:35 IST

New Delhi [India], March 4 : The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology's (MeitY) recent advisory on Artificial Intelligence ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], March 4 : The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology's (MeitY) recent advisory on Artificial Intelligence was aimed at significant platforms only and necessary permission would be needed for large platforms only, and the same would not apply to startups, clarified Union Minister for Electronics and Technology Rajeev Chandrasekhar.

In an advisory issued on March 1, 2024, the Ministry reportedly said all artificial intelligence (AI) models, large-language models (LLMs), software using generative AI or any algorithms that are currently being tested, are in the beta stage of development or are unreliable in any form must seek "explicit permission of the government of India" before being deployed for users on the Indian internet.

In the advisory, the Ministry asked all platforms to ensure that "their computer resources do not permit any bias or discrimination or threaten the integrity of the electoral process" by the use of AI, generative AI, LLMs or any such other algorithm.

"Recent advisory of @GoI_MeitY needs to be understood. Advisory is aimed at the Significant platforms and permission seeking from Meity is only for large platforms and will not apply to startups," the Minister said in a post on X on Monday, attaching a media report filed basis the March 1 advisory.

In the X post, the minister said the Advisory was aimed at untested AI platforms from deploying on the Indian Internet.

"Process of seeking permission, labelling & consent-based disclosure to user about untested platforms is an insurance policy to platforms who can otherwise be sued by consumers," the minister further clarified, stressing that safety and trust of India's internet is a shared and common goal for government, users and platforms.

India's stance has always been that the internet and every other emerging technology should be deployed in a "safe and trusted" manner.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi in December asserted that the deep fake was a challenge for the entire world as it could be used to create 'deepfakes' to purposefully spread false information or have malicious intent behind their use.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessUnion Budget 2026 likely to set 9% growth target for next year, increase capex to Rs 12-12.2 lakh crores: BoB economist

BusinessGerman business leaders highlight growing Indo-German partnership, praise India's global trajectory

CricketWPL 2026 Points Table: Updated Women’s Premier League Standings After Gujarat Giants (GG) Vs Delhi Capitals (DC) Match

Other SportsWomen's T20 WC 2026 ticket sales cross 2017 ODI WC total: Report

BusinessSensex recovers 1,100 points from day’s low over fresh US-India trade talk hopes

Business Realted Stories

BusinessIndo German Carbons Limited Strengthens Brand Protection Measures Following Repeated Trademark Infringement

BusinessIndian Stock Market Recovers After US Ambassador’s Trade Deal Remarks; Sensex Up 1,000 Points, Nifty Reclaims 25,800

BusinessIndia to be invited to join US-led Pax Silica tech initiative: Ambassador Sergio Gor

BusinessThe Biggest Gap in Stock Market Education: How StockSprint Is Bridging Capital, Discipline, and Real-Market Exposure

BusinessInvestor Home Solutions (IHS) Sets a New Benchmark for Investor Engagement in Ultra-Luxury Real Estate