‘This is a technology that will particularly benefit those who want to take agency over it’.

Kindly note that this illustration generated using ChatGPT has only been posted for representational purposes.
Key Points
- OpenAI has 100 million users in India, including 30 million students, making it a key market.
- India is the fastest-growing market for Codex, with user numbers quadrupling after the latest update.
- OpenAI plans to support all 22 official Indian languages on ChatGPT to expand accessibility.
- OpenAI will work with the Indian government on AI governance, focusing on access, productivity, and nation-building.
The global conversation on democratising access to artificial intelligence (AI) — so that as many people as possible can participate and benefit — is incomplete unless countries like India are part of it, Chris Lehane, chief global affairs officer at OpenAI, told Business Standard.
Democratising Access to AI
“We have 100 million regular users in India, of whom 30 million are students.
“It is also our fastest-growing market for Codex and among the top five for our science tool.
“This is a technology that will particularly benefit those who want to take agency over it,” Lehane said, speaking on the sidelines of the ongoing AI Impact Summit in New Delhi.
The total number of Codex users in India has quadrupled over the past fortnight since an updated version of the application was launched, he added.
India: Fastest-Growing Market for Codex
As countries in the Global South consider framing AI governance architectures, it is important to remember that AI is a general-purpose technology — akin to the steam engine or the printing press — and that regulations should reflect that, Lehane said.
“If countries such as India are to achieve AI diffusion at scale, they will need governance models that ensure access to the technology for everyone,” he noted.
“We will certainly operate within India’s existing regulatory frameworks.
“But we will also advocate for policy approaches that are consistent with our mission: to democratise access to AI,” Lehane added.
These governance rules should also consider AI’s ‘nation-building’ potential to ensure its benefits reach as many people as possible, he said.
100 Million Users, 30 Million Students
In countries like India, where digital maturity is still developing, and many users interact with platforms like ChatGPT in their native languages, OpenAI is ensuring coverage of all 22 languages listed in the Eighth Schedule of the Indian Constitution.
Of these, ChatGPT performs very well in at least a dozen, Lehane said.
For OpenAI to succeed in India, it must ensure that citizens benefit from productivity gains and emerging opportunities, he stressed.
To support new users — many of whom are young and less digitally literate — OpenAI will work with the Indian government to understand the policy directions they want to pursue for AI and other emerging technologies, he added.
Having access to local data, Lehane said, will put OpenAI in the strongest position to address challenges as newer users come on board.
Feature Presentation: Ashish Narsale/Rediff


