
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman predicts India to be the largest market for AI, says 'what Indians are doing with AI is...'
Disclaimer Statement: This content is authored by a 3rd party. The views expressed here are that of the respective authors/ entities and do not represent the views of Economic Times (ET). ET does not guarantee, vouch for or endorse any of its contents nor is responsible for them in any manner whatsoever. Please take all steps necessary to ascertain that any information and content provided is correct, updated, and verified. ET hereby disclaims any and all warranties, express or implied, relating to the report and any content therein.
More

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Mint
an hour ago
- Mint
GPT-5 brings four new personalities to ChatGPT: what they do and how to use them — check our step-by-step guide
OpenAI unveiled its latest large language model powering ChatGPT during a live-streamed event on Thursday. The new GPT-5 model comes with a number of enhancements across areas like coding, accuracy, reasoning, writing, health-related questions and multimodal abilities. However, a feature in the new model that has gone relatively under the radar is the introduction of four new personalities in ChatGPT that allow users to customize the chatbot according to their requirements. So what exactly are personalities and how can you turn them on in ChatGPT? Let's find out below. Personality in ChatGPT is the style and tone that the chatbot uses while responding to questions from users. It is a combination of traits, voice, and behaviours that ultimately determine whether the chatbot's answers feel friendly, casual, concise, or professional. Changing the personality of ChatGPT allows users to choose a style for the chatbot that is most relevant to them. The new personalities also work alongside the memories saved by users in ChatGPT, allowing them to customize the personalities according to their preferences. OpenAI says that saved preferences of a user could adjust or override the personality's behaviour. Changing the personality in ChatGPT will not change the inherent capabilities of the chatbot or the safety rules it follows. It also does not affect the type of content users can ask it to produce. So if the user has the 'Listener' personality turned on and they ask for Python code for a certain problem, ChatGPT will still provide it in a clear and functional manner rather than its usual reflective and conversational style. ChatGPT personalities are only available to OpenAI's paying users, including Plus, Pro, and Team subscribers. The new personalities take effect only in a new conversation; any ongoing conversation will continue in the chatbot's original personality. OpenAI officially describes the Cynic personality as 'Sarcastic and dry, delivers blunt help with wit. Often teases, but provides direct, practical answers when it matters.' This personality will provide candid responses that may include sarcastic observations but will not be hostile or irrelevant. It's best for users who want candid yet entertaining replies from ChatGPT that are actionable. It could also be good for creative brainstorming sessions. While describing this personality, OpenAI writes, 'Precise, efficient, and emotionless, delivering direct answers without extra words.' With the Robot personality turned on, users can expect direct answers first, followed by concise reasoning. ChatGPT will clearly map problems into inputs, levers, and outputs when applicable. There could also be occasional citations for references when making factual claims. It is best for times when users want direct, fast, and unambiguous answers from the chatbot. This personality is also useful for technical tasks, code walkthroughs, and troubleshooting. OpenAI's official description for this personality goes, 'Warm and laid-back, reflecting your thoughts back with calm clarity and light wit.' This personality is aimed at helping users make their own decisions by giving responses that discuss trade-offs and likely outcomes. It acts as a conversational sounding board and allows users to reflect on a problem. 'Playful and curious, explaining concepts clearly while celebrating knowledge and discovery,' reads OpenAI's official description for this personality. With the Nerd personality turned on, users can expect deep yet accessible explanations, along with possible next steps they could take. It could also give users encouragement to explore follow-up paths or experiments. Make sure you are subscribed to ChatGPT Plus, Pro, or Team Select the profile icon at the bottom left corner of the ChatGPT website Click on 'Customize ChatGPT' to open the settings page Scroll down to find the 'What personality should ChatGPT have?' option Enter your desired personality here If you are using the ChatGPT iOS or Android app: Go to settings by clicking on the profile icon Tap on 'Personalization', then select 'Custom Instructions' Write your chosen personality in the 'What personality should ChatGPT have?' option


Mint
an hour ago
- Mint
Why Big Tech is focusing on Indian languages
On Thursday, OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman unveiled GPT-5 with native support for 12 Indian languages. Last year, Google expanded its AI model Gemini's native support for nine Indian languages. With artificial intelligence startups Anthropic and Perplexity also focusing on Indian languages, regional-language internet is fast emerging as a huge AI battleground. Mint explains why. Why are languages important for AI firms? Foundational AI models are trained on massive troves of data and produce responses in plain text. To do this, AI firms rely on publicly available information to train their models, and most information on the internet is in English. As a result, the world's top AI models are all natively based on data that's available in English. This leads to various biases in the way AI models understand user queries, which makes wider language access a fundamental necessity for AI companies. Why are Indian languages important for AI firms? Hindi, as per global language repository Ethnologue, is the world's third-most spoken language, after English and Mandarin. Cumulatively, 10 Indian languages are spoken by 1.7 billion people, or 21% of the world's population—ahead of English (with 1.5 billion speakers), and varying versions of Chinese (1.4 billion). This makes India the world's single-largest region for tech companies to tap into. Beyond the numbers, experts underline that each language has its own nuance, regional dialects, biases, and complications. Indian languages, owing to their scale, are crucial resources for AI models that cater to the world. Are all global firms targeting India? Yes. Last week, Sam Altman said OpenAI's latest model, GPT-5, natively supports 12 Indian languages. Last year, Google announced native support for nine Indian languages. Meta, too, said last year that its Llama family of AI models would support eight Indian languages. Anthropic's Claude supports Hindi and Bangla. Perplexity, another prominent Silicon Valley startup, supports inputs and outputs in Hindi. How important is India in terms of business potential? This is difficult to assess. India is one of the world's largest user bases for any AI firm. However, diverse consumer behaviour makes it difficult to monetize this market. As a result, India's contribution to the net revenue of global tech firms has only ranged between 1% and 4%. AI-first companies, however, are of the opinion that they can incrementally add to the way global companies have generated revenue from India, as most AI tools and platforms need enterprise-grade subscriptions to leverage AI. With a vast base of users, most tech firms expect India to become a major monetization hub. Can AI see the replication of India's DPI push? India, through the government's backing, is keen to build foundational models trained natively on Indian languages. Startups and industry veterans state that in the long run, an AI model trained on most Indian languages can be used as a template for other non-English AI models around the world. This, in the long run, could be akin to India's push to offer digital public infrastructure (DPI) to the world—which it did in digital payments via the unified payments interface (UPI). While other nations are also building their own sovereign AI models, India believes it can gain soft power by offering AI models to the global south.


Hindustan Times
2 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Volkswagen to pull the plug on ID.5 EV, blame it on sluggish sales
Volkswagen is planning to shelve its ID.5 electric car from the OEM's EV lineup as early as 2027. Introduced in 2021, the swoopy electric SUV seems to end its run with a seven-year life cycle, as the automaker has no plan to bring a second-generation iteration of the model. The reason behind the decision to drop the model from the product lineup is possibly sluggish sales, as the ID.5 failed to gain traction in European markets. British automotive publication Autocar UK has reported that Volkswagen will drop the ID.5 from its product portfolio in 2027. The report claimed that consumers in the European markets prefer more spacious and conventionally styled ID.4 over the ID.5, which is a reason why the brand never tasted upbeat sales for the latter model. Also, not launching the ID.5 in the United States further limited its potential. Also check these Cars Find more Cars UPCOMING Volkswagen ID.4 77 kWh 77 kWh 418 km 418 km ₹ 50 - 60 Lakhs Alert Me When Launched Tesla Model Y 75 kwh 75 kwh 622 km 622 km ₹ 59.89 Lakhs Compare View Offers BMW iX1 LWB 66.4 kWh 66.4 kWh 531 km 531 km ₹ 49 Lakhs Compare View Offers UPCOMING VinFast VF7 75.3 kWh 75.3 kWh 450 km 450 km ₹ 60 - 65 Lakhs Alert Me When Launched BYD Sealion 7 82.56 kWh 82.56 kWh 567 km 567 km ₹ 48.90 Lakhs Compare View Offers Hyundai Ioniq 5 72.6 kWh 72.6 kWh 631 km 631 km ₹ 46.05 Lakhs Compare View Offers Interestingly, the move comes at a time when, after a hesitant start, the Volkswagen Group's EV onslaught is finally paying off. In the first half of 2025, Volkswagen Group's global EV sales rose 47 per cent to about 465,000 units, giving the company an 11 per cent share of the global market. What's more interesting is that the ID.5 actually tops the Volkswagen Group's EV sales charts for the first half of the year, but only because its numbers are combined with those of the ID.4. Also, discontinuation of the ID.5 raises questions about the fate of the Ford Capri. Ford revived the iconic nameplate on its own coupe-styled electric crossover in 2024, but production was soon reduced in response to rapidly deteriorating market conditions for electric vehicles. Now it is to be seen how Ford reacts to the discontinuation of the ID.5. The discontinuation of Volkswagen ID.5 seems to be part of the brand's broader effort to cull underperforming models. Volkswagen has already shelved the Passat sedan, recently ended Arteon production, and is rumoured to drop the Touareg in 2026. The T-Roc Cabriolet, too, will bow out in 2027. The plans for a smaller minivan to replace the ageing Touran has also been scrapped. Check out Upcoming EV Cars in India. First Published Date: