logo
JioMart eyes dark store network for growth

JioMart eyes dark store network for growth

Fashion Network09-05-2025

JioMart is considering entering the dark store segment to strengthen its delivery network in areas not adequately covered by its current kirana-led model as it increases its focus on quick commerce.
'An internal team is evaluating options for the dark stores foray,' said JioMart's chief executive officer Sandeep Varaganti on tie sidelines of the Phygital Retail Convention 2025, India Retailing reported. While the business has a presence in 1,000 cities through its kirana network, some areas remain underserved. 'Kirana is a thriving ecosystem, but I won't say they are not impacted,' said Varaganti about the rise of quick commerce and need for local distribution hubs.
JioMart is also actively developing its own quick commerce offering with a focus on profitability. Varaganti, who previously worked at e-commerce giant Amazon, assured that JioMart is actively pursuing the quick commerce route for growth but that the business will eschew burning money in favour of profitability.
Reliance Retail 's broader infrastructure, comprising 18,000 stores across numerous formats, supports JioMart's operations, and the group maintains a cash flow-driven approach, according to Varaganti. Indian consumers are increasingly preferring 10-minute order fulfilment over traditional three-day delivery times but Varaganti is confident that a 30 minute wait time will also be well received.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hey chatbot, is this true? AI 'factchecks' sow misinformation
Hey chatbot, is this true? AI 'factchecks' sow misinformation

France 24

time5 hours ago

  • France 24

Hey chatbot, is this true? AI 'factchecks' sow misinformation

With tech platforms reducing human fact-checkers, users are increasingly relying on AI-powered chatbots -- including xAI's Grok, OpenAI's ChatGPT, and Google's Gemini -- in search of reliable information. "Hey @Grok, is this true?" has become a common query on Elon Musk's platform X, where the AI assistant is built in, reflecting the growing trend of seeking instant debunks on social media. But the responses are often themselves riddled with misinformation. Grok -- now under renewed scrutiny for inserting "white genocide," a far-right conspiracy theory, into unrelated queries -- wrongly identified old video footage from Sudan's Khartoum airport as a missile strike on Pakistan's Nur Khan airbase during the country's recent conflict with India. Unrelated footage of a building on fire in Nepal was misidentified as "likely" showing Pakistan's military response to Indian strikes. "The growing reliance on Grok as a fact-checker comes as X and other major tech companies have scaled back investments in human fact-checkers," McKenzie Sadeghi, a researcher with the disinformation watchdog NewsGuard, told AFP. "Our research has repeatedly found that AI chatbots are not reliable sources for news and information, particularly when it comes to breaking news," she warned. 'Fabricated' NewsGuard's research found that 10 leading chatbots were prone to repeating falsehoods, including Russian disinformation narratives and false or misleading claims related to the recent Australian election. In a recent study of eight AI search tools, the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia University found that chatbots were "generally bad at declining to answer questions they couldn't answer accurately, offering incorrect or speculative answers instead." When AFP fact-checkers in Uruguay asked Gemini about an AI-generated image of a woman, it not only confirmed its authenticity but fabricated details about her identity and where the image was likely taken. Grok recently labeled a purported video of a giant anaconda swimming in the Amazon River as "genuine," even citing credible-sounding scientific expeditions to support its false claim. In reality, the video was AI-generated, AFP fact-checkers in Latin America reported, noting that many users cited Grok's assessment as evidence the clip was real. Such findings have raised concerns as surveys show that online users are increasingly shifting from traditional search engines to AI chatbots for information gathering and verification. The shift also comes as Meta announced earlier this year it was ending its third-party fact-checking program in the United States, turning over the task of debunking falsehoods to ordinary users under a model known as "Community Notes," popularized by X. Researchers have repeatedly questioned the effectiveness of "Community Notes" in combating falsehoods. 'Biased answers' Human fact-checking has long been a flashpoint in a hyperpolarized political climate, particularly in the United States, where conservative advocates maintain it suppresses free speech and censors right-wing content -- something professional fact-checkers vehemently reject. AFP currently works in 26 languages with Facebook's fact-checking program, including in Asia, Latin America, and the European Union. The quality and accuracy of AI chatbots can vary, depending on how they are trained and programmed, prompting concerns that their output may be subject to political influence or control. Musk's xAI recently blamed an "unauthorized modification" for causing Grok to generate unsolicited posts referencing "white genocide" in South Africa. When AI expert David Caswell asked Grok who might have modified its system prompt, the chatbot named Musk as the "most likely" culprit. Musk, the South African-born billionaire backer of President Donald Trump, has previously peddled the unfounded claim that South Africa's leaders were "openly pushing for genocide" of white people. "We have seen the way AI assistants can either fabricate results or give biased answers after human coders specifically change their instructions," Angie Holan, director of the International Fact-Checking Network, told AFP. "I am especially concerned about the way Grok has mishandled requests concerning very sensitive matters after receiving instructions to provide pre-authorized answers."

Indian airline IndiGo orders 30 Airbus A350 widebody planes
Indian airline IndiGo orders 30 Airbus A350 widebody planes

France 24

time18 hours ago

  • France 24

Indian airline IndiGo orders 30 Airbus A350 widebody planes

"We are placing a firm order for 30 Airbus A350-900s," said Pieter Elbers, the CEO of IndiGo, a company founded in 2006 and already behind the largest contract by volume in the history of civil aviation -- 500 Airbus single-aisle aircraft by 2023. The Indian low-cost carrier, the country's biggest by market share, is positioning itself as a significant player in the long-haul market. "This strategic move will enable IndiGo to spread its wings further and expand its long-haul international network", the company said in a statement. "This is yet another step in defining the airline's long-term plans of international expansion". The A350 planes, with ranges of up to 15,000 kilometres (9,300 miles), will allow it to further expand its network. Overall, IndiGo has placed orders for around 1,000 aircraft from the A320 family, Airbus's most successful model and rival of the Boeing 737 MAX, which has endured multiple setbacks after a series of safety scares. Willie Walsh, director general of the International Air Transport Association (IATA), which began its annual industry conference in New Delhi on Sunday, said "the development of India's air connectivity in recent years has been nothing short of phenomenal". Indian domestic air growth is "running at over 10 percent" per year, Walsh said, ahead of the conference. The growth of its economy has made India and its 1.4 billion people the world's fourth-largest air market -- domestic and international -- with IATA projecting it will become the third biggest within the decade. Last year, India's domestic air passenger traffic reached a "historic milestone, surpassing 500,000 passengers in a single day", according to India's Ministry of Civil Aviation. The ministry boasts of a sector "experiencing a meteoric rise". Railways remain hugely popular but travelling by trains crisscrossing a country about three-quarters the area of the European Union is often slow and chaotic. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is slated to address IATA delegates on Monday, has made the development of the air sector a priority since coming to power in 2014. India has doubled its number of airports in the past decade to 157, with plans to have as many as 400 by 2047.

US tech giants ask European Commission for 'simplest possible' AI code
US tech giants ask European Commission for 'simplest possible' AI code

Euronews

time3 days ago

  • Euronews

US tech giants ask European Commission for 'simplest possible' AI code

US tech giants Amazon, IBM, Google, Meta, Microsoft and OpenAI have called upon the European Commission to keep its upcoming Code of Practice on General-Purpose AI (GPAI) 'as simple as possible', according to now published minutes of a meeting held last week. In a meeting with Werner Stengg, an official in the cabinet of EU Tech Commissioner Henna Virkkunen, the companies said that the code 'should be as simple as possible, so as to avoid redundant reporting and unnecessary administrative burden'. The voluntary Code of Practice on GPAI, aims to help providers of AI models – such as large language models like ChatGPT, comply with the EU's AI Act. The final draft was due out on 2 May but was delayed because the Commission 'received a number of requests to leave the consultations open longer than originally planned.' The EU executive appointed thirteen experts last September to work on the guidelines and organised plenary sessions and workshops enabling some 1,000 participants to share feedback. The previous texts were criticised by publishers for impacts on copyright rules, while US Big Tech companies said the draft would stymie innovation and prove burdensome. The companies told Stengg that the final text should 'allow its signatories sufficient time to implement the various commitments after the publication of the final version of the Code' and warned that it should not go beyond the intended scope of the AI Act itself. Earlier this month, ABBA member Björn Ulvaeus warned lawmakers in Brussels that he is concerned about 'proposals driven by Big Tech' that weaken creative rights under the AI Act. The artist - who is the president of the International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers (CISAC) - echoed concerns voiced by other creative industry players in recent months. The Commission said previously that the aim is to publish the latest draft 'before the summer'. On 2 August, the rules on GP AI tools enter into force. The AI Act itself - which regulates AI tools according to the risk they pose to society - entered into force in August last year. Its provisions apply gradually, before the Act will be fully applicable in 2027. Ukraine is no longer prohibited from using long-range weapons on targets within Russia in the ongoing effort to repulse its invasion, one of its key European allies signalled on Monday. In the past, Ukraine received long-range missiles from the US, UK, Germany, and France, but was only allowed to use them against any Russian forces that were in occupied Ukrainian territory. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz told journalists that the lifting of restrictions - which, he later clarified, was a decision made months ago - will make "the decisive difference in Ukraine's warfare". "A country that can only oppose an attacker on its own territory is not defending itself adequately," he said. Following Merz's comments, Euronews Next takes a look at which weapons Ukraine can now use unrestricted, and how they might impact the course of the war now in its fourth year. The Army Tactical Missile Systems (ATACMS) is a long-range surface-to-surface missile artillery weapon system that strikes targets "well beyond the range of exising Army canons," according to US manufacturer Lockheed Martin. The missiles on the system are "all-weather adaptable, stealthy firepower" against targets up to 300 km away. The missiles are fired either from the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) or MLRS M270 platforms, both produced by Lockheed Martin. The Russian Defence Ministry confirmed in November 2024 that it had shot down some of the first foreign-made long-range missiles fired directly into their territory, including six US-made Army Tactical Missile Systems (ATACMS). But it was not the first time Ukraine had fired them. Reports from as far back as October 2023 suggest Ukraine fired ATACMS missiles that reportedly destroyed nine helicopters at Russian bases in the eastern part of the country. The Storm Shadow, or SCALP to the French, is a long-range missile jointly manufactured between France and the UK that weighs 1,300 kg and has a range "in excess" of 250 km. European multinational manufacturer MBDA said the missile works well for pre-planned attacks against stationary targets, like hardened bunkers or key infrastructure. The missile is described by MBDA as offering a high-precision strike day or night because it combines GPS, onboard guidance systems, and terrain mapping to find its target. Once the Storm Shadow missile approaches a target, an infrared device matches an image of the target with stored pictures on its onboard hard drive to make sure the target matches its mission, MBDA said. The missile's warhead has a first charge that allows it to penetrate a bunker or clear soil, then after it lets out a fuze to control how the ordnance detonates. It's already in service with the UK, French, and Italian militaries, MBDA said. In Germany, much of the conversation has centred on supplying Ukraine with Taurus missiles. The Taurus KEPD 350, manufactured jointly by Swedish company Saab and MBDA Deutschland, is an "incomparable modular standoff missile" that can land precision strikes on stationary targets like bunkers and high-value targets like large radar stations. The Taurus flies at low terrain to penetrate thick air defenses and shoot down targets with a 481 kg warhead system called the MEPHISTO. The air-to-surface missile system has a range of over 500 km and weighs 1400 kg. Before Germany's last federal election held in February, Merz, as leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) party, had called for the delivery of Taurus missiles to Ukraine. Merz has now signalled that Ukraine and Germany would produce the "This will be a cooperation on an industrial level, which can take place both in Ukraine and here in Germany," Merz said. While restrictions on long-range weapons have been lifted, Merz declined to confirm if Germany would be delivering Taurus missiles to Kyiv or not.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store