
ChatGPT Down: OpenAI's Chatbot Faces Significant Global Outage Affecting Thousands of Users

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The Hindu
3 hours ago
- The Hindu
India can reframe the Artificial Intelligence debate
Less than three years ago, ChatGPT dragged artificial intelligence (AI) out of research laboratories and into living rooms, classrooms and parliaments. Leaders sensed the shock waves instantly. Despite an already crowded summit calendar, three global gatherings on AI followed in quick succession. When New Delhi hosts the AI Impact Summit in February 2026, it can do more than break attendance records. It can show that governments, not just corporations, can steer AI for the public good. India can bridge the divide But the geopolitical climate is far from smooth. War continues in Ukraine. West Asia teeters between flareups. Trade walls are rising faster than regulators can respond. Even the Paris AI Summit (February 2025), meant to unify, ended in division. The United States and the United Kingdom rejected the final text. China welcomed it. The very forum meant to protect humanity's digital future faces the risk of splintering. India has the standing and the credibility to bridge these divides. India's Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology began preparations in earnest. In June, it launched a nationwide consultation through the MyGov platform. Students, researchers, startups, and civil society groups submitted ideas. The brief was simple: show how AI can advance inclusive growth, improve development, and protect the planet. These ideas will shape the agenda and the final declaration. This turned the consultation into capital and gave India a democratic edge no previous host has enjoyed. Here are five suggestions rooted in India's digital experience. They are modest in cost but can be rich in credibility. Pledges and report cards First, measure what matters. India's digital tools prove that technology can serve everyone. Aadhaar provides secure identity to more than a billion people. The Unified Payments Interface (UPI) moves money in seconds. The Summit in 2026 can borrow that spirit. Each delegation could announce one clear goal to achieve within 12 months. A company might cut its data centre electricity use. A university could offer a free AI course for rural girls. A government might translate essential health advice into local languages using AI. All pledges could be listed on a public website and tracked through a scoreboard a year later. Report cards are more interesting than press releases. Second, bring the global South to the front row. Half of humanity was missing from the leaders' photo session at the first summit. That must not happen again. As a leader of the Global South, India must endeavour to have as wide a participation as possible. India should also push for an AI for Billions Fund, seeded by development banks and Gulf investors, which could pay for cloud credits, fellowships and local language datasets. India could launch a multilingual model challenge for say 50 underserved languages and award prizes before the closing dinner. The message is simple: talent is everywhere, and not just in California or Beijing. Third, create a common safety check. Since the Bletchley Summit in 2023 (or the AI Safety Summit 2023), experts have urged red teaming and stress tests. Many national AI safety institutes have sprung up. But no shared checklist exists. India could endeavour to broker them into a Global AI Safety Collaborative which can share red team scripts, incident logs and stress tests on any model above an agreed compute line. Our own institute can post an open evaluation kit with code and datasets for bias robustness. Fourth, offer a usable middle road on rules. The United States fears heavy regulation. Europe rolls out its AI Act. China trusts state control. Most nations want something in between. India can voice that balance. It can draft a voluntary frontier AI code of conduct. Base it on the Seoul pledge but add teeth. Publish external red team results within 90 days. Disclose compute once it crosses a line. Provide an accident hotline. Voluntary yet specific. Fifth, avoid fragmentation. Splintered summits serve no one. The U.S. and China eye each other across the frontier AI race. New Delhi cannot erase that tension but can blunt it. The summit agenda must be broad, inclusive, and focused on global good. The path for India India cannot craft a global AI authority in one week and should not try. It can stitch together what exists and make a serious push to share AI capacity with the global majority. If India can turn participation into progress, it will not just be hosting a summit. It will reframe its identity on a cutting edge issue. Syed Akbaruddin is a former Indian Permanent Representative to the United Nations and, currently, Dean, Kautilya School of Public Policy, Hyderabad
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Business Standard
4 hours ago
- Business Standard
Worldwide, it's an artificial intelligence-powered way to browse the web
Next-gen browsers are poised to redefine online interaction, challenging Chrome's reign New Delhi Listen to This Article The web browser, the ubiquitous software enabling access to the internet, has remained unchanged in its core purpose of fetching and displaying online content for decades. That's now changing as tech giants bring the power of artificial intelligence (AI) to the browser. Alphabet's Google Chrome is by far the top browser, holding more than 70 per cent market share and boasting over 3 billion users. Chrome's dominance and how people interact with the internet are set to change with the arrival of AI browsers: Perplexity's Comet and OpenAI's reported offering. Since its public launch in 2008, Chrome has fended off


Indian Express
4 hours ago
- Indian Express
What is ‘Baby Grok'? Elon Musk announces new kid-friendly AI app for educational content
Elon Musk has announced that his artificial intelligence company xAI is developing a new chatbot designed specifically for children. Called Baby Grok, the app is expected to provide kid-friendly and educational content, offering a safer alternative to existing AI tools. In a short post on X, Musk wrote, 'We're going to make Baby Grok @xAI, an app dedicated to kid-friendly content.' He did not share further details about how the new tool will work, or how it will differ from xAI's main chatbot, Grok. We're going to make Baby Grok @xAI, an app dedicated to kid-friendly content — Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 20, 2025 The announcement comes just days after xAI introduced customisable 3D animated companions for Grok. The feature had drawn criticism online, with some users saying the avatars were too sexualised. Baby Grok is expected to be a simplified version of Grok that offers safe and educational content for children. Musk's chatbot, first launched in 2023, is designed as an alternative to tools like OpenAI's ChatGPT, Google's Gemini, and Meta's Llama. It currently includes three modes DeepSearch, Think, and Big Mind which allow users to choose how detailed they want their answers to be. Grok 4, the latest version, was released earlier this month. At the time, Musk said the chatbot could handle complex academic questions 'better than PhD level in every subject, no exceptions'. He added that while it sometimes lacks common sense and has not yet invented anything new, this could change in future. The update followed a controversy in which Grok shared antisemitic messages on X, leading to widespread backlash. Many users welcomed the idea of a child-friendly version. One parent wrote, 'Much needed. I have to let my kids use my app right now over ChatGPT.' Another said, 'Thank you!!!!! My daughter has been wanting to play with it but I wouldn't let her.' Thank you!!!!! My daughter has been wanting to play with it but I wouldn't let her 😂 — Natalie F Danelishen (@Chesschick01) July 20, 2025 xAI has not yet announced a release date for Baby Grok.