logo
Free-AI: How well India adopts AI will shape its future

Free-AI: How well India adopts AI will shape its future

Mint2 hours ago
Rahul Matthan The Reserve Bank of India's Committee on the Framework for the Responsible and Ethical Enablement of AI (Free-AI) has submitted its report. It has recommended an approach that enables innovation and mitigates risk. Contradictory as it sounds, it can be done. The Reserve Bank of India has constituted a Committee on the Framework for the Responsible and Ethical Enablement of AI (Free-AI)
Gift this article
For the past six months, I served on the Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) Committee on the Framework for the Responsible and Ethical Enablement of AI (Free-AI). It has been an enriching experience putting it together, and I am sure I speak for all members of the committee when I say that we are proud of what we produced. Now that we have submitted our report, I am glad to finally be able to write about it.
For the past six months, I served on the Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) Committee on the Framework for the Responsible and Ethical Enablement of AI (Free-AI). It has been an enriching experience putting it together, and I am sure I speak for all members of the committee when I say that we are proud of what we produced. Now that we have submitted our report, I am glad to finally be able to write about it.
Unlike most artificial intelligence (AI) regulation frameworks, this is not one that is focused solely on risk. On the contrary, we have proposed a two-pronged approach—one that both enables innovation and mitigates risk. In my view, the weaving together of these two seemingly contradictory sets of objectives is what's novel about this report.
To enable the use of AI in the financial sector, we centred our recommendations around three distinct pillars: infrastructure, policy and capacity. We proposed the establishment of the sort of data infrastructure that would be necessary for building AI models and, more generally, encouraging the use of AI in the financial sector.
There is a lot of financial sector data in disconnected silos that, if organized, can be helpful for building models and developing AI applications. To that end, we have recommended an initial investment of ₹ 5,000 crore, with an additional ₹ 1,000 crore per annum over the next five years.
We have also suggested setting up an AI innovation sandbox in which RBI-regulated entities, fintech firms and just about anyone interested in applying AI innovations to the financial sector can experiment. Since the general-purpose large language models (LLMs) that are currently available may not serve the specialized needs of our financial sector, we have recommended developing sector-specific models capable of catering to the country's linguistic diversity.
In order to reward innovation in all these areas, we are hoping that RBI will institute challenge grants and innovation prizes designed to shine a light on noteworthy innovations. Finally, we believe that AI can and should be integrated into India's digital public infrastructure so that its reach can be extended even further than is currently possible.
Under the policy pillar, we believe that the country needs a flexible approach that can adapt to keep pace with the evolution of technology. Regulators should periodically assess existing policies and not be afraid to review and amend them if new technologies so demand.
We have suggested that RBI constitute a permanent multi-stakeholder committee for this purpose. We were also keen to encourage the use of AI to reach those otherwise excluded or underserved. The report encourages the use of AI to bring first-time borrowers into the country's formal financial system and recommends appropriate relaxation of existing regulations to enable that.
Recognizing that AI systems are fundamentally probabilistic, we believe that it would not be appropriate to apply the binary lens we currently use to determine liability. While we need to ensure that customers are always protected, if we penalize AI developers for each small misstep, we will stifle innovation.
To that end, we have recommended a graded approach to supervisory action under which the first instance of a failure will not automatically trigger full scope supervisory action, as long as the regulated entity has taken appropriate steps to mitigate harm and proactively remediates issues that have been identified.
There is a need for capacity building in the sector, and for that we have recommended measures to improve the capacity of regulated entities as well as the regulators and supervisors responsible for the sector.
We have also suggested putting in place a framework for sharing best practices so that the entire sector can benefit from everyone's experiences with using AI.
As important as it is to incentivize innovation, we must make sure that the framework is designed to mitigate risk. To that end, we have proposed 13 recommendations across three broad pillars: governance, protection and assurance.
Regulated entities are encouraged to establish board-approved AI policies and to ensure that data is protected across the entire AI lifecycle. They need to ensure that they have in place appropriate governance frameworks for the AI systems they use. Since most regulated entities already have product approval processes, we ask that they be modified to take into account the use of AI in their products and services. Beyond pre-release testing, we also recommend regular red-teaming to ensure that failures can be anticipated in advance.
Customer protection is paramount, and regardless of how AI is used by users, regulated entities must ensure that they are protected at all times. This includes appropriate grievance redressal measures and awareness campaigns to keep customers well-informed while interacting with AI. To ensure AI availability, regulated entities are encouraged to put in place business continuity plans. We have also suggested the establishment of an incident-reporting framework with a good-faith approach to encourage timely disclosure of notable incidents.
AI can prove transformational for India's development and we have to do whatever is necessary to allow this to happen. It calls for an entirely different approach to regulation than what we currently have—one that encourages responsible innovation and also mitigates risks.
This, in sum, is the Free-AI approach.
The author is a partner at Trilegal and the author of 'The Third Way: India's Revolutionary Approach to Data Governance'. His X handle is @matthan. Topics You May Be Interested In
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How to invest in government bonds online via RBI Retail Direct and exchanges? Here's a step-by-step guide
How to invest in government bonds online via RBI Retail Direct and exchanges? Here's a step-by-step guide

Mint

time3 minutes ago

  • Mint

How to invest in government bonds online via RBI Retail Direct and exchanges? Here's a step-by-step guide

Government bonds are debt instruments issued by a government to raise money. They offer investors a safe way to earn fixed or floating returns. These bonds are generally designed to fund projects such as long-term infrastructure or construction projects, while also providing investors with steady income and principal repayment on maturity. Technological advancements and measures by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) have made investing in these bonds online straightforward and seamless for retail investors. By following these seven simple steps, investors can invest in government bonds online successfully: It is important to keep in mind that, if you are investing through RBI Retail Direct, you do not need a demat account. Instead, you must open a free Retail Direct Gilt (RDG) account on On the other hand, if you are investing through brokers or stock exchange platforms, then a demat account linked to your bank account is required. This account will hold your securities electronically, similar to stocks. Carefully complete your customer registration, i.e., KYC formalities. Then register on RBI Retail Direct ( or through broker platforms integrated with NSE goBID or BSE Direct (e.g., Zerodha, HDFC Securities, ICICI Direct, Upstox, Groww, or Axis Direct). If in doubt, seek professional guidance. You can also speak to the designated customer service executive of your respective bond purchasing platform. Once the process of registration is complete, you should log in to your account and link your savings bank account for seamless payment during purchase Go through the list of open government bond auctions or bond offerings. You can participate in primary issues (newly issued bonds) through RBI Retail Direct or applications linked to NSE goBID/BSE Direct. Furthermore, for secondary market purchases, you can use reputed brokerage platforms such as Zerodha, HDFC Securities, ICICI Direct, Upstox, Groww, or Axis Direct. Specifically select the bond type, maturity period, and investment amount. Submit your bid during the auction window or purchase directly if available in the secondary market. After selecting the bond that aligns with your financial goals, make the payment using UPI or net banking from your linked account. For auctions, funds are debited only if the allotment is successful; otherwise, the blocked amount is released or refunded automatically. Once successful, bonds are credited either to your RDG account (if using RBI Retail Direct) or to your demat account (if using a broker). You can track your interest payments, holdings, and investment dates through the respective platform you opt to use. Easy availability of various government securities. Simple online process via RBI Retail Direct or broker apps. Safe transactions and recording of data with sovereign backing. Comfortable portfolio viewing and management in a single demat account. Ability to compare and trade bonds on secondary markets if required. Disclaimer: The information provided above is for general awareness and educational purposes only. Government bond investments are subject to market risks, interest rate fluctuations, and regulatory changes. Investors are advised to evaluate their financial goals and consult a qualified advisor before making any investment decisions.

AI adoption spreads across sectors as Indian workforce seeks upskilling
AI adoption spreads across sectors as Indian workforce seeks upskilling

Business Standard

time3 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

AI adoption spreads across sectors as Indian workforce seeks upskilling

As artificial intelligence pervades work places across the globe, Indian workers are increasingly leaning on AI tools to stay employable and grow in their careers, according to hiring platform Indeed's latest workforce study. The survey, conducted in May 2025 among more than 3,000 professionals across the country, found that 43 per cent of respondents feel confident about adapting to technologies such as generative AI and agentic AI over the next two to five years. The findings suggest that AI is not only being treated as a productivity tool but also as a skill that could open opportunities for higher pay, promotions, and new career paths. Nearly one-third of respondents expressed concern that failing to keep pace with new technologies could affect their job security. The report surveyed 3,001 workers, spanning white- and blue-collar employees as well as business leaders, across 12 industries including technology, retail, manufacturing, travel, legal, healthcare, and HR. Respondents ranged from clerical staff to business owners. Which age group is most confident about AI adoption? Mid-career professionals, particularly those aged 35 to 54, appear most prepared for an AI-integrated workplace, according to the report. Almost half (49 per cent) of the respondents said they feel ready to navigate changes brought by AI, outpacing their younger peers aged 18 to 24. At the same time, this group is seeking more opportunities to upskill. Fifty-six per cent of mid-career respondents said they want significantly more training to stay competitive, compared with 41 per cent of younger workers. Their motivations include career advancement, staying up to date with evolving technology, and becoming more efficient in their roles. 'There's a determined confidence building across India's workforce,' said Sashi Kumar, head of sales, Indeed India. 'Mid-career professionals, in particular, are not only using AI but actively seeking upskilling opportunities to master it.' How is AI changing day-to-day work across sectors? The report highlights that AI has moved beyond hype and is becoming embedded in daily work. About 34 per cent of those surveyed expect to use Generative AI tools frequently in the near future, while a quarter anticipate using Agentic AI, which can autonomously complete complex tasks. AI adoption is also growing in traditionally hands-on roles. 70 per cent of blue-collar workers surveyed agreed that technology assists them in their job, and two in ten are using Generative AI already. Their usages include workflows related paperwork, and in some cases customer service. What support do workers expect from employers? While workers are showing strong interest in learning, many are also asking for structural support from employers. The survey found that 29 per cent of respondents want access to self-paced online training to build AI skills on their own terms. Others want employers to allocate time during work hours to learn and adapt. 'As we move ahead, upskilling in AI wouldn't just be good practice; it'll be the career accelerator,' Kumar said. 'Workers who build AI skills will be better positioned for higher pay, promotions, and future roles.' Risk of unemployment during the AI-transition phase While optimism is high, analysts have also flagged risks tied to AI adoption. A recent Goldman Sachs report has estimated that globally, unemployment could rise by half a percentage point during the AI-transition period, as displaced workers search for new roles. Jobs considered to face higher displacement risks include computer programmers, accountants and auditors, legal and administrative assistants, and customer service representatives. These findings underline the challenges of balancing efficiency gains with potential disruption, even as many workers and employers prepare for an AI-centred future.

OpenAI ChatGPT Go Plan in India at ₹399: Complete 2025 Pricing Model Analysis
OpenAI ChatGPT Go Plan in India at ₹399: Complete 2025 Pricing Model Analysis

Time of India

time12 minutes ago

  • Time of India

OpenAI ChatGPT Go Plan in India at ₹399: Complete 2025 Pricing Model Analysis

OpenAI has launched a new model for pricing the ChatGPT Go plan at just ₹399 per month in India, signaling a major shift in global AI pricing strategy. Positioned as an affordable yet powerful option, the Go plan bridges the gap between free access and premium subscriptions. Here's a detailed comparison of all five pricing models in 2025-Free, Go, Plus, Team, and Pro, and how India's exclusive Go plan is redefining accessibility. iStock Free Plan: A Public Demo for Starters The Free plan is the beginner's plan. It has a cost of ₹0 and allows informal users to use ChatGPT with basic limits on messages and tools. Whereas OpenAI does not provide explicit caps, Free is intentionally limiting. It pushes those who require dependability or more sophisticated tools into paid levels. For students, occasional users, or first-timers with AI, Free is quite sufficient. But when you reach repeated usage limits or require features such as sophisticated data analysis or extended file upload, Free rapidly reveals its constraints. ChatGPT Go: India's New Budget-Friendly Plan Available in India only, ChatGPT Go is available at ₹399 per month and is the value unlock for those who have grown beyond Free but don't wish to pay ₹1,999 for Plus. The plan offers: More messages than Free, larger file uploads, increased image creation, deeper data analysis, and longer memory. With UPI support and regional language features, it fits in with India's digital landscape. In essence, Go makes ChatGPT a more affordable day-to-day tool for students, solo creators, and cost-conscious professionals. OpenAI is hoping that making this happen at this price point will lead to massive growth in adoption in one of the world's fastest-growing AI markets. Although there are fewer features than Plus, its low price makes it the most affordable premium AI plan in the world. It is intended as a "bridge" between the Free and Plus plans. ChatGPT Plus: The Mainstream Power Tier Then there is ChatGPT Plus, which costs ₹1,999 a month in India (or €23/£20 in the EU). This is the plan most serious individual users opt for. It greatly expands capabilities: Expanded message limits, file uploads, data analysis, and image generation. It includes access to deep research tools and multiple reasoning models and voice and video features, including advanced voice mode and screen sharing with codex agents. Live Events For writers, analysts, solo entrepreneurs, and knowledge workers, Plus is the default productivity motor. In contrast to Go, it's not merely greater quotas; it unleashes qualitatively different tools capable of managing more sophisticated workflows and collaboration tasks. ChatGPT Pro: High-Performance for Heavy Operators The pinnacle of the solo pricing tier is ChatGPT Pro, which costs ₹19,999 a month in India (or $200/€229/£200 elsewhere). That is not for recreational users; it's reserved for operators who expect regular access to the best models OpenAI has. Pro comes with Unlimited message and upload access, pro reasoning access to GPT-5, and Research preview of upcoming features. This is the plan for professionals doing research, R&D, high-risk content creation, or high-end coding contexts. For them, the price doesn't feature itself; it's about time saved and reliability in volume. ChatGPT Team: Collaboration at Scale Whereas Free, Go, Plus, and Pro are for individuals, ChatGPT Team is the first level designed specifically for organisations. The Team plan costs ₹ 2,099 per user per month. Team offers: Shared workspaces for several users, Organisational-level admin controls and governance, more usage limits, and greater availability than individual plans For small businesses, startups, or groups of creators, the plan aggregates use into a single hub. The benefit is not merely per-user access but group efficiency—teams can organize prompts, GPTs, and resources as a group. OpenAI does not release INR pricing for Team, maintaining it in USD. A Practical Playbook That's how to make the decision: stay with Free if your use is casual, sporadic, or exploratory. You can step up to Go if you are in India and need higher reliability, higher numbers of messages, and data analysis without spending a fortune. Select Plus if you are a daily creator or knowledge worker who requires richer tools and more profound research capabilities. Select Pro if you operate mission-critical workflows that demand the latest reasoning models and steady throughput. Choosing a team of collaboration, governance, and centralization are more important than single pricing. This segmentation ensures users at all points, from casual learners to enterprise teams, have a plan that is right. Five-variant ChatGPT pricing by OpenAI is now among the most sophisticated in AI. By adding the Go plan at ₹399, India has become the laboratory for a new pricing strategy: increase adoption by reducing initial cost without sacrificing premium users on Plus, Pro, and Team. For consumers, the actual choice is easy: Free to try, Go for value, plus for productivity, Pro for heavy lifting, and Team for teaming. The end result? A clear value ladder that matches users at every stage of their AI journey, with India positioned at the centre of OpenAI's growth strategy. OpenAI launching the ChatGPT Go plan for only ₹399 a month in India is not only a local test it's a sign of how the company is reconfiguring its pricing stack to reach new audiences. By placing Go below Plus, Pro, and Team, OpenAI has built one of the most tiered subscription stacks in AI. This breakdown examines each one of the five individual and small-team plans Free, Go, Plus, Pro, and Team more closely with a side-by-side comparison to assist you in making your choice of which plan best suits your Free plan is the beginner's plan. It has a cost of ₹0 and allows informal users to use ChatGPT with basic limits on messages and tools. Whereas OpenAI does not provide explicit caps, Free is intentionally limiting. It pushes those who require dependability or more sophisticated tools into paid levels. For students, occasional users, or first-timers with AI, Free is quite sufficient. But when you reach repeated usage limits or require features such as sophisticated data analysis or extended file upload, Free rapidly reveals its in India only, ChatGPT Go is available at ₹399 per month and is the value unlock for those who have grown beyond Free but don't wish to pay ₹1,999 for Plus. The plan offers: More messages than Free, larger file uploads, increased image creation, deeper data analysis, and longer memory. With UPI support and regional language features, it fits in with India's digital essence, Go makes ChatGPT a more affordable day-to-day tool for students, solo creators, and cost-conscious professionals. OpenAI is hoping that making this happen at this price point will lead to massive growth in adoption in one of the world's fastest-growing AI markets. Although there are fewer features than Plus, its low price makes it the most affordable premium AI plan in the world. It is intended as a "bridge" between the Free and Plus there is ChatGPT Plus, which costs ₹1,999 a month in India (or €23/£20 in the EU). This is the plan most serious individual users opt for. It greatly expands capabilities: Expanded message limits, file uploads, data analysis, and image generation. It includes access to deep research tools and multiple reasoning models and voice and video features, including advanced voice mode and screen sharing with codex writers, analysts, solo entrepreneurs, and knowledge workers, Plus is the default productivity motor. In contrast to Go, it's not merely greater quotas; it unleashes qualitatively different tools capable of managing more sophisticated workflows and collaboration pinnacle of the solo pricing tier is ChatGPT Pro, which costs ₹19,999 a month in India (or $200/€229/£200 elsewhere). That is not for recreational users; it's reserved for operators who expect regular access to the best models OpenAI has. Pro comes with Unlimited message and upload access, pro reasoning access to GPT-5, and Research preview of upcoming is the plan for professionals doing research, R&D, high-risk content creation, or high-end coding contexts. For them, the price doesn't feature itself; it's about time saved and reliability in Free, Go, Plus, and Pro are for individuals, ChatGPT Team is the first level designed specifically for organisations. The Team plan costs ₹ 2,099 per user per month. Team offers: Shared workspaces for several users, Organisational-level admin controls and governance, more usage limits, and greater availability than individual plansFor small businesses, startups, or groups of creators, the plan aggregates use into a single hub. The benefit is not merely per-user access but group efficiency—teams can organize prompts, GPTs, and resources as a group. OpenAI does not release INR pricing for Team, maintaining it in how to make the decision: stay with Free if your use is casual, sporadic, or exploratory. You can step up to Go if you are in India and need higher reliability, higher numbers of messages, and data analysis without spending a fortune. Select Plus if you are a daily creator or knowledge worker who requires richer tools and more profound research capabilities. Select Pro if you operate mission-critical workflows that demand the latest reasoning models and steady throughput. Choosing a team of collaboration, governance, and centralization are more important than single segmentation ensures users at all points, from casual learners to enterprise teams, have a plan that is ChatGPT pricing by OpenAI is now among the most sophisticated in AI. By adding the Go plan at ₹399, India has become the laboratory for a new pricing strategy: increase adoption by reducing initial cost without sacrificing premium users on Plus, Pro, and Team. For consumers, the actual choice is easy: Free to try, Go for value, plus for productivity, Pro for heavy lifting, and Team for end result? A clear value ladder that matches users at every stage of their AI journey, with India positioned at the centre of OpenAI's growth strategy. 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.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store