
India Hosts World's Largest AI Summit for Human Good
Over 100 nations gathered in New Delhi for an AI summit that put people first, showcasing tech that's already helping 3.6 million farmers. India's betting big that artificial intelligence can serve everyone, not just the privileged few.
India just hosted the world's largest and most accessible AI summit, and it wasn't your typical tech conference full of executives in suits. Thousands of young people packed exhibition halls in New Delhi, asking questions and dreaming up possibilities alongside leaders from over 100 countries.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi opened the AI Impact Summit 2026 with a bold vision. Instead of letting AI become another technology that widens inequality, India wants to make it work for everyone, guided by an ancient principle: welfare for all, happiness of all.
The country isn't just talking about inclusive AI. It's already building it.
Meet Sarlaben, an AI assistant now helping 3.6 million dairy farmers, mostly women, get real-time advice about cattle health and productivity in their own languages. Another platform called Bharat VISTAAR gives farmers multilingual updates on everything from weather forecasts to market prices, putting crucial information in their hands exactly when they need it.

Modi compared AI to humanity's biggest breakthroughs: fire, writing, electricity, and the internet. But there's a catch with AI that makes it different. Changes that once took decades can now happen in weeks and touch every corner of the planet.
That speed makes getting AI right even more urgent. India's approach draws from its success with digital payments and Covid vaccination programs, which reached hundreds of millions by design, not accident.
Why This Inspires
India's innovators are already using AI to help people with disabilities, break down language barriers, and boost agricultural security. The summit showcased solutions built for real problems facing everyday people, not just flashy demos for investors.
The energy at the summit reflected something bigger than policy announcements. A genuine mass movement for AI innovation has taken root in India, driven by curiosity and the belief that transformative technology shouldn't leave anyone behind.
Modi's message was clear: technology must serve people, not the other way around. When a country of 1.4 billion people commits to that principle, it can reshape how the entire world thinks about our AI-powered future.
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Based on reporting by South China Morning Post
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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