AI costs are dropping fast—and India stands to gain: OpenAI CEO Sam Altman
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. NEW DELHI: The cost of deploying and running artificial intelligence (AI) applications is falling at an exponential pace, potentially making AI tools affordable at scale across India sooner than expected, according to Sam Altman, co-founder and chief executive of OpenAI, one of the world’s most valuable startups. Altman also dismissed the idea that companies like his would “kill" software and technology services firms, even as AI automates large parts of their core work.
“I am optimistic that we are going to drive prices down more than anyone thinks is possible or reasonable or likely. Using AI can become absolutely cheaper for India to use at scale, and we are moving actively in this direction," Altman said, speaking at a roundtable that Mint was part of. At the heart of his optimism are sharply declining computing costs and rising investment in artificial intelligence infrastructure in India.
“The cost of inference from two Decembers ago, in about 14 months, has declined by 1,000x. Will it continue to decline so exponentially? I don’t think we can, but I’m sure that we can continue to reduce it and make it absolutely cheaper and more affordable," he said. This was Altman’s first visit to India since last year, ahead of which he had said the country was emerging as one of OpenAI’s biggest markets.
“India is OpenAI’s largest market outside of the US, and it is rapidly on course to become the biggest market for us globally," he had told Mint in August last year. Since then, OpenAI and its rivals have accelerated automation in software development and business workflows. The rapid pace of progress has been one factor behind India’s IT services industry losing $45 billion in value since
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