Beyond the AI Arms Race: India AI Regulation Strategy 2026 and the Third Way
Explore the India AI Regulation Strategy 2026 as it navigates the US-China AI arms race. Discover how Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) creates a third path for the Global South.
They've shaken hands, but their fists remain clenched. In what's become a fierce geo-technological rat race, the United States and China have entered an unprecedented AI arms race. The United Nations Secretary-General has warned that the threat from AI is now on par with nuclear war, urging international partners to establish an ethical global approach to regulate its irresponsible use.
The Great Fragmentation: China vs. US AI Governance Models
The regulatory landscape is split between two polar opposites. China has adopted a state-led, preventive approach where the government acts as the primary risk-taker. With open-source AI models accounting for 30% of global use, China mandates pre-deployment scrutiny and algorithmic registration, ensuring technology aligns with state objectives and political stability.
In contrast, the Trump administration's U.S. model remains market-driven and largely deregulated. By granting high-tech companies unprecedented access to government data sets, the U.S. prioritizes rapid innovation. However, this relies on a fragmented patchwork of state laws, making national policy adoption a constant struggle. Meanwhile, the EU AI Act seeks to be a global norm-setter by categorizing systems based on human rights risks.
India AI Regulation Strategy 2026: Leveraging Digital Public Infrastructure
India is now carving out a 'third path' that avoids China's heavy control and the U.S.'s perceived chaos. Moving beyond the IT Act of 2000 and the DPDP Rules of 2025, New Delhi is pivoting toward a risk-tiered framework adapted to its unique democratic realities. India's true strategic advantage lies in its Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI).
Platforms like Aadhaar and UPI provide an unparalleled testbed for AI systems at a population scale. By focusing on #AIforAll, India aims to champion a public good-oriented framework. This approach is designed to attract support from the Global South, positioning India as a leader that shapes global norms rather than just following them.
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