A Singapore-based cybersecurity firm Group-IB discovered in June that over 100,000 ChatGPT user accounts were compromised and their credentials found on the Dark Web. Among the accounts reported compromised, India topped with 12,632, followed by Pakistan with 9,217 and Brazil with 6,531. Bangladesh witnessed the fewest instances with 2,463. This report gave a glimpse of the high-interest level of Indians and Pakistanis in generative AI. Prior to this, there was a series of news reports about the launch of the Presidential Initiative for Artificial Intelligence and Computing (PIAIC) by President Arif Alvi, and then came the government’s policy to train one million AI experts in the country by 2027. Pakistanis published 2,600 AI-related research papers from 2016 to 2020, according to Statista.
Back in 2017, then Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi inaugurated a National Centre for Artificial Intelligence (NCAI) at the National University of Sciences & Technology (NUST) in Islamabad. It was followed by a Rs 1.1 billion budgetary allocation for select universities with AI research to be coordinated by NCAI. In 2020, Pakistan Air Force (PAF) set up a Center of Artificial Intelligence and Computing (CENTRIC).
While OpenAI is the first to offer a Generative AI model trained on vast amounts of data, Google has also joined the generative AI race with its own offering. Google BARD appears to have capabilities similar to OpenAI’s ChatGPT. Very little is known about the specific datasets used to train either of them, raising some trust issues about the results produced by them.
Top global cloud operators Amazon, Google, and Microsoft are now offering generative AI services to their clients for an additional fee. Cloud app developers in Pakistan and elsewhere can train these base models on their custom datasets to develop AI applications for agriculture, business, education, finance, healthcare, law, etc. The AI market in Pakistan is currently estimated at $123 million by Statista Market Insights.
Amazon Web Services (AWS) recently featured four Pakistani startups at the forefront of AI/ML: SalesFlo, Ozoned Digital, XpertFlow, and Trukkr. SalesFlo offers sales software for FMCG (fast-moving consumer goods) companies. Ozoned Digital caters to the technology needs of the insurance industry. XpertFlow is an AI-powered preventative healthcare company. Trukkr provides financial services and technology for logistics. These and other startups are well-positioned to take advantage of the new generative AI services being offered by cloud vendors.
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