The buzz from Delhi’s India AI Impact Summit has taken a controversial turn with Galgotias University’s robotic dog display exposed as a repackaged Chinese product. Filmmaker and author Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri seized the moment on social media to peel back layers of India’s struggling innovation framework, labeling it a stark emblem of systemic failures.
The four-legged bot, showcased under banners of ‘Center of Excellence’ and ‘AI Leadership,’ was unmasked as Unitree Robotics’ off-the-shelf model. The backlash led to the pavilion’s evacuation and a public mea culpa from the university.
Agnihotri’s analysis cuts deep: importing technology isn’t the crime; faking originality reveals a frantic desire to project advancement amid anxiety. This incident mirrors a culture prioritizing optics over substance, where original research bows to performative pomp.
Private institutions, he argues, frequently serve as extensions of political and corporate agendas. Classrooms become cash cows, grounds event spaces, and R&D? An afterthought. Revolutionary tech like AI is trivialized as thematic gimmicks rather than civilization-altering powerhouses.
Contrasting this with antiquity’s Nalanda and Takshashila—beacons of global learning that championed discourse and innovation—Agnihotri warns of self-inflicted sabotage. America and China dominate with autonomous labs and hefty investments in core AI development. India? Still mired in policy squabbles.
‘Is our “Khilji” an outsider or the system that favors tamasha over truth?’ he probes. To avoid becoming AI consumers, India must depoliticize academia, enshrine research independence in law, and deploy AI practically across sectors. Agnihotri’s rallying cry: Skip the drama, embrace authentic strides—the next opportunity awaits.