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Onetab successfully hosts its first developer community meet – OneBharat

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Mumbai: Onetab, the Generative AI SaaS startup kick-started by Saket Dandotia and Alok Patil has launched OneBharat, a series of developer community meets across India. They hosted their first-ever developer community meet at Hyderabad on Saturday which saw attendance from over 100+ tech and AI enthusiasts.

This was the first of the multi-city developers meet, which the company is hosting across leading cities like Bangalore, Chennai, Pune, Mumbai, Indore, and Ahmedabad.

These developer meets are aimed to create and build a community of AI Developers and tech aficionados and foster collaboration, innovation, networking, and learning. The first meet-up featured leading panelists who spoke on Leveraging AI in the Software Development Lifecycle. The panelists at the event were Vamsi Udayagiri- CEO Hesa Global, ⁠Priyal Mandloi, Technical Lead, Magnifi, ⁠Dr. V S S Kiran, Founder & CEO, Garudalytics and Rupesh Garg, Founder and Chief Architect, Frugal Testing.

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Speaking on Onetab’s latest initiative, Dandotia said, “At Onetab, we aim to strengthen the tech and AI industry and keeping this in mind, we have launched OneBharat. OneBharat is our way to have new innovations and ideas grow in the AI and new-tech space. We are very elated with the response we received at our first developer community meet at Hyderabad and we look forward to hosting more in the coming weeks.”

“We aim to cover cities like Bangalore, Chennai, Pune, Mumbai, Indore, and Ahmedabad over the next few months,” he further added.

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Ethical AI must benefit society, not dominate it, says WFEB chief Sanjay Pradhan at IAA event

At Mumbai event, ethics expert urges businesses and governments to shape AI responsibly

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MUMBAI: Artificial intelligence may be racing ahead at lightning speed, but its direction must still be guided by human conscience. That was the central message delivered by Sanjay Pradhan, president of the World Forum for Ethics in Business (WFEB), during the latest edition of IAA Conversations held in Mumbai.

The session was organised by the International Advertising Association (IAA) and the Artificial Intelligence Association of India (AIAI) in association with The Free Press Journal at the Free Press House on 7 March. Addressing a packed audience, Pradhan called for stronger ethical leadership to ensure AI remains a tool that benefits humanity rather than one that governs it.

“Artificial intelligence has rapidly become one of the most powerful technologies humanity has created,” Pradhan said. “It is unlocking breakthroughs in medicine, science and creativity at a pace unimaginable just a few years ago.”

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But he warned that the same technology carries serious risks. AI, he noted, can amplify disinformation faster than facts can travel, compromise privacy, deepen discrimination and disrupt millions of livelihoods. Referencing concerns raised by AI pioneers such as Geoffrey Hinton, often called the godfather of AI, Pradhan stressed that the real challenge is not whether AI will shape the world, but whether humans will shape it with ethics and wisdom.

Structuring his talk around four guiding questions, why, what, how and who, Pradhan introduced the audience to WFEB’s emerging AI Ethics Partnership, a global platform aimed at advancing responsible artificial intelligence. He outlined four priority concerns that demand urgent attention: disinformation, bias and discrimination, data privacy and job security.

To make the idea of ethical AI easier to grasp, Pradhan offered a simple metaphor. Ethical AI, he said, is like a three layered cake. The outer layer represents the visible value ethical AI creates for businesses and society. The middle layer is organisational culture that moves ethics from written codes to everyday practice. The innermost layer, however, is the most crucial, the conscience of individual leaders.

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Drawing from Indian philosophical thought through WFEB co-founder Ravi Shankar, Pradhan noted that while artificial intelligence can reproduce stored knowledge, true intelligence is boundless and rooted in conscience, creativity and compassion. Practices such as breathwork and meditation, he suggested, can help leaders develop the calm clarity needed for ethical decision making.

The event also featured a discussion with Maninder Adityaraj Singh, chief of staff and head of innovation at Rediffusion Brand Solutions Pvt Ltd, and Yash Johri, lawyer, Supreme Court of India.

Opening the session, IAA India chapter president Abhishek Karnani, highlighted the need for industries to understand and engage with AI responsibly.

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“AI has to be befriended and understood,” added Rediffusion managing director and AIAI national convenor Sandeep Goyal. “Its ethical use will determine whether it becomes a friend or a foe.”

As AI continues to reshape industries and societies, Pradhan ended with a simple but powerful call to action. Businesses, governments and individuals must work together to ensure that the algorithms shaping the future reflect human values rather than just cold logic.

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