Generative AI is increasingly embedded in healthcare systems to address workforce shortages, improve efficiency, support clinical decision-making, and accelerate medical research. While it offers significant benefits in documentation, diagnostics, patient engagement, and drug discovery, its adoption raises concerns related to accuracy, bias, data privacy, ethics, and regulation. The future of Generative AI in healthcare therefore depends on responsible governance, strong government initiatives, and human oversight to ensure that technology augments, rather than replaces, clinical judgement and patient trust.
Click to View MoreCentral Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) is a sovereign digital form of money issued by central banks to complement physical cash and existing digital payment systems. It aims to enhance payment efficiency, financial inclusion, monetary sovereignty, and cross-border transactions while offering a safer alternative to private digital currencies. However, challenges related to cybersecurity, privacy, banking stability, and interoperability necessitate a cautious, phased, and well-regulated implementation supported by strong domestic and international coordination.
Click to View MoreAI mental health tools improve access and affordability but create serious risks. Data privacy, bias and the absence of human empathy can harm vulnerable users. India must enforce strong rules like the DPDP Act and ensure a human-in-the-loop model so AI supports, not replaces, real care.
Click to View MoreTechnology is transforming governance in India by promoting transparency and efficiency through initiatives like Digital India, Aadhaar, and UMANG. These tools enable faster, corruption-free services and data-driven policies. However, challenges such as the digital divide, cybersecurity risks, and data protection remain crucial for inclusive governance.
Click to View MoreAI can transform Indian education through personalized learning, aligning with the National Education Policy. However, its successful and fair integration requires addressing challenges like the digital divide, data privacy, and algorithmic bias. This will necessitate investments in infrastructure, teacher training, and ethical regulations.
Click to View MoreThe 2025 UN Convention Against Cybercrime establishes a global framework for 112 nations, surpassing the Budapest Convention. It criminalizes ransomware, fraud, and child abuse, standardizes evidence sharing, and strengthens international law enforcement against transnational cybercrime, creating a unified approach to digital threats.
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