IANS | 28 Nov, 2023
Generative AI, with a right selection of Cloud, has the true
potential to streamline a lot of unstructured data that's sitting in
silos in public sector organisations globally, including India, a top
AWS executive said here on Tuesday.
Dave Levy, Vice President of
AWS Worldwide Public Sector, told IANS during the AWS re:Invent 2023
conference that there are early days for GenAI, particularly with the
public sector, as organisations start to think about what are the use
cases while some are already doing a few things with respect to GenAI
that are very promising and very exciting.
“We are trying to
understand what are going to be various applications of generative AI --
How is it going to benefit citizens, how can we help improve research,
how can decision makers make better decisions with data with respect to
GenAI," Levy said.
Stressing that there are a lot of opportunities
in the Indian public sector, particularly with healthcare, where
generative AI can help deliver results to patients faster.
“We
have examples of customers that are able to produce discharge reports
faster to free up physicians, to allow them to work with patients and
care for patients and do things so that they're not bogged down in the
administrative work,” Levy told IANS.
AI healthtech startup Hoppr
has just announced the launch of Grace, a multi-modal foundation model
for medical imaging, powered by AWS.
Grace is a first-of-its-kind
B2B foundation model that enables image-to-image and text-to-image
learning across all medical imaging modalities, including X-rays, CTs,
MRIs, and echocardiograms.
According to Levy, GenAI has the
potential to transform citizen experiences, create new applications
never seen before, and help organisations and people reach new levels of
productivity and more.
On the education front, he said that AWS has a big ed-tech business in India.
“The
country has a great foundation for us to serve the customers globally.
The Indian industry continues to innovate which is a great opportunity
for us,” said Levy, who worked for Apple for 12 years and led teams that
helped federal, state and local governments adopt innovative mobile
technologies.
Today, AWS serves over 7,500 government agencies,
over 14,000 academic institutions and over 85,000 nonprofit
organisations worldwide.
“They can run their own foundational
model or they can run a model that Amazon has, or they can have access
to third-party models. And so we heard that loud and clear from
customers as they're moving into this generative AI world that those are
things that are interesting to them and they want a partner who has
security in mind first,” Levy explained.
According to him, if
governments globally are going to get to the promise of generative AI,
they're going to have to move to the cloud.
“Every country is at a
different stage of digital transformation. The innovation that's
happened in India and the Indian government has been really at a good
pace,” Levy told IANS.
AWS, the Cloud arm of e-commerce giant
Amazon, in May this year announced plans to invest Rs 1,05,600 crore
($12.7 billion) into cloud infrastructure in India by 2030 to meet
growing customer demand for cloud services in the country.
“The
theme of having unstructured data sitting in silos, and governments
wanting to bring that data to a place where it's usable for them, where
they can get insights from it, where they can use the data to help
provide better services for their citizens, is going to be the key
factor for their digital transformation,” the AWS executive noted.