In a compelling open letter dated February 24, 2026, to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, distinguished disability rights researcher Nilesh Singit challenges the notion of "AI for All" amid India's ambitious AI push. Referencing the India AI Impact Summit 2026's sign language AI demonstration and a recent Moneylife article on technoableism, Singit highlights how AI systems absorb societal biases, scaling exclusion for persons with disabilities through default designs that overlook diverse needs. He calls for proactive measures: embedding accessibility standards, conducting disability impact assessments, auditing datasets for bias, and including disability expertise in AI governance bodies. Drawing from lived experience and aligned with the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016, and UNCRPD obligations, the letter urges structural inclusion over symbolic gestures to align technological leadership with social justice. For deeper insights into disability bias in AI, visit The Bias Pipeline.
A few stray thoughts, random reflexions, general observations and points of view — all my own work, as Busybee would say — on my day-to-day crip existence in this chaotic, ever-surprising circus of life. Minor irritations, modest triumphs, everyday absurdities, and the odd philosophical musing over an evening cuppa. Nothing earth-shattering, but just enough to coax a smile, lift an eyebrow, and deliver a gentle kick in the backside when required.
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Showing posts with label Bias Audit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bias Audit. Show all posts
Thursday, 26 February 2026
AI for All? An Open Letter to PM Modi on Disability Bias in India's AI Future
Labels:
Accessibility,
AI,
AI for All,
AI Governance,
Bias Audit,
Disability Bias,
Disability Rights,
Inclusion,
Inclusive AI,
India AI,
India AI Summit 2026,
Modi Letter,
Moral Test,
RPWD Act,
Structural Bias,
Technoableism,
UNCRPD
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