Google has launched a series of AI-focused initiatives in India at I/O Connect 2026, including a free AI research curriculum, local data center deployment for Gemini, and new cybersecurity tools like CAPSEM. These efforts aim to support Indian developers, startups, and enterprises as they build and scale agentic AI systems safely.
At I/O Connect India 2026, Google launched a suite of new AI tools, curriculum partnerships, and infrastructure initiatives designed to accelerate the nation's transition into the "agentic era."
BENGALURU — Google has unveiled a comprehensive strategy to empower India’s developers, startups, and public institutions, focusing on the deployment of "agentic AI"—systems capable of executing complex, multi-step tasks independently. The announcements, made on Tuesday, July 14, 2026, at the Google I/O Connect India summit, aim to address the practical barriers to scaling AI, spanning education, cybersecurity, healthcare, and enterprise cloud infrastructure.
As India positions itself as a global leader in AI adoption, Google’s latest initiatives provide the underlying infrastructure and guardrails necessary for safe, large-scale implementation. The company’s strategy signals a shift from simply building foundation models to enabling "trusted, large-scale AI adoption" across the country’s digital economy.
Empowering the Next Generation of AI Builders
A core pillar of Google’s announcement is the expansion of technical education. Google DeepMind is introducing a free, 56-hour AI Research Foundations curriculum in India. This program, available on the Google Skills platform, is designed to teach learners how to build and fine-tune Large Language Models (LLMs). To ensure widespread access, Google has partnered with NASSCOM and the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) Bengaluru to integrate this curriculum into institutions across the country.
In addition to research-level training, Google is expanding its Google Play Academy curriculum to 10,000 developers and app creators, through partnerships with the state governments of Rajasthan, Odisha, and Madhya Pradesh, helping them leverage AI to scale their app businesses.
Strengthening Infrastructure and Cybersecurity
For enterprises and government agencies, Google is addressing data residency and security concerns by enabling the deployment of frontier AI models through Google Distributed Cloud. This allows organizations in regulated sectors to run Gemini models entirely within Indian data centers, ensuring compliance with local data localization requirements.
To improve the safety of autonomous AI systems, Google also introduced CAPSEM (Capabilities Security for Agents), an open-source runtime environment. CAPSEM isolates AI agents within individual virtual machines, ensuring that if one agent is compromised, the broader system remains protected. Furthermore, Google is providing its specialized cybersecurity agent, Sec-Gemini V3, to select government and enterprise testers, including Flipkart, to assist in rapid incident investigation.
Impact on Healthcare and Local Innovation
Google’s AI initiatives are also reaching specialized sectors. Researchers at AIIMS Delhi are utilizing the multimodal MedGemma open models to develop India-specific tools for leprosy and sexual and reproductive health. These models are intended to eventually be accessible to the wider developer ecosystem to assist healthcare professionals in diagnosis and management.
Additionally, Google DeepMind launched ATL Saathi, a Gemini-powered desktop assistant for teachers in Atal Tinkering Labs. The tool helps educators prepare lessons and curate hands-on experiments; it is being rolled out to 100 schools initially, with a goal to reach 10,000 schools. On the consumer front, Gemini Live now supports 25 Indian languages and dialects, including Sanskrit, Bhojpuri, and Maithili.
Why It Matters
These initiatives address the practical challenges developers face when moving from experimental AI to commercial deployment. By providing localized infrastructure, security tools like CAPSEM, and free education, Google is lowering the barrier for Indian startups to build sophisticated, industry-specific solutions that adhere to security and compliance standards.
Key Facts at a Glance
AI Curriculum: A free 56-hour AI Research Foundations program launched for Indian learners.
Localization: Gemini models can now be deployed within Indian data centers via Google Distributed Cloud.
Security: Open-source CAPSEM runtime introduced to isolate and protect AI agents.
Language Support: Gemini Live expanded to include 25 Indian languages and dialects.
Education Reach: ATL Saathi rollout aimed at 10,000 schools via the Atal Innovation Mission.
FAQ
What is "agentic AI" and why is it important?
Agentic AI refers to systems capable of independently executing tasks rather than just answering queries. It is considered the next phase of innovation, and Google’s new tools aim to provide the safety framework for this transition.
How can developers access the new AI training?
The 56-hour AI Research Foundations curriculum is available for free on the Google Skills platform, with additional scaling support through NASSCOM and IISc Bangalore.
Are these tools compliant with Indian data regulations?
Yes. Through Google Distributed Cloud, enterprises and government organizations can run Gemini models within Indian data centers to meet local data localization and compliance requirements.
Source: Google Cloud Events, Times of India, YourStory