
89 countries and organisations signed the New Delhi Declaration calling for AI that is “secure, trustworthy, and robust.” For anyone who has watched this industry for twenty-five years, two words come to mind. Overdue. And incomplete.
Overdue because the right questions are finally on the table. Governed AI is not the enemy of innovation — it is the condition for real adoption. Trust is not an obstacle. It is the foundation.
Incomplete because declarations without binding commitments are aspirations. Technology does not create value by existing. It creates value when organisations can use it, trust it, and own it on their own terms.
This is why security is not a feature we are adding to SeldonIA. It is the foundation we are building everything on. Trustworthy AI is not a political statement. It is an architectural one.
The summit is a signal. The architecture is the answer.