
Explained: Chinese robodog row at India AI Summit - Why Galgotias University was asked to leave
Zee News
The Chinese robodog controversy at the India AI Impact Summit erupted after a viral video showed Galgotias University staff presenting a China-made Unitree Go2 robot as a university innovation. The incident triggered allegations of misrepresentation, prompting authorities to ask the Greater Noida-based institution to vacate its stall at the event.
The Chinese robodog controversy at the India AI Impact Summit erupted after a viral video showed Galgotias University staff presenting a China-made Unitree Go2 robot as a university innovation. The incident triggered allegations of misrepresentation, prompting authorities to ask the Greater Noida-based institution to vacate its stall at the event.
The controversy began when Professor Neha Singh introduced the Unitree Go2 robot, referred to as "Orion" as a university development during the expo. The video quickly spread online, prompting criticism and raising questions about whether the Greater Noida-based institution had claimed the imported robot as its own creation. Amid the outrage, authorities reportedly asked the university to vacate its stall at the Summit.
Following the backlash, Galgotias University staff and officials vacated their exhibition space on Wednesday. According to sources, authorities directed the institution to leave the expo premises, ANI reported.
Responding to the controversy, Galgotias University Registrar Nitin Kumar Gaur said the issue stemmed from confusion over the words “develop” and “development,” stressing that the university had not built the robot but had used it for academic purposes.
"This is a jumble of two words, develop, and development. We didn't develop it. We worked on its development... We want to bring them, just like that robot was brought, and an effort was made to get students to do research on it," Gaur told ANI. Addressing the viral video in which Professor Neha Singh introduced the RoboDog as "Orion," Gaur said she may have misspoken during the presentation. He reiterated that the robot had been purchased to support student research initiatives.

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