Technology

According to sources, India orders a university to withdraw from the AI summit after introducing a Chinese robot as its own.

According to sources, India orders a university to withdraw from the AI summit after introducing a Chinese robot as its own.

By Kajal Sharma - 18 Feb 2026 06:06 PM

According to two government sources, an Indian university was forced to leave its booth at the nation's premier AI event after a staff member was seen passing off a commercially available robotic dog manufactured in China as the institution's own.Orion needs to meet you. This was created by Galgotias University's Centre of Excellence," communications professor Neha Singh said this week on state-run channel DD News in comments that have since gone viral.NEW DELHI (AP) — After one of its employees showed off a commercially available robotic dog manufactured in China and claimed it was the institution's own invention, a private Indian university was expelled from a major artificial intelligence symposium in New Delhi on Wednesday. Two government sources claim that a day after Neha Singh, a communications professor at Galgotias University, told state-run broadcaster DD News that the robotic dog Orion was created by the university's Center of Excellence, the university was directed to remove its booth at the summit.

However, internet users soon recognized the robot as the Unitree Go2, which is used extensively in research and education and is marketed by China's Unitree Robotics. It starts at $1,600. Singh told reporters on Wednesday that she had never stated outright that the dog was an exhibit rather than the university's original creation.The two government officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not permitted to address the media, said the event was an embarrassment for the host nation, India. But according to a statement from Galgotias, the university was "deeply pained" and called the occurrence a "propaganda campaign" that might spread negativity and lower the spirits of students who are trying to use global technology to innovate, learn, and develop their talents.

 

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