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Anthropic was coming India and then this happened
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Today we are going to see, AI’s rapid rise isn’t just reshaping tech, it’s running into the real world. This week, one company’s expansion hit a legal roadblock in India, another faced tough questions about medical safety, and a third got sued over branding in the entertainment space. As AI moves fast, the friction is starting to show.
In today’s post:
AI might be smart but it’s not your doctor
Anthropic hits legal snag in India
Autodesk sues Google over AI movie tool
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HEALTH AND AI
Why AI still fumbles your health questions

Image Credits: University of Oxford
The University of Oxford just released a study on AI chatbots and medical advice.
The takeaway? They’re not as safe as you think.
Here’s everything you need to know:
Over 1,300 people were given health scenarios, from severe headaches to postnatal exhaustion.
Half turned to AI chatbots to help figure out what was wrong.
Most got a mix of good and bad advice with no clear way to tell the difference.
The same question, worded differently, gave totally different answers.
Many didn’t know what to ask in the first place, which made things worse.
Researchers say people were left guessing which condition actually fit a risky game.
Experts warn that AI can also repeat deep-rooted medical biases baked into its training data.
AI is a powerful tool, but health is personal. When people aren’t sure how to describe their symptoms or what questions to ask chatbots struggle to help. And that’s not a tech failure. That’s a human problem. Until AI systems learn to handle ambiguity and nuance like real doctors do, we need to treat medical advice from bots like what it is: information, not instruction.
EXPANSION
A name clash in India could slow one of AI’s fastest movers

Image Credits: Anthropic
Anthropic just expanded operations in India. Now it’s facing a trademark dispute from a local company with the same name.
Here’s everything you need to know:
A software firm in Karnataka has used the name “Anthropic” since 2017.
It’s suing for damages and asking the court to recognize its prior use.
The case highlights a growing issue: global AI companies colliding with local IP rights.
India’s market is red-ho fast-growing, deeply digital, and highly strategic.
Anthropic just appointed ex-Microsoft exec Irina Ghose to lead its India push.
The company is also set to appear at next week’s AI Impact Summit in Delhi.
The court declined to block Anthropic’s India rollout for now.
Global scale sounds clean on a roadmap, but local markets are messy. Names, norms, and rights don’t always align. As AI giants race to claim ground in places like India, they’ll need more than language models, they’ll need legal sensitivity, cultural fluency, and a willingness to play by rules they didn’t write.
RESEARCH
Google’s Flow may be too close legally to Autodesk’s

Image Credits: Reuters
Autodesk just filed a lawsuit against Google, claiming the tech giant’s new AI powered movie tool infringes on its trademarked product name: Flow.
Here’s everything you need to know:
Autodesk has used the “Flow” brand since 2022 for film, TV, and game production tools.
In 2025, Google launched its own AI product also called Flow targeting the same market.
Google had previously told Autodesk it wouldn’t commercialize the name.
But it then filed for a Flow trademark in Tonga, a less visible jurisdiction.
Autodesk says this move gave Google a quiet head start on U.S. trademark rights.
Google has promoted Flow at major events like Sundance, raising its industry profile.
Autodesk now seeks damages and claims Google’s branding will overwhelm its own.
This isn’t just about a name, it’s about how AI firms move fast and break things, including existing brands. Big players like Google may find that speed doesn’t always win when the legal stakes are high. For smaller innovators, this fight underscores the need to protect what you build early before Goliath shows up.
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