Want to get featured here? Explore premium visibility opportunities.

Contact us

AI NewsOpenAI deepens India push with Pine Labs fintech partnership

OpenAI deepens India push with Pine Labs fintech partnership

12:17 PM IST · February 19, 2026

OpenAI deepens India push with Pine Labs fintech partnership

As India pitches itself as a global hub for applied artificial intelligence, OpenAI has partnered with Pine Labs to integrate AI-driven reasoning into the fintech firm’s payments stack, automating settlement and invoicing workflows in a move the companies say could help accelerate AI-led commerce in India. The partnership will see Pine Labs embed OpenAI’s application programming interfaces — software tools that let companies plug AI into their existing systems — within its payments and commerce infrastructure, the companies said on Thursday, all with the aim of enabling AI-assisted settlement, reconciliation, and invoicing workflows. The deal underscores OpenAI’s broader push to expand its footprint in India,one of its fastest-growing markets, as it looks to move beyond being known primarily as the maker of ChatGPT and embed its technology into education, enterprise, and infrastructure. Earlier this week, OpenAI partnered with leading Indian engineering, medical, and design institutions tobring AI tools into higher education, betting that India’s large developer base and more than a billion internet users will play a central role in the next phase of AI adoption. Pine Labs is already using AI internally to automate parts of its settlement and reconciliation process, cutting the time it takes to clear daily settlements from hours to minutes, according to Chief executive B Amrish Rau. The Noida-based company previously relied on manual checks by dozens of employees to process funds from multiple banks before markets opened each day, a workflow that is now largely handled by AI-driven systems, he said in an interview. For Pine Labs, the partnership is intended to extend those AI-driven efficiencies beyond internal operations to merchants and corporate clients, starting with business-to-business use cases such as invoice processing, settlements and payments orchestration, Rau told TechCrunch. He noted the company sees faster adoption in B2B workflows, where AI agents can handle large volumes of repetitive financial tasks under predefined rules, before similar capabilities reach consumer-facing payments. “People talk about retail AI, but the bigger impact of all of this is really efficiency improvement, especially in B2B,” Rau said. “If you look at invoicing and settlement, those are workflows where agents can actually drive the process end to end, and that’s where adoption can happen faster.” The rollout of more autonomous, agent-led payment workflows will move faster in overseas markets where regulations already allow such transactions, Rau said, while India is likely to see a more gradual adoption focused on AI-assisted commerce rather than fully agent-initiated payments. He said that Pine Labs is already prototyping agent-driven payments in parts of the Middle East and Southeast Asia, even as Indian regulations require tighter controls on how payments are authorized. For OpenAI, the partnership offers a route deeper into India’s payments and enterprise ecosystem as it looks to move beyond consumer-facing tools and embed its models into high-volume, regulated workflows. Rau said the collaboration is aimed at increasing merchant stickiness and expanding Pine Labs’ role from a payments processor to a broader commerce platform, with higher transaction volumes over time translating into incremental revenue. Pine Labs says itworks with more than 980,000 merchants, 716 consumer brands, and 177 financial institutions, and has processed over 6 billion cumulative transactions valued at over ₹11.4 trillion (about $126 billion), per its prospectus published last year. The fintech operates across 20 countries, including Malaysia, Singapore, Australia, parts of Africa, the UAE, and the U.S., giving the OpenAI partnership reach across both Indian and international markets. Rau said the partnership does not involve revenue sharing between the two companies, with Pine Labs not taking a cut if its merchants choose to embed OpenAI’s tools. “We’ve kept it completely independent of each other — anything related to payment and payment services, we will get the benefit of it, and anything related to OpenAI revenues will go to them,” he said. The arrangement, Rau added, is also non-exclusive. He compared it to OpenAI’s partnership with Stripe in the U.S. and said Pine Labs remains open to working with other AI providers. Rau said Pine Labs is building additional security and compliance layers around AI-driven workflows to ensure that sensitive merchant and consumer transaction data remains protected, as the company integrates AI more deeply into its payments systems. He said the focus is on ensuring transactions remain secure and compliant even as more workflows are automated by AI. Pine Labs’ interest in AI-driven commerce builds on earlier work through its Setu unit, which hasexperimented with agent-led bill payment experiencesusing chatbots including ChatGPT and Anthropic’s Claude. Separately, India also began pilotingconsumer payments directly through AI chatbotslast year. The new announcement comes as India hosts itsAI Impact Summitin New Delhi, where global AI companies including OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google are showcasing their latest capabilities alongside Indian startups demonstrating AI applications aimed at large-scale deployment across sectors such as finance, healthcare, and education.

read more

Latest AI News

View All News →
WhatsApp Introduces Incognito Chat With Meta AI for Private Conversations

WhatsApp Introduces Incognito Chat With Meta AI for Private Conversations

WhatsApp has announced Incognito Chat with Meta AI, a new feature that lets users have private, temporary conversations with the company's AI assistant. The feature is aimed at people who want to ask sensitive questions involving personal matters, finances, health, or work without keeping a lasting record of the interaction. Incognito Chat is built on Meta's Private Processing technology and will begin rolling out to WhatsApp and the Meta AI app over the next few months.

2 hours ago

View

Poppy debuts a proactive AI assistant to help organize your digital life

Poppy debuts a proactive AI assistant to help organize your digital life

Smartphones can be distracting with their dizzying array of apps and constant stream of notifications. A new app calledPoppyaims to organize the chaos by combining your calendar, email, messages and other sources into a single dashboard. The idea, per the company’s website, is that “Poppy pays attention so you don’t have to.” Users can connect various services to Poppy’s app, like their email, calendar, and, at a minimum, their location. Poppy then uses that data along with AI to guess what’s important to you right now based on what’s going on in your life. At a high level, this means you can open Poppy’s app or glance at its widgets to see the meetings or tasks you have on your plate. But Poppy’s most powerful feature is likely its proactive suggestions. For instance, if Poppy has access to your calendar and sees that you have a 30-minute gap while you’re near a park, it could suggest you take a break and go for a walk before your next appointment. And if you’re planning a brunch with a friend who mentioned their food preferences in a previous communication, it could factor in that information when suggesting restaurants. You can also message Poppy with questions or requests, almost as if you had a personal assistant working on your behalf. Poppy can track your flights and alert you to changes, or nudge you when it’s time to take your medication. Poppy’s maker,Sai Kambampati, says he’s always been fascinated by human-computer interaction, having earned his Master’s degree in Computer Science with a specialization in this area. Previously a software engineer at the AI hardware startup Humane, he said he has seen first-hand how people are trying to rethink how we engage with technology. "I've always been interested in challenging what computers are able to do, especially the idea of ambient computing and computers that can proactively sense what you need and anticipate your needs," Kambampati told TechCrunch. "That's something that I found very, very exciting. And I felt like with all the AI technology that we're seeing around us, it has never been more possible to embark on something like this." At launch, Poppy works with everyday apps like Apple Calendar, Google Calendar, Gmail, Outlook, iCloud Mail, Apple Health, Reminders, Contacts, iMessage, WhatsApp, and others. (It uses a Mac app to access iMessage, which could later be a problem as Apple generally doesn't allow third-party apps to access its messaging service.) It also works with apps like Uber and Instacart, and Kambampati plans to extend support to others over time. The company says users' data is encrypted when stored in its database, and it has a zero-retention policy enabled when it uses cloud-based LLMs for its suggestions. In time, however, Kambampati would like make the switch to using local, on-device AI models when technology advances. "My hope, my dream is — within two to three years from now, when our devices have much more powerful compute, and the models get much smaller, cheaper and more high quality — eventually we can have all of this running on our own devices, and there won't even be a need to hit the servers," he says. Poppy's San Francisco-based team of four is backed by $1.25 million in pre-seed funding led by Kindred Ventures, with various angels also participating, including DeepMind's Logan Kilpatrick.

2 hours ago

View

Anthropic now has more business customers than OpenAI, according to Ramp data

Anthropic now has more business customers than OpenAI, according to Ramp data

For the first time, Anthropic has more verified business customers than OpenAI, according tothis month’s AI Indexfrom the fintech firm Ramp. The survey, compiled from Ramp’s clients’ expense data, shows 34.4% of participating businesses are paying for Anthropic services, more than any other AI lab, while only 32.3% pay for OpenAI. It is the first time Anthropic has held the top position. “Anthropic has already been in the lead amongst the high adoption groups like finance, tech, professional services,” Ramp economist Ara Kharazian told TechCrunch. “It’s across the other firms where OpenAI still has a lead, but that has been shrinking over the past couple of months.” Because the index only represents companies that use Ramp, it’s not a perfect proxy for the marketplace at large. Still, the sample includes more than 50,000 companies, making it both broad and diverse enough to carry weight. More importantly, the general trend can be seen across the industry. OnOpenRouter’s leaderboard, which samples a different portion of users, OpenAI last ranked above Anthropic in December 2025. According to Ramp’s figures, the past 12 months have been particularly transformative for Anthropic. In May 2025, a mere 9% of businesses were paying for Anthropic products, a figure that climbed 26% in the following 12 months. Over the same period, OpenAI’s share declined by 1%, and the overall share of businesses using some kind of AI product increased by 9%. Kharazian is skeptical about whether this advantage will last, for reasons he explained in a blog post, but said the success of the past year was proof that Anthropic had chosen a good strategy. “What Anthropic did worked really well,” Kharazian told TechCrunch, “which was — start with a very technical customer base, focus on their needs, really succeed in execution and then start broadening out through tools like Cowork.”

2 hours ago

View

WhatsApp adds an incognito mode in Meta AI chats

WhatsApp adds an incognito mode in Meta AI chats

Meta on Wednesday said it is adding the ability to start “incognito” conversations with its Meta AI chatbot within WhatsApp. These conversations, the company said, will be processed in a secure environment and can’t be seen by anyone. Users can start an incognito session by tapping on a new icon in one-on-one chats with Meta AI. The company said the feature will also be available on the standalone Meta AI app as well. Incognito chats will roll out to WhatsApp and the Meta AI app over the next few months. Loading the player… Meta said these incognito conversations are not saved, and messages will disappear by default once you close the chat. The session will also end if you close the app or lock your phone, and Meta AI will lose the context of that particular conversation, the company said. “People are starting to use AI for everything, including some of their most private thoughts, whether that’s tackling financial or health questions, or for advice on how to respond to a tricky message from a friend or a colleague. We think it’s really important to give people the ability to ask these questions as privately as possible,” Alice Newton-Rex, VP of Product at WhatsApp, told TechCrunch over a call. The company has been laying down the groundwork for secure AI chats on WhatsApp for a while now. Last year, it detailed its private processing infrastructure that would let it build AI features withoutbreaking end-to-end encryption. Since then, WhatsApp has added features likeAI-powered summaries of messagesthat use this architecture. Newton-Rex said Meta used smaller models to power its previous features, but the new incognito chat uses itslatest Muse Spark model, which was released last month. The company is already working on its next feature that taps its private processing infra. Called Side Chat, it will let users invoke Meta AI within chats to ask questions and get answers privately without notifying or showing it to other people in the chat. Currently, you need to tag a message and ask a question to the AI assistant to get an answer that other participants in the chat can see. If you privately need to ask a question, you have to paste the text in a separate chat window. ChatGPT and Claude offer incognito modes, too, and companies likeDuckDuckGoandProtonhave launched their own privacy-first chatbots. Meta's move towards private AI chats comes at a key time. Last month, Reuters cited lawyers who opined that users'conversations with an AI chatbot could be used against themin litigation.

2 hours ago

View