HomeAmericaUkraine to pick AI models operated without provider control, official says

Ukraine to pick AI models operated without provider control, official says

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By Leo Marchandon and Gianluca ‌Lo Nostro

July 7 (Reuters) - Ukraine will favour AI systems it can ​run on its own servers, a senior ministry official said on Tuesday, as wartime Kyiv seeks to ⁠keep digital tools for government services, businesses and the military from depending on remote systems that providers can restrict or switch off.

The approach favours self-hosted, or "on-premise," models ​that Ukraine can deploy on its own infrastructure, while limiting solutions that, by design, remain under the ‌provider's control — a category that includes Anthropic and OpenAI's main models.

The policy was reinforced after the U.S. government ordered Anthropic to cut access to powerful models, echoing broader European sentiment, ⁠Roman Kyslyi, Chief AI Officer at Ukraine's Ministry of Digital Transformation, ⁠told Reuters.

"It confirms that AI sovereignty isn't just a defensive talking point, it's a necessity," he said. 

Reuters reported on Tuesday that Chinese authorities are considering curbs on top AI models, which currently dominate the open-source market. 

Kyslyi said the decisive criterion is not about ‌where the model is from. "If the vendor will provide it to run on our ⁠on-premise (infrastructure), there are no restrictions."

"The model is essentially a ‌commodity," Kyslyi said, adding that Ukraine would work with ​any provider whose technology could be deployed under Ukrainian control.

Currently, Ukraine's AI assistant inside the Diia government app runs on Google's remote-only Gemini, accessed through servers within the ‌European Union. Kyslyi said Google provided free tokens for it, ​meaning no budget spending.

Still, Ukraine ⁠strips personal data before sending queries to Gemini because they "don't control those ‌models," he said, describing Gemini as an "interim" ⁠solution.

Ukraine is also developing its own model with Kyivstar based on Google's Gemma, its open variant, due to be released in autumn and intended for use across government services, ​private enterprises and the military.

Kyslyi ‌said the ministry compared several open-source options before choosing Gemma, including Mistral models and OpenAI's ⁠GPT-OSS. Gemma and Mistral matched remote-only alternatives ​on many performance tests, he said.

(Reporting by Leo Marchandon and Gianluca Lo Nostro ​in Gdansk, Editing by William Maclean)

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