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More screens, more stakes: India’s content boom needs an India-first media-tech backbone
Breaking India News Today | In-Depth Reports & Analysis – IndiaNewsWeek > Technology > India’s Content Explosion Demands a Strong Local Media-Tech Backbone
Technology

India’s Content Explosion Demands a Strong Local Media-Tech Backbone

Technology Desk By Technology Desk March 11, 2026 8 Min Read
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Today, if you stood at a bustling train station in Mumbai or a quiet village square in Jaunpur, Uttar Pradesh, chances are, you would see the same thing: heads bent over glowing rectangles. India, much like the world, is obsessed with screens, and today they grab more eyeballs than ever.

Recent data confirm that we’re now a nation of 313 million digital-only viewers – a number that’s growing fastest not in metropolitan areas, but in rural India. These devices also witness a fierce battle for attention between films, premium OTT series, live cricket, short-form reels, and news, among others.

On the production side, this explosion has pushed volume and complexity to new highs. With the digital segment now overtaking television in total revenue, we are creating more hours of footage, in more languages, for more formats than ever before. This sheer velocity, while it’s filling screens, is also stress-testing an underlying architecture that was never designed to carry such a complex load.

The Core Proble m: Fragile, Non-Sovereign Infrastructure

For all our creative prowess, the “plumbing” of India’s media industry remains surprisingly fragmented. A typical content workflow relies on a patchwork of stitched-together tools and vendors, with the heavy lifting—the processing, storage, and management of our media assets—happening on infrastructure located miles away.

This may seem like another technical process, but it is a business risk. It imposes friction of distance where latency slows down critical workflows, and a cost premium, where we pay for scattered, foreign tools while absorbing operations inefficiencies.

To put it simply, it is like running a national broadcast on borrowed wiring. This makes sovereignty a practical necessity. It ensures that critical workloads and IP stay within India’s legal and performance boundaries, freeing creators from dependence on opaque, external systems.

It also makes day-to-day business easier: when the platform, teams and accountability sit in the same market, onboarding is faster, fixes don’t wait on distant time zones, and support feels like a partnership, rather than just a ticket number.

Strategic Shift: Media-Tech as Sovereign Infrastructure

For too long, we have treated media technology as ‘just software’. It’s time we start viewing it as infrastructure: essential, public-utility-grade facility, like highways or the power grid. When we treat media-tech as sovereign infrastructure, the outcomes change. Costs become predictable, time-to-market shrinks, and most importantly, we regain control.

This requires establishing a sovereign, scalable, cloud-native services layer built specifically for India.The industry needs a purpose-built ecosystem designed for the creative economy. Such an architecture must be capable of ingesting massive raw files and instantly converting them for every device – from a 4K TV in Delhi to a budget smartphone in a remote village. Simultaneously, these systems must handle rights management and ad-insertion natively, understanding the nuances of India’s complex regional markets. This shifts the burden from manual operations to intelligent automation, where AI enforces contracts and stitches ads directly into the stream in milliseconds.

This vision is powered by three specific technological shifts. Let’s look at them not as buzzwords, but as business enablers.

  • Cloud GPUs: In the past, high-end animation and visual effects (VFX) were the domain of massive studios that could afford to sink serious capital into their own “server rooms” of GPUs, cooling, upgrades, and specialist teams. For SMEs and independent creators, that kind of upfront spend is usually a non-starter, and the hardware also risks sitting idle between projects. Rendering-as-a-Service flips the model. Think of this as renting a supercomputer by the hour. A small animation team in Pune or a VFX artist in Chennai can now access massive graphics processing power in the cloud to render complex scenes, and then shut it off when they are done. That is how rendering gets democratised, moving from a privilege of scale to a capability that even small creators can access when ambition strikes.
  • AI-Driven OTT: Artificial Intelligence is often over-hyped, but in the media, AI, when used well, is not magic. It is a workflow. AI can now “watch” a video and tag every face, object, and emotion, making archives searchable in seconds. Beyond search, it drives the recommendation engines that keep viewers hooked. Industry reports suggest that AI-driven personalisation can significantly increase engagement, serving the right regional content at the right time. Furthermore, automated QC tools can spot a glitch or a compliance issue in a thousand hours of footage faster than any human team. When these tools are built locally and integrated end-to-end, platforms can launch faster and monetise more intelligently.
  • Secure, End-to-End Workflows: In an era of leaks and hacks, security is non-negotiable. A sovereign media-tech stack ensures that pre-release content never leaves a secure, audited environment. It creates a clear chain of custody. It ensures that when you handle user data, you are doing so in full compliance with Indian law, protecting your brand from reputational and legal damage.

An India-First Media-Tech Backbone

Sovereign infrastructure is already the playbook for global dominance. China’s tech giants secured their market not by renting, but by building end-to-end domestic platforms. Europe is aggressively pivoting toward sovereign clouds to ring-fence its digital borders. Yet, India—poised to be the world’s largest creative economy—is still attempting to conquer the global market while relying on borrowed infrastructure.

We have spent the last decade proving to the world that India is the ultimate content factory. But factories alone don’t define the future; the owners of the supply chain do. The technology exists. The talent is ready. The only remaining variable is our willingness to own the backbone, not just the bandwidth.

The author is Sunil Gupta, Co-founder, CEO & MD, Yotta Data Services.

Disclaimer: The views expressed are solely of the author and ETCIO does not necessarily subscribe to it. ETCIO shall not be responsible for any damage caused to any person/organization directly or indirectly.

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  • Updated On Mar 11, 2026 at 08:52 AM IST
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