- The Netherlands has begun real-world testing of its national AI model GPT-NL
- GPT-NL is designed as a European alternative to Big Tech systems
- The project focuses on practical public sector uses, including government communication and municipal assistants.
The Netherlands is trying to build a national artificial intelligence model that is not controlled by Silicon Valley. The country developed its GPT-NL model over the past two years. Now the model is starting to move beyond the lab and into real-world testing.
A partnership between Dutch government agencies and research organizations created GPT-NL. The idea was to focus less on viral demonstrations and more on practical deployment within government agencies.
GPT-NL is positioned as infrastructure rather than a consumer chatbot competing for attention. If it works, GPT-NL will demonstrate that an AI system can operate within European legal frameworks and public sector expectations without being completely dependent on foreign companies. Europe already relies heavily on non-European cloud services, office software and artificial intelligence systems. GPT-NL supporters argue that dependency creates a strategic weakness.
Institutional AI
Five organizations have begun feasibility studies with plans to expand and eventually launch commercially later this year. One of the first pilots involves Gem, a virtual assistant already used by nearly thirty Dutch municipalities. The feasibility study examines whether GPT-NL can improve the quality of responses citizens receive when asking questions about Gem.
Another pilot focuses on a government writing assistant designed to help public officials write clearer letters. This may seem less glamorous than AI-enabled imaging or video tools, but it touches on a very real issue in public administration. Official communication about benefits, debt, and social services is often dense enough to confuse the people who receive it. GPT-NL is being tested to see if it can make those interactions more understandable.
The Netherlands Forensic Institute is using GPT-NL for its work, fine-tuning it on forensic data sets to improve the classification of large volumes of investigative evidence. TNO itself is also testing GPT-NL internally for sensitive projects where commercial AI systems may present privacy or security issues.
Anti-Silicon Valley AI
The most surprising thing about GPT-NL may be how it was trained. As major AI companies face escalating legal battles over copyrighted training data, GPT-NL has reached licensing deals with Dutch news publishers covering newspapers, broadcasters and online media platforms across the country. According to the project, it is the first AI initiative worldwide to guarantee paid collective agreements with major publishers in a single market.
That achievement is important because the relationship between journalism and artificial intelligence companies has become increasingly hostile. The editors argue that their work has been removed without permission and reused in systems that may directly compete with the original reporting.
The terms of the GPT-NL license are publicly documented, publishers are compensated, and technical safeguards are intended to prevent users from ripping licensed content directly through requests.
Still, the project faces the same scaling cost reality that almost all AI initiatives face. GPT-NL’s 25 developers and budget are minuscule by AI standards. That creates a tension underlying the optimism surrounding the project. GPT-NL appears usable for institutional use, but continuing to improve the model while keeping pace with global AI development will require sustained funding and political support.
Still, there are only a few significant challenges to AI outside of the largest American companies. The Netherlands is effectively testing whether there is another route forward, focused on public institutions, negotiated copyright agreements and local control over data infrastructure.
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