"Digital India is an enterprise for India's transformation on a scale that is, perhaps, unmatched in human history," Modi said while speaking about his ambitious Digital India initiative before a gathering of Silicon Valley CEOs.
Modi, the first Indian Prime Minister to visit Silicon Valley in more than three decades, said his government wants paperless transactions.
"We would set up digital locker for every citizens to share documents across departments," he said.
"I want our 1.25 billion citizens to be digitally connected," Modi said, describing the steps taken by his government towards broadband connectivity.
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"I see technology as a means to empower and as a tool that bridges the distance between hope and opportunity," he added.
"In this digital age, we have an opportunity to transform lives of people in ways that was hard to imagine just a couple of decades ago," the Prime Minister said, adding that the pace at which people are taking to digital technology defies stereotypes of age, education, language and income.
"I see technology as a means to empower and as a tool that bridges the distance between hope and opportunity," he said.
Recognising that a Digital India could not be built without bridging the digital divide, he listed out the measures taken by his government to bridge this digital divide.
"From large corporates to young professionals in this great center of innovation, each can be part of India story," he said.
"Building upon that vision, we conceive of Digital India, to fundamentally transform the way our nation will work," the Prime Minister said.