How to use today’s GK page
A quick routine: skim One-Liners → test with the Mini-Quiz → deepen with Short Notes.
📌 One-Liners
- Scroll the categories (they may change daily).
- Read the bold title then the short sub-line for context.
- Watch for acronyms—today’s quiz/notes expand them.
🧠 Mini-Quiz
- Answer the 3 MCQs without peeking.
- Tap Submit to reveal answers and explanations.
- Note why an option is correct—this locks facts into memory.
🔑 Short Notes
- Read the 3 compact explainers—each builds on a different topic.
- Use them for a quick recap or add to your personal notes.
- Great for mains/PI: definitions, timelines, and “why it matters”.
📝 Short Notes • 03 Jun 2025
3 compact, exam-focused notes built from today’s GK365 one-liners. Use for last-minute revision.
Karnataka Raises Tobacco Age to 21 & Bans Hookah Bars
Digital GovernanceWhat: The Karnataka government raised the minimum age for purchasing tobacco products from 18 to 21 years and imposed a statewide ban on hookah bars and parlors. This legislative measure aims to curb tobacco consumption among youth and address the rising trend of hookah smoking, which is often perceived as less harmful than cigarettes despite carrying similar health risks. The decision makes Karnataka one of the few Indian states to implement such stringent tobacco control measures, aligning with public health advocacy for stricter tobacco regulations.
How: The implementation involves amendments to the Karnataka Prohibition of Smoking and Spitting Act and enforcement through state health and excise departments. Penalties will be imposed on establishments violating the hookah bar ban and retailers selling tobacco products to individuals under 21. The measure requires age verification mechanisms at point of sale, awareness campaigns highlighting hookah health risks, and coordination with police departments for compliance monitoring. The state leverages existing frameworks under the Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products Act (COTPA) 2003 while introducing stricter state-level provisions.
Why: Critical for UPSC GS2 (Social Justice & Health) and GS2 (Governance – State Legislation) as it demonstrates state-level public health intervention and legislative autonomy. Questions on COTPA provisions, tobacco control measures, state vs. central legislation on health, and preventive health initiatives appear in prelims and mains. This provides excellent content for mains answers on public health governance, youth welfare, balancing individual freedom with public health goals, and effectiveness of prohibition measures—themes common in GS2 governance papers, ethics case studies on paternalism, and essays on health policy.
NAKSHA Programme Phase II: Modernising Urban Land Surveys
Digital GovernanceWhat: The Department of Land Resources (DoLR) launched Phase II of the NAKSHA (National Automated Khasra Mapping and Survey Application) programme to modernize urban land surveys and create accurate digital land records. NAKSHA is a comprehensive geospatial technology initiative aimed at establishing ground-verified land parcel boundaries, updating cadastral maps, and integrating them with property registration systems. Phase II focuses specifically on urban areas where rapid urbanization has created discrepancies in land records, ownership disputes, and challenges in urban planning and tax administration.
How: Phase II employs drone-based aerial surveys, Continuously Operating Reference Stations (CORS) for precise GPS coordinates, Geographic Information System (GIS) mapping, and Artificial Intelligence for data processing. The programme creates high-resolution digital cadastral maps with unique identification for each land parcel, linking them to the National Generic Document Registration System (NGDRS) and Property Tax systems. Implementation involves collaboration between DoLR, state revenue departments, Urban Local Bodies (ULBs), and Survey of India. The system enables real-time updates, transparent land transactions, and dispute resolution through accurate boundary demarcation.
Why: Highly relevant for UPSC GS2 (Governance – Land Records) and GS3 (Infrastructure – Urban Planning) as it addresses land records modernization, a critical reform area. Questions on Digital India Land Records Modernisation Programme (DILRMP), geospatial technology applications, cadastral surveys, and property rights clarity appear regularly in prelims and mains. This provides excellent material for answers on governance reforms, technology in administration, ease of doing business, urban land management challenges, and reducing litigation through accurate records—frequently appearing in GS2 governance answers and GS3 urbanization topics.
ADB’s $10 Billion Five-Year Plan for India’s Urban Infrastructure
InternationalWhat: The Asian Development Bank (ADB) announced a $10 billion five-year financing plan specifically dedicated to India’s urban infrastructure development. This substantial commitment will support projects across urban transport systems, water and sanitation infrastructure, solid waste management, smart city initiatives, and affordable housing. The plan represents ADB’s recognition of India’s rapid urbanization challenges and the critical infrastructure gaps in cities and towns. The funding aligns with India’s urban development priorities under missions like Smart Cities, AMRUT (Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation), and Swachh Bharat Urban.
How: The financing will be delivered through sovereign loans to central and state governments, sub-sovereign lending to Urban Local Bodies with state guarantees, and technical assistance for project preparation and capacity building. ADB will focus on sustainable and climate-resilient infrastructure, promoting green building standards, renewable energy integration, and nature-based solutions for urban flooding and water management. Implementation involves collaboration with Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, state urban development departments, and specialized urban infrastructure agencies. The bank will also support policy reforms in urban planning, municipal finance, and public-private partnerships.
Why: Essential for UPSC GS3 (Economy – External Financing) and GS3 (Infrastructure – Urbanization) as it demonstrates international development bank role in India’s infrastructure financing. Questions on ADB operations, multilateral development assistance, urban infrastructure challenges, Smart Cities Mission, and municipal finance appear in prelims and mains. This provides strong content for answers on urbanization challenges, infrastructure financing mechanisms, role of international institutions in development, sustainable urban development, and India’s engagement with multilateral banks—themes common in GS3 economy papers, essays on urbanization, and international relations questions on development cooperation.
🧠 Mini-Quiz: Test Your Recall
3 questions from today’s one-liners. No peeking!
Karnataka raised the minimum age for tobacco purchase to which of the following?
NAKSHA programme is related to which of the following?
What is the value of ADB’s five-year plan announced for India’s urban infrastructure?
🔑 Short Notes: Build Concept Depth (3 Topics)
Each note gives you a quick What—How—Why on a high-yield news item from today’s GK365 one-liners.
Bharat Gen: India’s First Indigenous Multimodal AI Model
Frontier TechWhat: Bharat Gen became India’s first indigenous multimodal AI language model mission, representing a significant milestone in the country’s artificial intelligence capabilities and technological self-reliance. A multimodal AI model can process and generate multiple types of data—text, images, audio, and video—enabling more sophisticated applications than traditional text-only language models. Bharat Gen aims to address India’s specific linguistic diversity, cultural context, and domain requirements while reducing dependence on foreign AI technologies. This initiative aligns with the National AI Mission and Atmanirbhar Bharat objectives.
How: Bharat Gen is developed through collaboration between government research institutions, academic organizations like IITs, and private sector technology companies. The model is trained on extensive Indian language datasets covering 22 scheduled languages, Indian cultural content, regional knowledge systems, and domain-specific data from healthcare, agriculture, governance, and education sectors. The system employs Large Language Model (LLM) architecture with multimodal capabilities, enabling it to understand and generate content in multiple formats. Development involves creating Indian language corpus, ensuring data privacy compliance, building computing infrastructure, and establishing ethical AI guidelines specific to Indian context.
Why: Crucial for UPSC GS3 (Science & Technology) and GS3 (Economy – Self-Reliance) as it demonstrates India’s technological sovereignty and AI capabilities. Questions on National AI Mission, indigenous technology development, language technology, digital public infrastructure, and AI governance appear in prelims and mains. This provides excellent content for answers on technological self-reliance, linguistic diversity and AI, data sovereignty, global AI competition, and India’s position in emerging technologies—themes frequently appearing in GS3 technology papers, essays on Atmanirbhar Bharat, and ethics papers on AI governance and cultural appropriateness of technology.
GST Collections Cross ₹2.01 Lakh Crore in May 2025
EconomyWhat: India’s Goods and Services Tax (GST) collections crossed ₹2.01 lakh crore in May 2025, reflecting robust economic activity, improved tax compliance, and effective revenue administration. This milestone represents significant year-on-year growth in indirect tax collections and indicates strong consumption demand, business transactions, and formalization of the economy. Crossing the ₹2 lakh crore threshold consistently demonstrates the maturity of India’s GST system implemented in July 2017, and provides fiscal resources for government spending on infrastructure, social welfare, and development programs.
How: The strong GST collections result from multiple factors: economic growth driving higher consumption, increased compliance through technology integration, expansion of the tax base through formalization, improved input tax credit matching systems, data analytics for evasion detection, and simplified return filing processes. The GST Network (GSTN) employs AI and machine learning for fraud detection, risk-based assessment, and taxpayer profiling. E-invoicing for large businesses, biometric authentication, and integration with other databases like VAHAN (vehicle registration) enhance compliance. The collections are distributed between Central GST (CGST), State GST (SGST), Integrated GST (IGST), and compensation cess.
Why: Essential for UPSC GS3 (Economy – Taxation) as GST is a fundamental economic reform and regular prelims/mains topic. Questions on GST structure, revenue trends, compliance mechanisms, center-state revenue sharing, compensation cess, and indirect tax reforms are common. This provides excellent material for mains answers on fiscal federalism, tax reform effectiveness, revenue mobilization challenges, formalization of economy, and fiscal health indicators—themes that frequently appear in GS3 economy papers, essays on economic reforms, and current affairs linkage to economic policy. Monthly GST figures are standard current affairs questions in prelims.
Lt Gen Dinesh Singh Rana as 18th CINCAN
Defence & GeopoliticsWhat: Lieutenant General Dinesh Singh Rana assumed charge as the 18th Commander-in-Chief of the Andaman and Nicobar Command (CINCAN), India’s only tri-service integrated theater command. CINCAN is a unified command structure where the commander-in-chief exercises operational control over all Army, Navy, and Air Force assets in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. This strategically vital command guards India’s maritime interests in the Bay of Bengal, monitors critical sea lanes of communication, and serves as a model for the planned theater commands under military reforms. The position rotates among the three services.
How: CINCAN exercises unified operational command over all military assets including the Army’s 108 Mountain Brigade, Indian Navy’s Far Eastern Naval Command elements, and Indian Air Force’s forward airbases on the islands. The command is responsible for coastal security, maritime domain awareness, humanitarian assistance and disaster relief (HADR) in the region, and safeguarding India’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). The command operates under the Integrated Defence Staff headquarters and coordinates with the Coast Guard, local administration, and island development authorities. CINCAN plays a crucial role in India’s Act East Policy, joint exercises with friendly nations, and monitoring Chinese naval activity in the Indian Ocean Region.
Why: Highly relevant for UPSC GS3 (Internal Security & Defence) and GS2 (Polity – Constitutional Bodies) as it represents integrated military command structure and strategic geography. Questions on theater commands, tri-service integration, Andaman and Nicobar strategic importance, maritime security, and military reforms appear in prelims and mains. This provides excellent content for answers on defence reforms, jointness among armed forces, India’s maritime strategy, island territories’ strategic significance, and Indo-Pacific security architecture—themes common in GS3 security papers, essays on national security, and international relations questions on India’s strategic posture and regional security role.
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