What is your convincing dream scenario for AI – a breakthrough that might fundamentally improve life at a worldwide level?
My dream only works if people can understand in every single place and use AI in their very own lives. That's why I give attention to AI alphabetization. It will not be about transforming everyone into coders, but concerning the undeniable fact that every citizen has the knowledge of accessing opportunities, making well -founded decisions and folding systems into consideration. Without literacy, the promise of AI inequality becomes.
What is a current project or a breakthrough that you just are particularly happy with – and what sort of effects, what effects it would have in the actual world?
A project that I’m particularly proud is is the AI ​​Global Manual, which I wrote as a beginner guideline to assist on a regular basis people understand and use AI. It was officially adopted by Cross River State Government in Nigeria for a nationwide campaign through which students, specialists and civil servants were reached. What makes me proud will not be only political recognition, but additionally the concept normal residents receive the instruments for participating within the digital economy. The effects I hope is easy: more people don’t see AI as something distance or technical, but as a resource that they will use in their very own lives.
What is an application for AI that you just imagine that more people should know – something positive that flies under the radar?
An application that I believe that more people should know is how AI might be used as an instrument for bourgeois strengthening. For example, we see early efforts through which AI chatbots help the residents to know laws, guidelines and even their rights within the plain text. It may not sound glamorous, but it surely has enormous effects: it lowers the team of participation, gives people a voice in decisions and transforms AI right into a citizen infrastructure. This is the kind of application that’s directly connected to social mobility and inclusion.
If you have got to decide on a nightmare scenario that keeps you awake at night – whether realistic or speculative – what would it not be and which warning signs should we have a look at today?
The nightmare, which worries me probably the most, will not be killer robots or machines, but something more subtle: a world through which only a small group of individuals understand and shape AI while everyone else is disregarded. This creates a brand new type of inequality through which decisions are made without civic responsibility or public contributions. The warning signs are already here: if the scholars graduate without digital skills when governments use technology without preparing their workforce, or if AI is just treated as a product and never as a public infrastructure. When we ignore these signs, we also risk constructing first -class systems and inequality in world class.
Who or what do you think that has the strength to forestall your nightmare scenario above?
Preventing this nightmare will not be just the order of a gaggle. The universities that involve AI alphabetization into education, governments that they treat as a residents' infrastructure within the industry in investments in rescillering, introduction of individuals and products and residents who not only see themselves as technology consumers, but as a participant in design. If these parts work together, we are able to close the gap before it becomes everlasting inequality.
What are we not talking about within the AI ​​discussion today – something that you just imagine that it might be very vital in five years?
“We don't talk enough about bourgeois literacy within the AI.
If you look ahead for 10 years, what do you think that will likely be the most important change in our each day life?
In ten years, the most important change will likely be that AI shape almost every a part of on a regular basis life from the way in which we learn the best way to access health and public services. The actual difference is not going to be the technology, but whether people have the literacy to make use of it with confidence and to carry it into consideration. When AI becomes as common because the electricity competence of electricity, it would be more sure that it excludes it than excludes.
What did you encourage you to participate on this AI summit as a spokesman and what message you hope to send the audience?
What inspired me to affix this summit is the possibility to share a perspective that is usually missed: AI will not be nearly technology, but about people. My message to the audience is easy. If we wish AI to be a force for social mobility, we’ve to treat AI alphabetization as a citizen infrastructure in order that every student, specialist and residents can participate and profit from it, not only a number of.
Uchenna Victor Moses, Digital Project Manager
08 – 09 October 2025
Taets Art & Event Park, Amsterdam
09 – December 10, 2025
Doha exhibition and congress center

