• About Us
    • Àtẹ́lẹwọ́ Podcast
  • Contact
  • Cookie Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap
Freelanews
Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
    • Crime
  • Business
  • Brands
  • Banking
  • Opinion
  • Interview
  • Entertainment
  • Podcast
    • Àtẹ́lẹwọ́
  • Sports
  • Events
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Crime
  • Business
  • Brands
  • Banking
  • Opinion
  • Interview
  • Entertainment
  • Podcast
    • Àtẹ́lẹwọ́
  • Sports
  • Events
No Result
View All Result
Freelanews
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinion Opinion

Artificial Intelligence and the Nigerian mind: Are we asking the right questions?

Peculiar Adirika by Peculiar Adirika
June 16, 2025
in Opinion
0 0
0
Akeem Hassan2

A Lagos innovation advisor questions Nigeria’s readiness for the AI revolution, urging proactive building over passive consumption to avoid mass job displacement

Artificial Intelligence, the new magic word! Investors are funding it. Universities are teaching it. Even my WhatsApp uncle is forwarding AI-generated motivational quotes. In fact, it’s what the boys and I are always talking about over beer.

We’re all caught in the hype — and honestly, it’s exciting. But as the drums of this AI revolution beat louder, I find myself asking a different question:

Is Nigeria moving with it — or sleepwalking into an unfamiliar future?

Beyond the Hype: The Real Questions?

perfect aesthetic dental clinic perfect aesthetic dental clinic perfect aesthetic dental clinic

As someone standing in the middle of Nigeria’s innovation space, I’ve learned that real progress doesn’t just come from excitement.

It comes from asking the harder questions — the ones that make us uncomfortable before they make us better.

Because beneath all the celebration, I keep wondering: What does this AI revolution really mean for the average Lagos resident? Good or bad?

Or… are we even asking the right question? Let’s face it: AI is power. And like any form of power, it can either empower or marginalize — depending on who wields it, and why.

Already, AI can write better poems than me, paint portraits, produce mad afro beats music, generate movie scripts, Create deep fake videos, build websites and apps.

Soon, AI “agents” will be able to run businesses, book flights, negotiate deals, order food — basically run your daily life.

For the global economy, that’s progress.

But for a country like Nigeria — where millions of talented youths hustle, grind, and create every single day — I have to ask: Where does this leave us?

We are a nation of creative, hustlers, dreamers, builders. Do we risk becoming irrelevant in a world where machines do our jobs faster and better?

What happens when a prompt — just a few words — can produce what took someone years of sweat to perfect? It’s not just a job issue. It’s an identity issue!

Are we finally going to become Sophisticated… But Jobless?

We might be on the verge of raising a generation of sophisticatedly unemployed people. Smart. Ambitious. Highly educated.

But displaced by tools built in Silicon Valley — by people who don’t even know where Osun State is. Is that alarmist? No — it’s realistic. But realism doesn’t mean panic. It means preparation.

Are we on track?

This isn’t about resisting innovation — far from it. I’m proudly part of Nigeria’s tech ecosystem. I believe AI can help us solve big problems — in healthcare, education, agriculture, even governance. But we can’t afford lazy excitement. We need active imagination.

We need to Build our own AI models (trained on African languages, Nigerian realities, and local problems), Revamp education(focus on critical thinking, not just certificates), Empower the creative industries (to see AI as a collaborator, not competition), Lead from the front —not always from behind.

Because let’s be honest, the future won’t wait and AI won’t ask for our permission to change the rules.

Is there still Hope for us?

Despite all the challenges, I believe in the Nigerian spirit. I’ve seen young Nigerians turn nothing into something, time and time again. I don’t believe any machine can write our story for us — unless we let it.

But we have to stay awake, we have to be strategic, we have to be audacious enough to build, not just consume.

My Final Thoughts: Let us start Asking Better Questions

The question isn’t “Will AI shape the future?” It’s: “What role will Nigeria play in creating that future?”

But even before we answer that, maybe we need to ask better questions: Is the idea of work about to be redefined?, Are we — after centuries of struggle — about to find ourselves back at square one?, If Africa doesn’t shape this technology, what will our future look like as mere consumers?

These are uncomfortable questions but from the right questions come the right actions. The future doesn’t belong to the loudest or the fastest.

It belongs to those who ask the right questions early —and have the courage to build the answers.

About the Author

Akeem Hassan is an ecosystem builder and innovation adviser to the Lagos State Commissioner for Innovation, Science and Technology.

Passionate about the intersection of technology, governance, and African prosperity, he works at the forefront of Nigeria’s innovation ecosystem — building bridges between policy, creativity, and the future.

He believes Africa must not just adopt technology, but help define its next chapters.

Source: Read more at thisdaylive.com

Peculiar Adirika
Peculiar Adirika

Related Posts

bekem
Opinion

How extractive industries business can respect human rights beyond this pandemic

by Freelanews
June 8, 2020
MKO Abiola 1
Opinion

The enduring significance of June 12

by Peculiar Adirika
June 12, 2025
arcon lekan fadolapo freelanews
Opinion

‘ARCON reforms’ Is ADVAN in love with the industry status quo?

by Freelanews
October 4, 2022
Brand damage control at LASUSTECH
Brands & Marketing

LASUSTECH’s challenges: Navigating crises and rebuilding trust

by Steve Adesemoye
June 1, 2025
Senator Mudashiru Husain
Opinion

Why Senator Mudashiru Husain remains the most competent choice for Osun governorship

by Peculiar Adirika
May 19, 2025

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

Nosa Osaikhuiwu, President, FESCA

FESCA to launch ‘Culture Change’ book on ethical transformation, good governance in Nigeria

April 23, 2026
West Africa

Standard Chartered tops West Africa M&A advisers ranking by deal value

April 22, 2026
Plateau

Plateau State files case against five over Angwa-Rukuba attacks

April 22, 2026
UXO

UXO discovered near construction site in Adamawa, army secures area

April 22, 2026
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
N250k signature

Abiodun vs Amosun: N250k signature plot deepens Ogun political crisis ahead Tinubu visit

April 3, 2026
Omoge Saida

Omoge Saida sparks Nigerian social media over leaked video

October 28, 2025
james akaie

Nollywood SFX makeup artist James Akaie allegedly dies after explosion on Abeokuta movie set

January 13, 2026
Political persecution in Ogun State

Political persecution in Ogun State: Abiodun moves against Otunba Gbenga Daniel with demolition threats again

August 9, 2025
amoke

‘Meals by Amoke’ We serve traditional dishes in a modern way, Bukoye Fasola reveals

19
Image 2024 03 26 at 120645 AM jpeg

Charles Inojie, Ali Nuhu call on communities to #MakeWeHalla against domestic violence

11
Meran Primary Health Centre Lagos father Meran hospital

Lagos father shares heartbreaking experience at Meran Primary Health Centre (Photos)

4
fls2

‘Disarticulated system’ Gov’t confused about Nigerian education, expert laments

3
Nosa Osaikhuiwu, President, FESCA

FESCA to launch ‘Culture Change’ book on ethical transformation, good governance in Nigeria

April 23, 2026
West Africa

Standard Chartered tops West Africa M&A advisers ranking by deal value

April 22, 2026
Plateau

Plateau State files case against five over Angwa-Rukuba attacks

April 22, 2026
UXO

UXO discovered near construction site in Adamawa, army secures area

April 22, 2026
April 2026
SMTWTFS
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930 
« Mar    
Freelanews

Freelanews is a Nigerian digital news platform that delivers timely, credible, and engaging stories across politics, business, entertainment, lifestyle, and the creative industry, with a strong focus on promoting innovation, integrity, and inclusivity in storytelling.

Today’s Popular

  • IMG 20260422 WA0018

    Just In: Police barricade Obanta Club, Daniel’s residence over planned BATOGD rally

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • UXO discovered near construction site in Adamawa, army secures area

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • LASUSTECH celebrates outstanding accreditation success in 2025 exercise

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Guinness Nigeria wins major sustainability award at Industry Awards

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Just Published!

Nosa Osaikhuiwu, President, FESCA

FESCA to launch ‘Culture Change’ book on ethical transformation, good governance in Nigeria

April 23, 2026
West Africa

Standard Chartered tops West Africa M&A advisers ranking by deal value

April 22, 2026
Plateau

Plateau State files case against five over Angwa-Rukuba attacks

April 22, 2026
UXO

UXO discovered near construction site in Adamawa, army secures area

April 22, 2026
Blessing CEO

Blessing CEO apologises over cancer claims, offers refunds after donations from VeryDarkMan

April 22, 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Advertisement
  • Sitemap

© 2025 Freelanews | by Iretura.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Crime
  • Business
  • Brands
  • Banking
  • Opinion
  • Interview
  • Entertainment
  • Podcast
    • Àtẹ́lẹwọ́
  • Sports
  • Events

© 2025 Freelanews | by Iretura.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.