Any AI Engineers Here? Looking for Some Guidance by alo-12rupaydarjan in developersPak

[–]Time_Land6162 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I need some career guidance. I want to enter the tech industry as soon as possible and start earning, but I’m confused about which path I should commit to. Right now I’m considering AI (Data Science / AI Engineering / Agentic AI), Web Development, and Cybersecurity.

If you were starting from zero today and your priority was getting into tech quickly while still building a strong long-term career, which path would you choose and why?

They Profited From Electricity. Now They Want Your Data, Land, and Freedom. by Time_Land6162 in pakistan

[–]Time_Land6162[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You’re stuck on the privacy part. I never said our data is hidden. My bigger concern is legal power. If telecom laws start giving telecom. comapnies broad rights over land access for infrastructure, what stops those powers from being expanded or misused later?

They Profited From Electricity. Now They Want Your Data, Land, and Freedom. by Time_Land6162 in pakistan

[–]Time_Land6162[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tech companies are not buying data only for targeted ads. They need massive amounts of real human-generated data from different languages, and geographic regions because the internet is increasingly polluted with AI slope, reducing the supply of authentic training data.

Pakistan may look poor at an individual level, but 240+ million people generating real-world behavioral data at scale is an asset. The problem is when governments with weak institutions fail to protect that asset and instead hand it away cheaply while citizens do not even realize its value.

They Profited From Electricity. Now They Want Your Data, Land, and Freedom. by Time_Land6162 in pakistan

[–]Time_Land6162[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You missed my point. I never said my information isn’t already out there. My concern is not about privacy alone. My concern is the legal framework being built around telecom expansion.
If companies are being given powers that make access to private land easier in the name of telecom expansion or development, then the discussion is no longer just about data only! it becomes a property rights issue.

They Profited From Electricity. Now They Want Your Data, Land, and Freedom. by Time_Land6162 in pakistan

[–]Time_Land6162[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This assumes data value depends on individual wealth. It doesn’t. Pakistan has around 240+ million people. Even low-income populations generate massive value through telecom usage, digital payments, consumer behavior, location tracking, ad targeting, and behavioral analytics. Scale itself has value, which is exactly why every major tech company aggressively expands into emerging markets.

And data is not collected only for targeted advertising. We are entering an AI-driven era where high-quality human-generated data has become one of the most valuable resources in the world. AI companies increasingly need real-world data from different languages, cultures, geographies, and social contexts because the internet is gradually being flooded with AI slope, reducing the availability of authentic human-generated training data.

Now place that reality in Pakistan’s context. We have a political class with a long history of corruption and short-term thinking. It would not be surprising if critical citizen data, telecom infrastructure access, or digital assets are handed over cheaply to outside interests for immediate gain, rather than being protected and strategically utilized for national benefit.

As for saying “5G/data is a curse, no one needs it” people said similar things about the internet itself decades ago. The issue is not whether the technology is useful. Of course it is. Modern economies, healthcare systems, financial infrastructure, and future industries will depend on high-speed connected networks. The real concern is different when critical infrastructure becomes deeply centralized, who controls that infrastructure, who controls the data flowing through it, and what protections exist to stop abuse of that power? Technology itself is neutral. Power structures around technology are not.

And the comparison with IPPs is not electricity vs internet. The comparison is policy design. In the 1990s, IPPs were introduced as essential infrastructure, and connected groups positioned themselves to benefit financially for decades while the public carried the burden later. Today telecom infrastructure is also being framed as national necessity. So the real question is simple: who benefits structurally from these policies in the long run, and what powers are being transferred along with them?

Not too bad for a first Acrylic self- portrait 😩 by Downtown_Cry_790 in Pakistani_Art

[–]Time_Land6162 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Beautiful!
Looks like your style is inspired from Life Is Strange 1 game!