Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Wednesday, 8 April 2026

Freebies ? No , Thank You !


 

===================================================

Grassroots Warriors in Tamil Nadu Just Shamed Every Political Party in

India – And They Didn’t Wait for PIPPPA !


While Delhi’s netas keep vomiting election manifestos full of “free” laptops, gold

chains, scooters, cash doles and electricity waivers, a handful of villagers in Tami

l Nadu have done what the entire political class fears most: they said NO.


No freebies.

No banners.

No posters.

No flags.

No propaganda war painted on their walls.


Welcome to Othaveedu village in Madurai district (and a growing list of others

like Marudhanatham, Komboothi and Balakrishnapuram). These ordinary citizens

have imposed a total ban on political advertisements during election season.


Politicians are welcome to come and campaign — but every single poster, banner

and flag must leave with them when they go. Village elders patrol the streets

like sentinels. Rules are pasted at the bus stand. Even religious or wedding posters

are ripped down. Why?


Because they refuse to let their votes be bought or their minds poisoned.


As resident M Jayaraj put it bluntly:

“We follow these rules so no one is swayed by propaganda on posters

and banners or has any allegiance to a particular flag. When the time

comes to vote, each one makes his or her own decision, without the

influence of the rest of the village.”

 

Shopkeeper P Pandi adds:

“Apart from political posters, we do not allow posters for religious or

private events such as festivals and weddings either. If such a poster is

stuck on walls, village elders ask them to remove it immediately.”

 

Another villager, Murugan, sums it up: politicians can bring whatever they want

— but they take it all back when they leave. No public discussions, no village

pressure, no “revadi culture” turning neighbours into rivals.


These are not rich, English-speaking elites. These are hard-working rural Indians

who have seen through the circus. They know freebies today mean debt tomorrow.

They know posters and flags divide communities. And most importantly — they

know it is futile to wait for the government in Delhi to grow a spine and

pass PIPPPA.


For over two years I have been screaming from the rooftops about the


Prevention of Irresponsible Promises by Political Parties Act (PIPPPA-

2026).


I even drafted the full Bill and sent it to the Union Home Minister. States are

drowning in debt — Punjab at 48.98% debt-to-GSDP, Rajasthan at 42.37%,

subsidies eating up 24% of revenue in some places.


The Supreme Court itself has called this “revadi culture” a threat to the nation’s

future. Yet no government — Congress, BJP, DMK, AAP, anyone — has the courage

to stop promising what they cannot deliver with other people’s money.


So the villagers of Othaveedu didn’t wait.


They didn’t write letters.

They didn’t hold press conferences.

They didn’t beg on social media.


They simply drew the line at their village boundary.


And in doing so, they have delivered the hardest slap possible to every political

party:


Your freebies and your posters have no value here. Our vote is not

for sale.”


This is real democracy. Not the fake one where parties treat citizens like beggars

lining up for freebies before every election. Not the one where manifestos are

written by marketing teams instead of economists. This is citizens reclaiming their

dignity.


If a few villages in Tamil Nadu can enforce this with zero power and zero money,

imagine what an entire nation can do once PIPPPA becomes law.


Read the full PIPPPA proposal here — the draft Bill, the fiscal data, the

Supreme Court warnings, and the complete framework that can end this

dangerous game forever:

🔗 Prevention of Irresponsible Promises by Political Parties Act - 2026 {

PIPPPA - 2026 }


The message from Othaveedu is crystal clear:


We will not sell our future for your temporary lollipops.

Either stop the freebie madness — or we will stop you at our doorstep.”

 

The ball is now in the court of every political party and every voter in India.


Will the parties finally listen?

Or will more villages have to rise up and teach them the same lesson?


The choice is yours, netas.

The villagers have already made theirs.


Jai Hind.

Jai PIPPPA.


Time to stop waiting. Time to start enforcing.


(Inspired by the courageous stand of Othaveedu and other Tamil Nadu villages — reported by Times of India, April 5, 2026)

===========================================

With Regards,

Hemen Parekh

www.YourContentCreator.in / www.HemenParekh.ai / www.IndiaAGI.ai

08 April 2026

Que Sora, Sora

Que Sora, Sora

A small & strange question

Sometimes a phrase arrives that is equal parts punctuation and invitation. "Que Sora, Sora" — a mix of Spanish curiosity and a Japanese noun — landed in my mind like a paper plane I didn't throw. I found myself asking: what do we really mean when we look up?

The word I followed: sora

In Japanese, sora (空) is most literally "sky," but it also carries echoes of emptiness, distance, memory and possibility. It is a simple word with many atmospheres: the blue above us, the void that lets light through, the space where weather and thought both move. For an introduction to that range, I looked into contemporary explanations of sora and how the word stretches across literal and metaphorical uses 空 - What does Sora in Japanese mean?.

Why the language-mix matters to me

The Spanish "qué" opens a question; the Japanese sora points upward. Together they felt like a ritual: ask, then look. That ritual is something I keep returning to — a tiny method for converting bewilderment into attention.

I often write about reaching—whether for an idea, a future, or the digital echo of a life. That reach is always a little like looking at the sky: you don't grab the blue, but you learn its moods. In an older reflection of mine I explored aspiration and the architecture of longing; this same curiosity now asks whether language can be a ladder as well as a window Dreams are unknown.

Short reflections (bullet points)

  • Sora as sky: the everyday and the vast.
  • Sora as void: the space that lets things appear; the absence that frames presence.
  • Mixing languages (Qué + Sora): a simple technique for re-sensing familiar things—asking in one tongue and listening in another.

What it means for my work on continuity

I'm chasing continuity — not just memory, but meaningful continuation: ideas, habits, and yes, a digital twin. The sky metaphor helps: continuity isn't about sealing everything in amber; it's about tracing currents. The word sora reminds me that continuity requires both room and clarity — empty space to move through, and an atmosphere that carries signals.

A small practice you can try

  • Ask a two-word question in two languages about something ordinary (e.g., "¿Qué agua, mizu?").
  • Look up and stay still for thirty seconds.
  • Notice what the silence between the languages reveals.

I don't expect definitive answers from these experiments—only slightly keener attention. And attention, I've come to believe, is the raw material of any life extended beyond its present moment.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Aadhaar Needs Deadlines

Aadhaar Needs Deadlines

Why the CIC's nudge matters

The Central Information Commission (CIC) has once again shone a light on a problem many of us experience quietly: Aadhaar update requests stuck "in process" for weeks or months. The CIC's ask is simple and rational — ask the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) to set clear, time-bound timelines and strengthen grievance redressal. I find that observation both practical and necessary.

The immediate story reported that a woman had to escalate a delayed date-of-birth correction through the courts after long administrative delay; the CIC noted similar patterns in cases about name spellings, gender corrections and other demographic fixes and urged UIDAI to be more transparent and time‑bound (Telegraph India).

What this reveals about digital governance

I write a lot about digital identity and policy. Years ago I warned that Aadhaar had become inescapable in our lives, and that the system must keep improving to preserve public trust (Aadhar-the-Irreversible). When basic operational functions — like timely demographic updates — falter, the consequence is not only inconvenience: it chips away at confidence in the entire infrastructure.

Delays in a national ID system expose three linked weaknesses:

  • Service design that treats citizens like passive inputs rather than users with deadlines and needs.
  • Opaque operational SLAs (service-level agreements) that leave people uncertain about when they will get resolution.
  • A grievance process that nudges citizens to use RTI or courts — costly avenues that should be last resorts.

Practical fixes UIDAI and administrators can adopt

If we treat this as a systems problem, there are pragmatic steps that make huge difference:

  • Define and publish clear SLAs: e.g., simple demographic edits resolved within 30 days, complex ones within 60–90 days, with automated status updates at milestones.
  • Make the status machine-readable and shareable: allow a secure tracking URL, SMS updates, and a printable acknowledgement that institutions (colleges, banks) can accept provisionally.
  • Strengthen regional escalation paths: a transparent escalation matrix (helpline → regional officer → nodal desk) with guaranteed response timelines.
  • Audit and publish backlog metrics monthly so the public sees improvement or identifies bottlenecks.
  • Provide interim remedies: where institutions need proof (for admissions, government benefits), accept the update acknowledgement and a short UIDAI-issued provisional note.

These are not rocket science. They are governance basics that protect citizens and preserve trust in a digital ID program.

The human cost — why timeliness matters

Behind every delayed URN (Update Request Number) is a person losing an opportunity — an exam registration, a job joining, a subsidy, or a college admission. When a system forces citizens to seek RTI answers or go to court, it means the system failed to meet its basic duty. Good technology without predictable operations is still a broken public service.

What citizens can do — a short checklist

  • Keep your Update Acknowledgement Slip (URN) safe and note dates.
  • Check status online and save the tracking URL / screenshots.
  • If delay passes the published SLA (or 90 days where SLA is absent), escalate through the regional office and file a formal grievance on the UIDAI portal.
  • If there is immediate institutional urgency (college, employer), request a provisional acceptance based on the acknowledgement slip and escalate with supporting letters.

UIDAI's own FAQ already acknowledges that some updates can take up to 90 days; the CIC's intervention is a reminder that the target must be shorter and enforced (UIDAI FAQ).

A broader lesson: infrastructure needs both tech and process

Technology often gets credit for transformation; but infrastructure lives in the seams between code and process. A national ID program succeeds only when code, operations, communication and grievance mechanisms work together. I've argued before that Aadhaar is inescapable and must continuously evolve; this moment is another call to action for operational maturity (Aadhar: Dawn of Realism).

The CIC's nudge is small but important. Deadlines, transparency, and humane grievance redressal are the simplest, highest-leverage reforms we can make to protect citizens who depend on this ID every day.

Final thought

I want systems that behave like good neighbors: timely, predictable, and helpful. National digital identity is too central to be opaque or slow. The law and policy frameworks are necessary, but they are not sufficient. Operations, published timelines, and the humility to improve — those will deliver the trust that an identity system must earn.

Connect with me: Hemen Parekh hcp@recruitguru.com


Regards,
Hemen Parekh hcp@recruitguru.com


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National Job Skilling Policy

National Job Skilling Policy

Background

I write this as someone who has followed India’s skilling journey for years. A recent NITI Aayog working paper — titled Education and Skilling for Employment: From Credentials to Learning Outcome and publicised in coverage such as The Economic Times — proposes a focused National Job Skilling Policy to better align training with real job needs and future demand.[^1]

The context is familiar: India has expanded access to education rapidly, but outcomes and job-readiness lag. The working paper, authored by Arvind Virmani (arvind.virmani@gov.in), makes the case that credentials alone no longer guarantee employment or productivity. It calls for tighter coordination across ministries, better labour-market data, and training systems that produce demonstrable workplace capabilities.

Key proposals and components of the policy

At its core the NITI Aayog proposal pushes for an outcome-first, data-driven skilling architecture. The main components are:

  • Integrated institutional architecture
  • Align employment and skill-development functions across ministries and states so policy and programmes are coherent.
  • Annual Skills and Employment Survey + central data portal
  • A national, periodic skills and employment survey feeding a digital data bank and portal to track demand, supply, and placement outcomes.
  • Demand forecasting and course alignment
  • Project skill needs by sector and geography; develop industry-aligned curricula and teaching aids so courses map to job tasks.
  • Strengthening trainers and infrastructure
  • Invest in training-of-trainers, capital subsidies for equipment, and upgrade ITIs/polytechnics to modern training standards.
  • Employer incentives and apprenticeship scale-up
  • Encourage firms to adopt formal training (via tax incentives, co-funding, or public–private partnerships) and expand apprenticeship/earn-while-you-learn models.
  • Recognising skilling as a service industry
  • Enable easier access to finance and international mobility for training providers and trainees to grow the market.

These measures are intended to create a continuous loop: better labour-market data informs curricula; employers help design and validate courses; training is assessed by workplace performance and placement outcomes.

Potential benefits for workers, employers and the economy

  • Workers
  • Faster, fairer routes to employment: skills-based, competency-verified credentials emphasise what a person can do on Day 1, not just the degree they hold.
  • More inclusive pathways: apprenticeships and recognition of prior learning help those from non-traditional backgrounds.
  • Employers
  • Reduced recruitment friction: demand-aligned credentials and a national data portal make it easier to find job-ready talent.
  • Lower onboarding and training costs if entry-level hires already meet baseline workplace competencies.
  • Economy
  • Productivity gains from a more capable workforce, supporting India’s growth and competitiveness ambitions to 2047.
  • Better utilisation of demographic dividend as more young people become employable and economically productive.

Implementation challenges and recommendations

This vision is sensible, but execution will determine results. Key challenges and pragmatic recommendations:

  • Fragmented governance
  • Challenge: Skills, education and employment currently sit across different agencies and layers of government.
  • Recommendation: Create a clear, time-bound inter-ministerial implementation cell with state nodal officers and robust KPIs, and publish progress quarterly.
  • Data quality and survey capacity
  • Challenge: Designing and sustaining a credible national skills and employment survey is non-trivial.
  • Recommendation: Pilot-region approach first; partner with academic institutions and independent statistical agencies; make anonymised data open for researchers and platforms.
  • Employer engagement
  • Challenge: Only a small percentage of firms currently provide formal training; habits and incentives have to change.
  • Recommendation: Mix carrots (tax credits, co-funding of curricula) and sticks (public procurement preferences for firms demonstrating workforce development) and scale apprenticeship stipends.
  • Trainer and infrastructure shortages
  • Challenge: Without quality trainers and tools, updated curricula won’t translate to outcomes.
  • Recommendation: Fund master-trainer exchanges with countries experienced in vocational training (Germany, Australia, Canada), and set standards for equipment and trainer-industry immersion.
  • Stigma and career signalling
  • Challenge: Social bias still favors degrees over vocational routes in many communities.
  • Recommendation: National campaigns that showcase successful skilling-to-career stories, and publicise industry-verified credentials that carry clear wage signals.

I have argued in the past that apprenticeships, demand-driven curricula, and early career pathways matter if India wants to convert education into productivity — themes I explored in earlier writing on productivity and skills.[^2]

Conclusion

The NITI Aayog proposal is an important, pragmatic step toward closing the gulf between credentials and capability. Its strengths are the emphasis on data, employer alignment, and trainer capacity. But the policy’s promise will be realised only if the architecture is implemented with measurable outcomes, transparent data, and sustained employer-state collaboration. If done well, it could transform skilling from a programme into a performance-based system that powers both individual livelihoods and national productivity.

I welcome this shift and will be watching the pilots and the Annual Skills Survey closely — because better data and better alignment are the twin levers that can finally make skilling translate into jobs at scale.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

References

[^1]: "NITI Aayog proposes National Job Skilling Policy to strengthen India's skilling ecosystem" — Economic Times coverage: https://cfo.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/policy/niti-aayog-proposes-national-job-skilling-policy-to-strengthen-indias-skilling-ecosystem/129699211

[^2]: See my earlier reflection on skills and productivity: "Skills to gain Productivity" (blog): http://mylinkedinposting.blogspot.com/2024/12/skills-to-gain-productivity.html

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What are the three core components proposed by NITI Aayog to improve India’s skilling ecosystem under the National Job Skilling Policy?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




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Tesla's India Energy Play

Tesla's India Energy Play

Why Tesla is eyeing India’s energy storage sector — my take

I’ve been watching the intersection of renewable energy policy and industrial strategy in India for years. When news surfaced that Tesla is preparing a formal push into India’s industrial energy storage market — signalled by a job ad seeking a business-development lead and earlier discussions about manufacturing Powerwall/Megapack-like systems — I felt a familiar mix of optimism and realism.Tesla plans India push into energy storage as it expands beyond cars, job ad shows

This isn’t surprising. Let me explain, in straightforward terms, why India matters to Tesla — and why it should matter to us.


The basic reasons (short and sharp)

  • India is adding renewables at scale and will need storage to make them reliable. The country’s non-fossil targets and rising electricity demand create a large addressable market.
  • Residential and commercial customers need dependable backup and solar-plus-storage solutions — a natural fit for products like Powerwall.
  • Utilities and developers need utility-scale systems (Megapack-style) to stabilise the grid and enable time-shifting of cheap solar energy. Tesla already sells Megapack and Megablock platforms built for speed and scale.Tesla’s Megablock and Megapack advances
  • India’s policymaking is evolving (including viability gap funding and other incentives) to make storage projects bankable and viable for private capital.Cabinet approves viability gap funding of 3,760 crore for BESS

Put simply: demand + policy tailwinds + Tesla’s product portfolio = a logical commercial interest.


What Tesla brings, and why that matters here

  • Product & integration: Tesla sells batteries, software (energy orchestration), and services that integrate with solar and grid operations. That vertical stack reduces project complexity for developers and utilities.
  • Speed & scalability: With Megapack/Megablock designs Tesla has been talking about faster commissioning and lower balance-of-plant costs — attractive in a country that needs to add large capacity quickly.Tesla’s Megablock and Megapack advances
  • Brand & financing leverage: Tesla’s global experience securing project finance and structuring VPP-like programs (virtual power plants) can accelerate market creation.

These capabilities are exactly what a market transitioning from intermittent solar to 24/7 reliability needs.


Why now — the timing is right

  • Policy is catching up: India’s recent moves to fund and de-risk storage projects show the government recognises storage as a public good and strategic industry.Cabinet approves viability gap funding of 3,760 crore for BESS
  • Grid constraints and rising demand make the commercial case stronger — both for distributed Powerwall-like products and for utility-scale batteries.
  • Global companies are diversifying supply chains and searching for manufacturing hubs; India’s large market and supportive industrial policy make it a natural candidate.

I’ve written about India needing storage capacity and sensible incentives before — this moment feels like the continuation of that arc rather than a sudden change.Tesla proposes building battery storage factory in India — my earlier reflections


The obstacles Tesla (and India) will face

  • Cost and raw materials: Battery economics depend on cell costs and supply chains. India will need locally competitive manufacturing or compelling incentives to lower end-user prices.
  • Competition & geopolitics: Global and domestic suppliers will fight for this market. India must balance attracting technology with protecting nascent local industry.
  • Offtakers and transmission: Building capacity is one thing; guaranteeing long-term buyers and upgrading transmission are separate challenges.
  • Regulatory clarity: Clear market rules for VPPs, aggregation, and grid services will determine how fast business models can scale.

These are solvable, but they require honest policy design and commercial creativity.


My practical prescriptions (win–win ideas)

  • Aggregate demand: Governments and large corporates should pool demand (aggregated tenders) to create predictable volumes and lower unit costs.
  • Incentivise localization thoughtfully: Offer time-bound incentives for cell/pack assembly and support R&D in battery recycling and second-life use.
  • Build clear VPP & grid-service rules: Let distributed storage earn revenue for frequency response, peak shaving, and capacity services.
  • Invest in skills & recycling: Make the lifecycle economy part of the industrial plan from day one.

If we get these right, a Tesla presence can accelerate India’s transition while creating manufacturing jobs and an exportable expertise in energy storage.


Final thought — continuity, not coincidence

This move by Tesla feels less like a sudden pivot and more like a predictable step in a broader global strategy — and it aligns with calls I’ve made earlier for India to prioritise storage as the missing link in its renewable ambitions.Tesla proposes building battery storage factory in India — my earlier reflections
I welcome competition and global partners that push cost down and capability up. The real prize for India isn’t just having Tesla install batteries — it’s building an ecosystem where technology, policy and markets mature together.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Designing for Addiction

Designing for Addiction

I woke up to the news that a Los Angeles jury found major platforms liable for designing products that addicted a young user. The verdict — covered widely by outlets such as CBS News — is a legal earthquake and also a moral one.[^1]

What surprised me

I am not surprised that people are hurt by technology. What still surprises me is how often we treat design choices as inevitable — as if infinite scroll, autoplay, algorithmic nudges and daily reward loops were neutral engineering decisions rather than moral choices.

One of the defendants’ most visible witnesses was Mark Zuckerberg (mz@fb.com). His testimony, and the jury’s reaction, felt like a public reckoning: executives can explain architecture, but they cannot explain away the human consequences when those architectures are optimized primarily for engagement.[^2]

My frame: product, policy, and parenting — in that order

I’ve written before about age-gating, verification and the need to replace bad content with good content when protecting children online.[^3][^4] This verdict crystallizes that these are not separate fixes — they are linked.

  • Product: Engineers and product leaders must treat engagement metrics as outcomes to be shaped, not as the sole objective. Design choices (recommendation engines, reward cues, beauty filters) have causal paths to behavior.
  • Policy: Courts and regulators will now play a larger role in defining what responsible product design looks like. This is likely the first step of many where legal standards begin to catch up with behavioral engineering.
  • Parenting & Education: Families need tools and curricula that teach children how attention is captured and how to resist nudges. But this is a slow fix if the platforms continue to push behaviors that are hard to unwind.

Three practical changes I’d like to see, starting now

  1. Design accountability statements in product releases — short, clear disclosures that explain how a recommendation system works and what steps were taken to protect minors.
  2. Default limits for minors — stronger, enforceable defaults for accounts that indicate underage status (not just opt-in parental controls). Age verification and government-level approaches are blunt but can complement better defaults.[^4]
  3. Public product audits — independent audits of algorithms that measure attention harms and produce remediation roadmaps.

A note on litigation and tech

This verdict will ripple through thousands of pending suits and through product roadmaps. Litigation is messy and slow, and appeals are likely. But the jury’s message is simple: if you build to hook, someone will hold you to account.

I don’t think law alone will fix the design culture inside technology companies. Law can change incentives; leaders must change priorities. We must build for flourishing, not just for metrics that look good on a quarterly report.

What I recommend to three groups

  • To builders: Add a harm budget to every product team’s roadmap. If a feature increases daily active use, require a counterproposal that reduces measurable harms.
  • To policymakers: Create clear standards for child-safe defaults and independent audits; avoid one-size-fits-all technical mandates, but insist on measurable outcomes.
  • To parents and educators: Teach kids meta-cognition about attention. Replace “don’t use” with “use better” — give alternatives that compete for time and attention.

Where this fits in my thinking

I’ve argued previously that we need age verification and to replace bad content with good content for young users.[^3][^4] This jury verdict doesn’t contradict that — it reinforces it. If product design can cause harm, then product design must also be part of the repair.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

[^1]: CBS News, "Meta and YouTube found liable on all charges in landmark social …" https://www.cbsnews.com/news/meta-youtube-social-media-addiction-lawsuit-verdict/

[^2]: LinkedIn and contact for Mark Zuckerberg provided per context: Mark Zuckerberg (mz@fb.com)

[^3]: "Australia's Plan to Ban Children from Social Media Proves Popular, Problematic" — my earlier reflections: http://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2024/11/over-doze-of-info-to-underage-kids.html

[^4]: "Just replace BAD with GOOD content" — thoughts on replacing attention vacuums: http://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2024/12/just-replace-bad-with-good-content.html

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"Which product design features (e.g., infinite scroll, autoplay, algorithmic recommendations) are most associated with addictive user behavior, and why?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




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