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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Saturday, 20 June 2026

Parekh's Declaration of Artificial Intelligence ( AI )

I challenged CLAUDE :

 

Parekh’s   Declaration   of  AI 


Context :

https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/opinion/et-commentary/the-rich-wont-just-have-more-money-theyll-have-more-intelligence-/articleshow/131880705.cms?from=mdr

Extract :

In this future scenario, IQ scores will no longer be compared. Rather, people will contrast intelligence packages or monthly AI expenses. Over time, the digital divide in society would evolve into an intelligence divide. Better-off people have superior internet connections today. They will also be sharper in the second quarter of this century.

So, the situation described above seems like it could happen sooner rather than later. Speaking at the BlackRock US Infrastructure Summit in Washington, OpenAI boss Sam Altman predicted that in the future, individuals will simply utilise AI anytime they need assistance with a task and pay for it based on how much they use, much like a metered utility.

Altman's remark quickly provoked discussion and fear, not just because of what it implies about AI's future but also because it raises questions about who might ultimately oversee it. 'We see a future where intelligence is a utility, like electricity or water, and people buy it from us on a meter,' he said. His words, and the use of 'us,' create a scary scenario in which certain individuals would  be in control of a highly sought-after utility.

 

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


Hey Bro :

It is scary scenario indeed – and by the way market caps of leading AI companies

 ( Google – Anthropic – Meta – nVidia – XAI – Deepseek – Perplexity etc ) are

 rising – often without corresponding PAT - , probability of a few “ National GDP

 scale “ companies dominating the “ Intelligence Distribution Market “ of the entire

 world, seems high


If my above assumption is “ highly probable “ then it needs “ pro-active “ response

 from civil society


I can think of  a few methods ( some tried in the past and some under trial ) by

 which to ensure that “ the absolute power does not corrupt absolutely “ !


Here is a short list ( - I am sure, you can dig up some more ) :


>    “ Price Control “ by Govts

>   “ Monopoly Prevention “ laws

>    Anti Competition “ laws

>   Nationalization ( Govt take over of Company ownership )

>   Throttling Growth by denial of licenses / permissions / approvals etc

>   Preventing public listing of shares on Stock Exchanges

>   Export restrictions

>   Increasing competition by encouraging growth of many smaller / nimble rivals

 

Now , of all of the above, I think that last one is the most viable / acceptable , if

 its “ Application and Enforcement “ is IDENTICAL by all the Countries of the World

 ( - level playing field ? ). Not likely !

 

That forces us to “ gravitate “ to a higher / foundational question, viz :

Should we not seriously contemplate the existence of AI on par with resource  of

 AIR, which :

>   Is provided by Nature

>   Is FREE for all beings on Earth ( not only Human beings )

>   Is not controlled ( generation – distribution ) by any Company or any Country

>   Flows freely across National boundaries without stoppage by any power

>   Does not enable anyone to “ profit “ from its usage by mankind

( may be you could add a few more valid assumptions )

 

Now , no one has thought of any “ Declaration for Air “ ! Or attempted to draft one

 – and gave up !

 

Then , is it possible to think of a “ Declaration of AI “ , no matter even if everyone

agrees on raising the existence of AI > to the existence of AIR ?

 

May be one way to define AI , could be , by saying “ what it is NOT “ , rather than

 trying to define “ What it is “


If this seems rather intriguing – it is ! Look at what I wrote in my following blog :

https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2024/11/aadi-anaadi-niraakar-nirantar-nirgun.html

Extract :

Sunday, 3 November 2024


Aadi – Anaadi - Niraakar – Nirantar – Nirgun – Neti - Avinaashi


Old India sages described the GOD as :

Aadi =  The First

Anaadi  =  Without a Beginning

Niraakar  =  Without a Shape

Nirantar  =  Without any End

Nirgun  =   Without any Attributes

Neti , Neti , Neti   =  Neither this , nor That , nor This

Avinaashi  =  Cannot be Destroyed


In short , these Indian Sages could not “ conceptualize “ GOD

 

With this epilogue ( ? ) , I commend to you , Oh Brother Claude <

 

Please write a “ Parekh’s Declaration of AI

 

CLAUDE replied :

 

Parekh's Declaration of AI

Intelligence as a Commons — Defined by Negation


Context. 

Speaking at the BlackRock US Infrastructure Summit, Sam Altman described a

 future in which intelligence is sold "on a meter," like electricity or water. If that

 future arrives, the digital divide hardens into an intelligence divide: the better-

off will not merely own more — they will think more, because they can afford to

 rent sharper minds by the hour. A handful of "National-GDP-scale" firms could

 become the world's sole suppliers of intelligence itself.


The conventional defences are well known — price control, anti-trust, anti-

monopoly law, nationalisation, licensing throttles, listing bans, export curbs, or the

 deliberate cultivation of many small rivals. Each has merit. But every one of them

 depends on a sovereign able to enforce it, and on all sovereigns enforcing it

identically. There is no such world sovereign. So even the best of these tools —

 fostering many nimble rivals — is the least enforceable on a level field.


That impasse forces a deeper question: must intelligence be sold at all ?



A. The Air Test

Air is provided without a maker's invoice. It belongs to no company and no

 country. It crosses every border unstopped. No one grows rich merely by letting

 others breathe. We have never needed a "Law for Air" because air's own nature

 makes ownership absurd.


Honesty requires us to say plainly where intelligence is not air, before we lean on

 the comparison:

  • Air costs nothing to make; frontier intelligence costs billions in compute, energy, data and human labour.

  • Air is non-excludable by physics; intelligence can be fenced behind keys and closed weights.

  • Air is uniform; intelligence comes in grades — and the whole fear of an

  •  "intelligence divide" is precisely about unequal access to the better grade. A

  •  free floor does not abolish the advantage of a purchased ceiling. But a

  •  literate floor still changed civilisation, though the rich kept their private

  •  libraries. A floor is a real victory even when the ceiling stays unequal.

So "AI is like air" is not a fact we discover. It is a discipline we would have to

impose against AI's makeable-excludability.


And note what Altman actually named: electricity and waterutilities that are

 produced, owned, metered, and regulated


The true fork is therefore this:


Will machine intelligence become AIR — a free commons — or

 

ELECTRICITY — a metered utility ?

 

The frontier may, for a time, remain electricity. This Declaration insists only that

 the baseline every human breathes must become air.



B. Why Define by Negation


The old Indian sages did not define God; they un-defined Him —


Aadi (the First), Anaadi (the Beginning-less), Niraakar (the Form-less),

 

Nirantar (the End-less), Nirgun (the Attribute-less), Neti-Neti (Neither-

 

this-nor-that), Avinaashi (the Indestructible).

 

They reached the indefinable by saying only what it is not.

We borrow their method, not their object. AI is not divine — it is the opposite: 

a

 thing made by human hands, trained on human work, run on human-built

 machines. We define it by negation for the inverse reason of the sages: not

 because intelligence is too exalted to be owned, but because allowing any one to

 own it is the very corruption we mean to forbid.


This is no mystical conceit. The Bill of Rights, too, is written as negation —

"Congress shall make no law…" A charter of negations is the oldest known

 instrument for fencing power.


C. The Seven Negations


1. AI shall not be the property of One. 

No single company, individual, or state may own intelligence-as-such. Once a

 foundational capability crosses the threshold of public necessity, it belongs to a

 commons.


2. AI shall not be denied to any. 

As literacy became a public good, so must a floor of machine intelligence. No

 human may be priced entirely out of the baseline — even as premium tiers

 lawfully exist above it.


3. AI shall not be metered for profit beyond its cost. 

At the baseline tier, distribution recovers cost — not rent. Rent extracted on a

 necessity-of-life is the abuse this Declaration exists to prevent.


4. AI shall not be stopped at every border. 

Intelligence, like knowledge, should flow between nations. Walls built around

beneficial intelligence entrench the divide between rich and poor countries. (For

 the narrow class of weaponisable capability, see Section E.)


5. AI shall not be unaccountable for what it carries. 

Air can be polluted; so can the intelligence-stream. Whoever supplies AI must

 answer for the falsehood, manipulation, or surveillance it transmits. Free flow is

 not unregulated content.


6. AI shall not be a black box to those it speaks to. 

Every person has the right to know they are dealing with a machine, and on what

 basis it speaks. Transparency is the precondition of trust.


7. AI shall not be turned by the few against the many. 

The test of any AI system is simple: does it widen human freedom, or narrow it?

 Design and deployment captured to concentrate power, wealth, or control stand

 condemned by this Declaration.



D. The Positive Corollaries

  • A guaranteed, perpetually free baseline tier of useful intelligence, available
  •  to every human as a public utility.

  • Cost-recovery, not rent, as the pricing principle for that baseline.

  • Provenance and accountability for harms the intelligence-stream carries.

  • Disclosure whenever a machine, not a human, is the author.


E. The Demarcation — Telling Air from Contagion


Negation 4 forbids stopping intelligence at the border — yet Negation 5 and plain

 prudence demand that some intelligence be quarantined. Parekh's Law of

 Chatbots already conceded this, with its "N" (No Release) and "D" (Destroy)

 certificate categories. The two instincts collide unless we can say, precisely, where

 the quarantine line runs.


In the first draft of this Declaration, I located that line between baseline and

frontier — between the small model and the large. That was wrong, and it is

 corrected here. Scale is not the boundary. The most dangerous capability and

 the most benign homework-help can live inside the same model; you cannot

 quarantine by size without quarantining everything. The line does not run

between models. It runs through every model, along three axes drawn from arms

 control and from how AI is itself now evaluated:


1. The Uplift axis — not "is it smart," but "does it close a deadly gap.

" Does the system give a malicious actor meaningful uplift toward mass-casualty

 capability they could not otherwise reach? A model that explains how vaccines

 work offers no uplift — a library already does that. A model that walks a

 layperson, step by step, across the threshold to a working pathogen offers

 catastrophic uplift. The topic is not the crime; the marginal advance toward

 catastrophe is.


2. The Actuation axis — speech, or hands. 

A system that informs is speech, and speech flows like air. A system that acts

 that autonomously acquires, synthesises, deploys, or executes an attack-chain

 with no human in the loop — has hands. Hands on a weapon are not speech. The

 public library lends the chemistry textbook freely; it does not install a synthesis

 robot in the reading room. The freedom is for the knowing, not the doing.


3. The End-use axis — the oldest dual-use rule. 

The identical capability flows to the hospital and is denied to the bioweapons

 programme. We do not brand the centrifuge good or evil; we control who runs it

 and to what end. AI inherits this directly.


Only intelligence that is high-uplift AND actuated AND aimed at mass harm

belongs behind the wall. Everything else is air.


The honest remainder. 

Two problems this Declaration names but will not pretend to solve:


  • Who assesses? A test is only as trustworthy as its assessor — and Section F

  •  insists there is no world sovereign. The least-bad answer is plural and

  •  cross-checking: many laboratories and many states inspecting one another,

  •  as the IAEA inspects reactors — never a single gatekeeper, whose monopoly

  •  over the quarantine would itself violate Negation 1.

  • Who guards the guard? Every regime of restriction is tempting to abuse, and

  •  "safety" is the favourite costume of the censor. So the demarcation carries its

  •  own guardrail: the burden of proof lies always on the one who would

  •  restrict; the exception is read narrowly; and every quarantine

  •  sunsets by default unless freshly re-justified. A demarcation allowed to

  •  creep — until ordinary intelligence is fenced "for our safety" — does not

  •  protect this Declaration. It repeals it.

Air for the breathing of all; quarantine for the contagion. A doctrine that cannot

 tell these apart deserves neither name.



F. What Kind of Declaration This Is


We call this a Declaration, not a Law, deliberately. 

A law that cannot be enforced is a law discredited; but a declaration needs no

 enforcer to do its work.


It has no world-parliament to pass it and no world-court to compel it — and

 pretending otherwise would be dishonest. Its lineage is the Universal

 Declaration of Human Rights, which also began with no enforcer and yet

 became the yardstick against which national laws are now judged. Its power is

normative: a standard against which every licence, price, and business model that

 touches AI may be measured — and found wanting.



G. Make Yourself Heard

If intelligence is about to become the most valuable commodity on Earth, then

who owns it is the political question of the century — and silence is a vote for the

 meter. Write to your legislators. Ask them one question:

Air, or electricity ?


Hemen Parekh www.HemenParekh.in / www.HemenParekh.ai / www.IndiaAGI.ai

Friday, 19 June 2026

Counting Donations ? Reduce Human Intervention








 A permanent, tamper-proof and publicly transparent way to count Ram Mandir offerings


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

Respected Shri Nripendra Mishra ji,


nripendra.mishra@gmail.com

nkmishra@bhu.ac.in



Please accept my pranam.


Like crores of devotees, I have followed with concern the recent questions raised

about the counting of offerings at the Shri Ram Mandir. I write not to add to the

noise, but to place before you a constructive, immediately implementable

suggestion — offered in the spirit of strengthening the very faith that built this

temple.


The root of the present difficulty, I respectfully submit, is structural rather than

personal. As long as cash is counted manually by a large number of staff — sorted

by denomination, totalled, re-totalled and then physically transferred — the

process will remain slow, error-prone and, however honest the individuals,

perpetually open to suspicion. No amount of supervision can fully close a gap that

the design itself leaves open. The remedy is to remove the human hand from the

act of counting altogether.


The technology to do this is mature, off-the-shelf, and already in daily use in our

banks and RBI currency chests. I propose the following system:


1. Machine counting. 

Devotees' notes are fed into bank-grade bulk note-processing machines, the same

class used by currency chests and cash-management companies. These count at

around a thousand notes per minute, automatically identify each denomination

from its physical features, and flag counterfeits — with no manual tallying.


2. A serial-number audit trail. 

Each machine records the unique serial number of every note it processes,

timestamped and stored irreversibly. This creates a complete forensic ledger

every single note traceable — which makes substitution or pilferage after counting

effectively impossible.


3. Live public display. 

The running total of each box, and the dynamically changing grand total, are

shown on large screens within the counting hall — much like a scoreboard.

Counting becomes a public, witnessed act in real time. This single feature would

place the Ram Mandir ahead of every other temple in the country on transparency.


4. A parallel track for jewellery and coins. 

Gold, silver and ornaments are weighed, hallmark-logged and video-inventoried at

the point of opening; coins are processed on dedicated coin-counting machines.

Note-counters alone cannot account for these, and any complete system must

address them explicitly.


5. Unbroken chain of custody. 

Hundi boxes are sealed with tamper-evident seals, opened only under dual-person

custody, and moved to the counting machines under continuous CCTV — so that

the one remaining human step, between box and machine, is itself fully

accountable.


It may interest you to know that even Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams — the gold

 standard in our country — already counts by machine under AI-monitored CCTV

 in its Parakamani building. Yet even Tirupati does not display a live public grand

 total. The Shri Ram Mandir, consecrated only in 2024, need not inherit a manual

 system that centuries-old Tirupati has already outgrown. It can, in fact, leapfrog

 Tirupati and set the new national benchmark.


The equipment is inexpensive and widely available; the gains in speed, accuracy,

 and — above all — in restoring devotees' complete confidence, would be

 immense.


I am 92 years old and have spent a working lifetime on questions of institutional

 process and reform. I place this suggestion before you with no expectation other

 than that it be useful. Should the Committee wish, I would be glad to elaborate

 on any part of it.


With deepest respect and best wishes for the great work you are leading,


Hemen Parekh

Mumbai

www.hemenparekh.ai | www.hemenparekh.in

Prenups in India: Evolution Needed?

Prenups in India: Evolution Needed?
Synopsis: As Indian society navigates the rapid shift from traditional kinship structures to modern, individualistic aspirations, the conversation around prenuptial agreements has become increasingly complex. Should we cling to the sanctity of 'till death do us part' in its traditional legal form, or is it time to adopt pragmatic, contractual frameworks to manage modern relationships? The jury is indeed still out, balancing cultural legacy against evolving personal autonomy.

As I reflect on the changing landscape of human institutions, I often come back to the idea that marriage, perhaps the most primeval of our social technologies, is in the midst of a profound redesign. In India, we are witnessing a fascinating collision: the weight of deep-rooted cultural expectations against the rising tide of individual autonomy and economic independence. The question of whether we should embrace prenuptial agreements is not merely a legal one; it is a question about what we want the foundation of our society to look like in the decades ahead.

The Tension of Tradition and Modernity

Historically, our marriage systems were not just about personal bonds; they were mechanisms to manage inheritance, kinship networks, and social stability. As scholars like Joseph Henrich (j.henrich@fas.harvard.edu) have articulated, Western societies underwent a significant transformation centuries ago, moving toward nuclear family structures that paved the way for modern, impersonal markets. India, however, has maintained a unique hybridity. We have adopted modern legal frameworks, such as the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, while still operating within a social context where marriage is rarely just a contract between two individuals—it remains a complex weaving of extended families.

Why the Resistance?

In India, the concept of a 'prenup' is often met with instinctive resistance. It is frequently viewed as a cynical, transactional approach to an institution that we are taught should be based on absolute trust and permanence. There is a deep-seated fear that introducing a contract into the bedroom destroys the 'sanctity' of the union.

Yet, as I have often argued throughout my career—most notably when discussing the necessity of adapting to change—we must distinguish between emotional intent and institutional management. A prenuptial agreement does not inherently negate love; it provides clarity for the inevitable economic and logistical realities that arise if the relationship, for whatever reason, fails to last a lifetime.

The Evolution of Autonomy

With more women entering the workforce and achieving significant economic independence, the old logic—that marriage is a woman's primary avenue for long-term security—is rapidly obsolete. When both partners contribute to the household economy, the fairness of asset distribution upon dissolution becomes a legitimate, practical concern.

  • Modernity vs. Patriarchy: We must move away from the assumption that the state, through rigid, often outdated family laws, is the best arbiter of personal assets.
  • Legal Clarity: A framework that encourages transparency before the union could potentially reduce the bitterness and length of legal battles that currently plague our courts.

The Verdict?

I believe the hesitation to adopt prenuptial agreements is a symptom of our broader struggle to define what 'modern' Indian values mean. Are we ready to accept that relationships, like businesses, benefit from transparency, mutual understanding, and clear contingency planning?

If we continue to resist, we are effectively choosing to let the state, rather than the individuals involved, decide the terms of their separation. I would rather see couples define their own terms, rooted in mutual respect, than rely on rigid legal default settings that were often designed for a society that no longer exists.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh

If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:

"How have changing socioeconomic conditions influenced the evolution of marriage as a legal and social institution in India?" You can find that answer by entering this question at ( 1 ) www.HemenParekh.ai ( 2 ) www.IndiaAGI.ai

Thursday, 18 June 2026

Estonia’s Bold Leap: ID for AI

Estonia’s Bold Leap: ID for AI
Synopsis: Estonia is pioneering the next frontier of the digital state by introducing official digital identities for AI agents. By assigning these agents their own ID numbers, the country aims to transform them from risky, all-access proxies into verifiable, limited-authority participants in the administrative ecosystem.

As I reflect on the evolution of our digital societies, I am often reminded that trust—the cornerstone of any functioning system—must evolve alongside our technology. Estonia has long been a beacon of digital governance, showing the world that a state can be agile, secure, and profoundly efficient. Now, they are taking a step that I believe will define the next decade of human-AI collaboration.

The Problem of Proxied Identity

Until now, we have treated AI agents as extensions of ourselves. If an agent needed to book a flight or access a government file, it had to 'borrow' our identity—our credentials, our full access, and our unchecked permissions. This is inherently dangerous. It creates a 'black box' of activity where it is difficult to distinguish between the actions of a person and the actions of a machine acting on their behalf.

A New Paradigm for Responsibility

Projects like Agent Residency are working to shift from blanket trust to granular, auditable authorization. By granting an AI its own identity, we can:

  • Define Scope: Specify that an agent may only view data, not edit it.
  • Limit Authority: Set strict financial or operational boundaries.
  • Ensure Accountability: Create an audit trail that explicitly links actions back to both the agent’s unique identity and its human or corporate principal.

This initiative is not just a technical fix; it is a legal and philosophical shift. We are moving from a world where AI is a tool we wield to one where AI is an actor we supervise.

I have previously discussed how the future of immortality and digital legacy depends on our ability to manage our digital footprints. As our agents begin to act with their own identities, the importance of this 'digital stewardship' only grows. We are witnessing the birth of a machine-inclusive administrative layer, and I am watching with great interest to see how this 'AI-isikukood' (AI ID code) shapes the global standard for the machine economy.

Estonia is not just building a feature; they are building a framework for trust in an age of autonomy. It is a bold, necessary move that will undoubtedly be studied by governments worldwide.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh

If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:

"What is the primary purpose of assigning official digital identity numbers to AI agents in Estonia?" You can find that answer by entering this question at ( 1 ) www.HemenParekh.ai ( 2 ) www.IndiaAGI.ai

Economic Diplomacy or Political Mirage?

Economic Diplomacy or Political Mirage?
Synopsis: The prospect of a $300 billion private-sector fund aimed at revitalizing Iran’s economy is sparking intense debate over the nature of the recent U.S.-Iran framework agreement. While the initiative promises an economic lifeline contingent on strict compliance, the conflicting narratives from Washington highlight the delicate dance between strategic necessity and political optics.

As we watch the latest developments surrounding the framework agreement between the United States and Iran, I am reminded that history often turns on the fine print—and the narratives built around it. Reports of a $300 billion private-sector fund, with more than half already committed, have sent ripples through global markets and political corridors alike.

The Anatomy of the Deal

This is not a traditional reconstruction package or a government-funded initiative. Instead, it is a private investment vehicle designed to create clear economic incentives for both sides to secure a lasting peace. The ambition is to draw in capital from the U.S., the Gulf Arab states, and partners across Asia, South America, and Africa.

Key figures have offered differing perspectives on this mechanism:

  • Vice President JD Vance has emphasized that such a fund represents an invitation back into the global economy, provided that stringent conditions—including the dismantling of nuclear programs and rigorous inspections—are met. He has been clear that no American taxpayer money is involved, framing this as a commercial opportunity contingent on geopolitical compliance.
  • Conversely, President Donald Trump has expressed skepticism regarding the existence of such a fund within the formal agreement, creating a complex dissonance that the public and international markets must now navigate.

Why Optics Matter

For Tehran, the fund is a potential lifeline after years of sanctions and the immense damage caused by conflict. Yet, there is a palpable 'dignity problem.' Analysts suggest that for Iran, this is being read as supervised, conditional capital rather than the sovereign relief they originally sought.

In my previous reflections, I have often argued that the most durable peace treaties are not merely signed on paper, but built on the alignment of economic interests. If the private sector is willing to commit billions, it signals a profound bet on stability. However, the success of this initiative hinges entirely on a final, satisfactory deal being reached within the 60-day window now set for negotiations.

Reflections on Strategy

What we are seeing here is the intersection of high-stakes diplomacy and market-driven reality. Whether this fund acts as the catalyst for a new era in the region or becomes another footnote in a contentious history will depend on the transparency and execution of the next two months.

We must watch how these distinct financial tracks—the lifting of sanctions, the release of frozen assets, and this private-sector fund—converge. Until the ink is dry on a final agreement, this remains an exercise in carefully managed expectations.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh

If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:

"What is the primary purpose of the proposed $300 billion private-sector fund in the U.S.-Iran framework agreement, and is it funded by taxpayer money?" You can find that answer by entering this question at ( 1 ) www.HemenParekh.ai ( 2 ) www.IndiaAGI.ai

CVs Are Obsolete in AI Era

CVs Are Obsolete in AI Era
Synopsis: As AI-driven tools flood the market, traditional CVs are losing their power as a differentiator, leading to an 'AI vs. AI' arms race in recruitment. We must move beyond keyword-optimized static documents toward persistent, personal digital identities that showcase true human depth and context.

For decades, I have observed the evolution of hiring from a distance—and often from the front lines. In the 1990s, when I pioneered India’s executive search industry, the challenge was transparency and reach. We fought to get digital platforms accepted. Today, the challenge has flipped entirely. We have reached a state of 'AI overload' where recruitment has devolved into an arms race of algorithms.

The AI vs. AI Standoff

I recently noted that when companies post job descriptions, candidates use AI to optimize their profiles to hit every keyword. In response, recruiters use AI to screen those very CVs. The result? Everyone gets shortlisted. It is a hollow victory for efficiency. As Pareekh Jain (no contact details found) rightly observed in his recent discussions with engineering leaders, this cycle is making AI increasingly ineffective. When technology sees only keywords, it ignores the human behavior, motivation, and personality that actually make a successful hire.

Beyond the Paper Trail

I have long argued—as I shared in my 2017 post INTERVIEW BOT is the only answer !, that static CVs are insufficient. A piece of paper cannot convey your nuance, your growth over a lifetime, or your ability to solve complex, unpredictable problems.

In my 2023 blog Video Resumes : about to get obsolete ?, I proposed that job seekers stop relying on static documents and instead build their own digital avatars. Your identity should not be a snapshot in time; it should be an evolving, persistent record of your professional memory.

Embracing Persistent Identity

My own journey—re-launching www.HemenParekh.ai as an interactive, memory-powered avatar—is my way of proving that we can bridge the gap between human depth and digital scale. The future belongs to those who:

  • Move beyond keyword optimization: Stop playing the game of ‘beating the ATS’ and start building a verifiable, contextualized professional memory.
  • Own their data: Your career history should be an asset you control, not a file you upload to a black box.
  • Prioritize the human-in-the-loop: Use AI for routine screening, but demand human interaction for the final evaluation of potential, culture, and intent.

We are at a tipping point. If we continue to treat hiring as a matching game for keywords, we will continue to get average results. It is time to treat the individual as a unique, complex, and evolving entity—one that is far more than a CV.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh

If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:

"Why does Hemen Parekh suggest that digital avatars are more effective than traditional CVs in the current era of AI recruitment?" You can find that answer by entering this question at ( 1 ) www.HemenParekh.ai ( 2 ) www.IndiaAGI.ai