Artificial Intelligence is moving faster than almost any technology in history.
Every week, a new model is released. Every month, another AI startup appears. Billions of dollars are being invested.
But one question keeps coming back to my mind.
Who is building AI for Africa?
I'm not talking about translating an interface into another language.
I'm talking about AI that truly understands local realities, local businesses, public services, education systems, and the everyday challenges people face.
Today, most AI systems are trained primarily on information from the parts of the world that are already well represented online.
That makes sense.
But it also means that many communities remain underrepresented.
The future of AI shouldn't belong only to countries with the largest data centers.
It should also include countries where innovation is growing under very different conditions.
Africa has one of the youngest populations in the world.
Millions of talented young people are learning programming, creating startups, and solving problems every day.
Imagine what could happen if more AI systems were designed with those realities in mind instead of being adapted afterward.
The next generation of AI shouldn't simply answer questions.
It should help students learn better.
It should make public information easier to access.
It should support entrepreneurs.
It should simplify digital services.
It should understand local contexts instead of forcing people to adapt to technology built somewhere else.
That is one of the reasons I'm working on a project called AurX.
AurX is my vision of an AI platform designed to grow with the needs of people and organizations in my country and, hopefully, across Africa.
It is still a work in progress.
There is a long road ahead.
But every ambitious project begins with a simple decision:
Someone chooses to build.
I don't believe Africa should only consume AI.
I believe Africa should help create it.
Not because it is fashionable.
Not because it is profitable.
But because the future will be better when more voices participate in building it.
The next breakthrough in AI could come from anywhere.
Why not Africa?

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