
Nadeem Sarwar
Contributor at WIRED
Nadeem is a tech journalist who started reading about cool smartphone tech out of curiosity and soon started writing professionally. Aside from keeping a track of the latest developments in the segment, he also tests out the newest gizmos, serves hot opinions about disastrous product decisions, and occasionally talks to smarter people for stories that connect tech with our lives.
His work has appeared at reputed outlets like Digital Trends, WIRED, Rest Of World, NewsBreak and NDTV, among others.
When he's not busy furiously typing on his precious mechanical keyboard, he likes to play Doom Eternal and cooks weird delicacies.
- New Delhi, Delhi, India
- nsnadeemsarwar
- linkedin.com/in/nsnadeemsarwar
Covers
Publications
- Digital Trends15 articles
- SlashGear.com4 articles
- BOOM Live1 article
- The Outlook1 article
- Outlook Newspapers
- NewsBreak
- WIRED
Writes Most On
- Users will fact-check Instagram and Facebook. Let’s just hope it works21 Feb—Digital TrendsTable of Contents How far can the damages go? This is not a fix for Meta’s problem A fundamentally problematic solution A month ago, Meta said it was ending its third-party fact-checking program, and said that it would rely on users to flag misinformation. Today, the company has announced Community Notes, which takes a similar approach as X, and will be implemented across Facebook, Instagram, and Threads. The requirements for being a community notes writer is that you must be a US citizen...
- DeepSeek’s censorship is a warning shot — and a wake-up call29 Jan—Digital TrendsTable of Contents How DeepSeek embraces censorship Why is DeepSeek problematic? Are businesses ready for DeepSeek? The Deep-er picture The AI industry is abuzz with chatter about a new large language model that is taking the fight to the industry’s top dogs like OpenAI and Anthropic. But not without its generous share of surprises. The name is DeepSeek. It comes out of China. It is open source. Most importantly, it is said to have been developed at a fraction of the cost compared to what...
- LinkedIn Scammers Trap Job Seekers With Fake Resume Reviews, Upskilling Offers12 Sep 2024—BOOM LiveThe Anatomy Of LinkedIn Scams It can be anything from an innocuous resume review from a sham professional that costs less than an espresso to multi-brand HR experts selling upskilling courses and charging for bogus referrals at top-tier companies. A Deloitte employee confirmed that they are aware of the LinkedIn recruitment scams. Many of these accounts do not list any actual employment history with the companies they claim to have connections with. Nevertheless, their posts garner hundreds...
People Also Viewed
- Reporter, IT Brew at Morning Brew