Two careers.
One uncommon path.
Abhishek Singh entered the world of technology in 1994 — when the internet was a rumour in India, software was a craft, and artificial intelligence felt like science fiction. He spent the next three decades inside that world, watching it transform from curiosity to civilisational infrastructure.
Alongside technology, he pursued law — not as an alternative, but as a deliberate complement. Thirty years of legal practice gave him something most technologists never develop: a precise understanding of what happens when systems meet human life. Rights. Accountability. The language that holds up when things go wrong.
When AI emerged as a mass phenomenon, Abhishek found himself at an intersection almost nobody else occupied. He understood the technology from first principles. He understood the legal implications from lived experience. And he understood people — because he had spent decades teaching, advising, and working with them.
NeuralCrowd was not a plan. It was the inevitable outcome of someone who could no longer watch from the sidelines when the stakes of AI literacy had become this high.