
Legal expert Henzie Healey and blockchain innovator Randall Pires share insights on how the UAE is blending innovation, regulation, and human values in the age of AI and blockchain.
What happens when a legal expert and a blockchain pioneer sit down to talk tech? You get a fascinating conversation about AI that hallucinates, digital twins that might know you better than you know yourself, and why the UAE has become the place where tomorrow’s technology is being built today.
Legal expert Henzie Healey and blockchain leader Randall Pires recently unpacked these topics in a wide-ranging podcast discussion that covered everything from smart city surveillance to why Gen Z might just save us all from our own technology.
See video of conversation: https://youtu.be/SYMaduMNO2E
Why the UAE Became Tech’s New Playground
The United Arab Emirates didn’t stumble into its position as a tech powerhouse—it was a deliberate strategy. Henzie Healey, who founded VA Consultancy, points to the government’s willingness to actually understand emerging technology rather than just regulate it into oblivion. Tech-friendly free zones, national AI strategies, and a genuine appetite for innovation have created what she calls an environment where “innovation thrives alongside robust compliance.”
Randall Pires, Chief Blockchain Officer at Disrupt-X, sees it from the builder’s perspective. Clear regulations and sandbox programs mean companies can experiment without constantly looking over their shoulders, wondering if they’re about to cross some invisible legal line. It’s a surprisingly simple formula: give people clear rules and room to play, and they’ll build remarkable things. The takeaway? Smart regulations don’t kill innovation—they guide it.
Big Brother or Big Help? The Privacy Puzzle
Walk through Dubai and you’ll notice the cameras. Lots of cameras. The UAE’s smart cities are bristling with AI-powered surveillance that can spot everything from traffic violations to security threats. Impressive? Absolutely. A little unsettling? Also yes.
Healey and Pires don’t shy away from the Big Brother implications. The line between public safety and mass surveillance can get blurry fast. Their answer isn’t to abandon the technology—it’s to be radically transparent about it. People need to know what data is being collected, how it’s being used, and who’s protecting it.
The formula is simple in theory, harder in practice: surveillance tech with clear oversight and respect for privacy can boost security without turning into a dystopian nightmare. But it requires something often in short supply—public trust. And trust only comes when people feel their rights matter more than the data they generate.
AI: Brilliant Intern or Confident Liar?
Here’s where the conversation gets particularly entertaining. Pires has the perfect description for modern AI: it’s like an overzealous intern. Mostly brilliant, occasionally catastrophically wrong, and far too confident about everything.
AI hallucinations—those moments when chatbots confidently spew complete nonsense—are the new reality check. We’re all learning the hard way that AI doesn’t actually “know” things; it predicts what words should come next based on patterns. Sometimes those predictions are genius. Sometimes they’re hilariously, dangerously wrong.
But here’s the twist: people are falling in love with these digital interns anyway. Some users form genuine emotional bonds with AI chatbots, confiding in their “digital friends” and mourning when conversations are lost. It’s a sign of how deeply AI has woven itself into the fabric of daily life.
So will AI replace us all? Healey and Pires aren’t buying the doomsday scenario. AI will absolutely transform certain jobs and handle tasks humans currently do. But creativity, judgment, ethical reasoning? Those uniquely human qualities aren’t going anywhere. As Pires puts it: “AI is a tool, not a usurper.”
The key is setting ethical boundaries now, while we still can. Technology should serve humanity, not the other way around.
The Fine Print Nobody Reads (But Probably Should)
Quick question: when was the last time you actually read a terms and conditions agreement before clicking “I agree”?
Healey has bad news—you might have just signed away more than you realize. Buried in that fine print are often shocking data grabs: companies claiming broad rights over your content, your behavior patterns, even your digital likeness.
Enter the concept of the “digital twin”—a virtual model of you built from your data that can predict what you’ll do, want, or buy. If a platform creates a digital twin of you, who owns it? You? The company? It’s legally murky territory, and even experts admit we’re navigating uncharted waters.
The solution? Clearer user rights and agreements written in actual human language. People shouldn’t need a law degree to understand what they’re agreeing to.
Taking Back Control: Your Data, Your Rules
The good news is that some promising solutions are emerging. Pires is particularly excited about decentralized identity—secure digital IDs that you control. Instead of handing over all your information to verify who you are, you share only what’s needed while keeping everything else private. It’s like showing the bouncer your ID to prove you’re over 21 without also giving them your home address, blood type, and mother’s maiden name.
These systems, often built on blockchain technology, could fundamentally shift the power balance between individuals and tech giants. Healey notes that governments are also getting into the game with data sovereignty initiatives—keeping citizens’ data within local borders to regain control over how it’s used.
Done right, technologies like self-sovereign identity and data localization could return something we’ve quietly lost: agency over our own digital lives.
Gen Z: The Ethical Compass We Didn’t Know We Needed
The podcast ends on a surprisingly optimistic note. Today’s young people aren’t just tech-savvy—they’re tech-skeptical in the best possible way. Having grown up with AI and social media, Gen Z spots the pitfalls faster than anyone.
They’re not impressed by the latest shiny tech. They want to know: Who benefits? What’s the catch? How is my data being used? And they’re not afraid to call out problems.
Healey and Pires see this generation as potential ethical arbiters of technology’s future. They’ve lived through enough privacy scandals, algorithmic manipulation, and digital toxicity to demand better. And they have the technical literacy to actually do something about it.
The challenge is giving them a real seat at the table. The next generation isn’t just inheriting the digital world we’re building—they might be the ones who finally get it right.
The conversation between Henzie Healey and Randall Pires reminds us that technology’s future isn’t predetermined. It’s being shaped right now by the choices we make about privacy, ethics, and who gets to control the digital tools that increasingly control our lives. And if we’re lucky, the generation coming up behind us will make better choices than we did.