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Tech companies rally behind arrested 14yo clockmaker

The global tech startup community has rallied behind a 14-year-old boy that was arrested at his school after his homemade clock was mistaken for a bomb. Ahmed Mohamed is passionate about robotics and inventing, and was excited to show his creation to his teachers. But instead he was promptly taken in handcuffs to a youth […]
Denham Sadler
Denham Sadler
Tech companies rally behind arrested 14yo clockmaker

The global tech startup community has rallied behind a 14-year-old boy that was arrested at his school after his homemade clock was mistaken for a bomb.

Ahmed Mohamed is passionate about robotics and inventing, and was excited to show his creation to his teachers.

But instead he was promptly taken in handcuffs to a youth detention centre and interrogated by five police, before being suspended from school โ€“ all because of a simple homemade clock.

But Ahmed seems to be getting the last laugh at least, with some of the largest tech startups in the world reaching out to him and offering their support and services, as Tech Crunch reports.

The likes of Google, Facebook, Twitter, Box, Reddit and even NASA have made some sort of comment regarding this story, and it looks like Ahmed has quite a bright future ahead of him.

โ€œWe love building things at Twitter too. Would you considering interning with us?โ€ the social networking giant tweeted.

โ€œDonโ€™t let this stop your creativity, come hang out at Autodesk and weโ€™ll make something new together,โ€ Carl Bass said.

Also on Ahmedโ€™s to-do list now is a chance to see a Mars rover, a reserved seat at the Google Science Fair, and a trip to meet the president.

โ€œCool clock, Ahmed,โ€ Barack Obama tweeted. โ€œWant to bring it to the White House?โ€

โ€œWe should inspire more kids like you to like science.โ€

Smartwatch manufacturer Pebble took a slightly more snarky approach, asking the local police if they too would be arrested for making clocks, while Box co-founder Aaron Levie upped the competition for Ahmedโ€™s future employment by saying heโ€™s an โ€œenterprise software guy at heartโ€.

Unsurprisingly, Ahmed wants to transfer schools, but fortunately it seems his passion for innovation and invention hasnโ€™t been deterred by this incident.

ย โ€œDonโ€™t let people change who you are, even if you get consequences for it,โ€ he said.

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Mark Zuckerbergโ€™s also posted about Ahmedโ€™s arrest.

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โ€œHaving the skills and ambition to build something cool should lead to applause, not arrest,โ€ he said.

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โ€œThe future belongs to people like Ahmed.โ€

This article was originally published on StartupSmart.

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