Here's an interesting narrative that captures the rise, impact, and controversy surrounding "Shahid Anwar Free Courses": The Beginning
But success brought a strange twist. Shahid noticed that other "gurus" were downloading his free courses, re-packaging them, and selling them for $20–$50 to unsuspecting students. Worse, some of those students thought Shahid himself was the scammer.
He never became rich. He doesn't sell a flashy lifestyle. But ask any struggling student in a small Pakistani city how they learned React or WordPress, and many will still whisper: "Shahid Anwar bhai ki free course se."
That's when he launched his movement—but with a catch. He started uploading premium courses from other international instructors (legally gray area) and giving them away, arguing that knowledge should never be locked behind a subscription.
Within months, his channel exploded. Students from small towns like Sialkot, Multan, and Quetta, who could never dream of attending a bootcamp in a big city, were suddenly building e-commerce sites and earning their first dollars on Fiverr and Upwork.
It's not just about free courses. It's about the tension between , between copyright and necessity , and how one person's radical generosity can shake up an entire industry—for better or worse.
Hold On
You are being redirected to another page,Here's an interesting narrative that captures the rise, impact, and controversy surrounding "Shahid Anwar Free Courses": The Beginning
But success brought a strange twist. Shahid noticed that other "gurus" were downloading his free courses, re-packaging them, and selling them for $20–$50 to unsuspecting students. Worse, some of those students thought Shahid himself was the scammer.
He never became rich. He doesn't sell a flashy lifestyle. But ask any struggling student in a small Pakistani city how they learned React or WordPress, and many will still whisper: "Shahid Anwar bhai ki free course se."
That's when he launched his movement—but with a catch. He started uploading premium courses from other international instructors (legally gray area) and giving them away, arguing that knowledge should never be locked behind a subscription.
Within months, his channel exploded. Students from small towns like Sialkot, Multan, and Quetta, who could never dream of attending a bootcamp in a big city, were suddenly building e-commerce sites and earning their first dollars on Fiverr and Upwork.
It's not just about free courses. It's about the tension between , between copyright and necessity , and how one person's radical generosity can shake up an entire industry—for better or worse.