GCC’s role in shaping an ethical AI framework

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GCC’s role in shaping an ethical AI framework

GCC’s role in shaping an ethical AI framework
GCC countries are uniquely positioned to set global benchmarks for ethical and positive AI advancement. (AFP file)
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Artificial intelligence has become an important focus of individuals and organizations in the public and private sectors because it holds immense promise for generating efficiencies, enhancing innovation and driving economic and social transformation.

But AI also brings potential dangers, including the possibility of widespread disinformation, concentration of power, social upheavals and disruptions. So how does society maximize the promise and minimize the peril associated with AI, which is still a largely unregulated space?

The Gulf Cooperation Council countries are uniquely positioned to set global benchmarks for ethical and positive AI advancement and implementation. Both Saudi Arabia and the UAE are already working toward an AI economy built as a force for good, focused on sustainable development and enhancing public services.

The UAE aims to be one of the leading nations in AI by 2031 with a goal of generating up to AED 335 billion ($91.21 billion) in extra growth. However, on a broader scale, there are several key challenges that are important to address when it comes to building a positive and sustainable AI ecosystem.

With a mindset that business can, and should, be a force for good in the world, it is imperative that business, government and other sectors work across disciplines to address complex innovations such as AI.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE are shining examples of how we can launch pioneering initiatives to harness AI’s potential. The National Strategy for Data and AI in Saudi Arabia seeks to make the Kingdom a global leader in AI.

For instance, AI is revolutionizing Saudi Arabia’s healthcare sector by enabling early diagnosis and data-driven treatment planning. Similarly, the UAE’s efforts as part of its National Strategy for Artificial Intelligence 2031 incorporate AI in urban planning, upskilling and smart government facilities.

These efforts help bolster the economic potential for AI in the region and contribute to the well-being of the community at large.

From logistics powered by autonomous systems to predictive analytics, the GCC is at the forefront of practical AI implementation across key sectors. However, as new technologies emerge, there is heightened potential for job displacement. Government and business collaboration is essential to protect society’s most vulnerable in the future of work.

One key issue facing many companies is the potential for algorithmic bias and discrimination in AI adoption. For example, one global tech company’s AI hiring tool was found to prioritize male candidates due to historical biases in its training data.

To avoid such pitfalls, governments and private institutions must ensure that all approved AI systems are built on diverse and equitable datasets. Policies should mandate ongoing audits of algorithms to detect and rectify biases, aligning with global standards while reflecting regional priorities.

Data privacy is paramount in the digital age. Saudi Arabia’s Personal Data Protection Law and the UAE’s forthcoming Federal Data Protection Law mark significant steps toward safeguarding personal information. However, enforcement must be coupled with public education to build a culture of trust.

Initiatives like Saudi Arabia’s Human Capability Development Program are equipping residents with critical skills in data analytics and machine learning.

Paul Almeida

Companies should commit to transparency in how data is collected, stored and used while empowering users with greater control over their information. Data protection frameworks must also evolve to address emerging risks such as AI-driven surveillance and misuse of sensitive information.

The automation of routine tasks through AI presents challenges such as job displacement, but also many opportunities for training and upskilling.

As we embrace the role of AI in organizations it is important that we ensure the less educated and less privileged in society are not left behind in the future of work. Initiatives like Saudi Arabia’s Human Capability Development Program are equipping residents with critical skills in data analytics and machine learning — essential for a prosperous AI ecosystem. Businesses must align with such efforts by offering tailored reskilling programs, ensuring employees transition seamlessly into new roles created by AI advancements.

As GCC countries make the transition to renewable energy supplies, there is an opportunity for AI systems to play a fundamental role in energy innovation.

Saudi Arabia’s NEOM project is a prime example of how AI can be deployed to repair the environment while building a sustainable metropolis. AI-powered systems in NEOM optimize energy usage, manage water resources and support biodiversity restoration.

By championing such initiatives, GCC countries are demonstrating how AI can tackle global challenges like climate change and resource scarcity, setting a powerful precedent for the rest of the world.

Looking ahead, there is an opportunity to learn from proof-of-concept systems developed by the UAE and Saudi Arabia.

Ethical AI requires strong leadership and cross-sector collaboration. As part of its campaign to attract global talent and business, the UAE’s “UAI Mark” offers a certification that verifies safe, efficient, and quality AI companies. These indicators ensure a bold but steady path toward responsible innovation.

At institutions such as Georgetown University’s McDonough School of Business, students are trained to navigate the moral dilemmas posed by AI while embracing values-based leadership. This ethos must extend to public-private partnerships, where governments, businesses and academia work together to embed ethics into AI development.

The GCC’s growing ecosystem of AI innovation hubs and research centers offer positive grounds for such collaboration.

Robust governance is the backbone of ethical AI adoption. Saudi Arabia’s NSDAI and the UAE’s Minister of State for Artificial Intelligence exemplify the region’s commitment to comprehensive AI governance.

However, these frameworks must remain dynamic, adapting to new challenges such as cybersecurity. International collaboration can further enrich the GCC’s approach, enabling it to contribute its unique perspective to global AI governance.

The GCC has the vision, resources and determination to be a leader in responsible AI. The region is also well placed to attract global research talent to build a sturdy AI network that addresses global ethical AI challenges.

AI adoption is one part of this strategy, but more importantly, we should refocus our efforts on reshaping societies to benefit from technology while reflecting human values. While championing AI’s potential for social good, the region can set a global standard for responsible innovation.

Paul Almeida is dean and William R. Berkley is chair of Georgetown University’s McDonough School of Business.

 

Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News' point of view

What We Are Reading Today: The Conqueror’s Gift by Michael Maas

What We Are Reading Today: The Conqueror’s Gift by Michael Maas
Updated 5 min ago
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What We Are Reading Today: The Conqueror’s Gift by Michael Maas

What We Are Reading Today: The Conqueror’s Gift by Michael Maas

Ethnography is indispensable for every empire, as important as armies, tax-collectors, or ambassadors. It helps rulers articulate cultural differences, and it lets the inhabitants of the empire, especially those who guide its course, understand themselves in the midst of enemies, allies, and friends.

In “The Conqueror’s Gift,” Michael Maas examines the ethnographic infrastructure of the Roman Empire and the transformation of Rome’s ethnographic vision during Late Antiquity. 

Drawing on a wide range of texts, Maas shows how the Romans’ ethnographic thought evolved as they attended to the business of ruling an empire on three continents.


Gazans prepare tent camps for families returning to north

Gazans prepare tent camps for families returning to north
Updated 13 min 30 sec ago
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Gazans prepare tent camps for families returning to north

Gazans prepare tent camps for families returning to north

GAZA CITY: Palestinians in northern Gaza prepared tent encampments for displaced families on Thursday, two days before they were expected to return to their home areas under the timeline of a ceasefire deal agreed between Israel and Hamas.

On open ground surrounded by blown-out buildings, a group of men began putting up rows of white tents to receive families who are planning to return north on Saturday when Hamas is due to release a second batch of hostages in return for dozens of Palestinians jailed by Israel.

Many of the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians expected to head back to the northern Gaza Strip will return to homes in ruins after a 15-month Israeli military offensive that has laid waste to the enclave and killed more than 47,000 Gazans.

In October, Israeli forces returned to areas of the north in a major anti-Hamas operation focused on the Jabalia refugee camp near Gaza City and Beit Hanoun and Beit Lahiya towns, clearing the area of its inhabitants and razing most of its buildings.

“Is this the tent that we dreamed of? This will have to fit 10 people. This tent is for my children who are coming from the south. Really, is this adequate space?” asked Wael Jundiya as he prepared a tent for his children, who will return from where they had been sheltering in the Mawasi coastal area of the south.

“On Saturday, people will come from the south and flood Gaza (City). Where will they go? This camp will fit 100, 200 people. There will be 1.5 million coming from the south,” Jundiya told Reuters.

Hamas published a statement on Thursday saying the return of the displaced families would begin after Saturday’s exchange was complete and once Israeli forces had pulled out from the coastal road to the north. 

At least four hostages are expected to be handed over to Israel on Saturday.

Highlighting concerns by many Palestinians over how strong the phased ceasefire is, an Israeli tank shelling killed two Gazans in Rafah in the south of the enclave, the local civil emergency service said.


Gaza ceasefire ‘wouldn’t have happened without us,’ Trump tells WEF

Gaza ceasefire ‘wouldn’t have happened without us,’ Trump tells WEF
Updated 15 min 48 sec ago
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Gaza ceasefire ‘wouldn’t have happened without us,’ Trump tells WEF

Gaza ceasefire ‘wouldn’t have happened without us,’ Trump tells WEF
  • The US president touted his administration’s role in brokering the Israel-Hamas hostage deal
  • He also welcomed Saudi Arabia’s $600 billion investment, while calling for lower oil prices

DAVOS: In a virtual address at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday, US President Donald Trump highlighted his administration’s pivotal role in brokering the ceasefire in Gaza and securing the release of hostages.

“Before even taking office, my team negotiated a ceasefire agreement in the Middle East, which wouldn’t have happened without us,” Trump said in his first major speech on the world stage since returning to the White House.

“Earlier this week, the hostages began to return to their families. They are returning, and it’s a beautiful sight, and they’ll be coming in more and more.”

The ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas, mediated by the US, Qatar, and Egypt, came into effect on Jan. 19, ending 15-months of fighting which has left more than 47,500 Palestinians dead, according to Gaza’s health ministry.

The deal was structured in multiple phases, the first involving a six-week ceasefire, during which Hamas agreed to release 33 hostages abducted during the Oct. 7, 2023 attack.

In exchange, Israel committed to releasing 90 Palestinian prisoners to the West Bank and allowing hundreds of aid trucks carrying food and fuel into the Gaza Strip through border crossings in Israel and Egypt.

The negotiation process was marked by significant diplomatic efforts, with both the outgoing Biden administration and the incoming Trump administration playing instrumental roles.

Brett McGurk, a Middle East negotiator for the Biden administration, collaborated closely with Steve Witkoff, Trump’s special envoy to the Middle East. This bipartisan cooperation was driven by a mutual desire to resolve the conflict prior to the presidential inauguration.

Trump had issued stern warnings, stating that failure to release the hostages, including seven American citizens, before his inauguration would result in severe consequences.

The US president, who began his second term on Monday, also used his WEF speech to welcome Saudi Arabia’s $600 billion investment, and said that he hoped there would be room for it to grow to $1 trillion and lower oil prices.

“I’ll be asking the Crown Prince (Mohammed bin Salman), who’s a fantastic guy, to round it up to around $1 trillion. I think they’ll do that,” Trump said.

He did, however, add: “I’m also going to ask Saudi Arabia and OPEC to bring down the cost of oil.” Four days into his presidency, Trump said he wants to lower global oil prices, interest rates and taxes, and warned they will face tariffs if they make their products abroad.

“I’ll demand that interest rates drop immediately. And likewise, they should be dropping all over the world,” he said.

Some of his harshest criticism was reserved for traditional US allies Canada and the EU who he threatened again with new tariffs, while berating their import policies blaming them for the US’s trade goods deficit with these partners.

“One thing we’re going to be demanding is we’re going to be demanding respect from other nations. Canada. We have a tremendous deficit with Canada. We’re not going to have that anywhere,” he said.

Trump promised to reduce inflation with a mix of tariffs, deregulation and tax cuts along with his crackdown on illegal immigration and commitment to making the US a hub of artificial intelligence, cryptocurrencies and fossil fuels.

He also criticized levels of taxation in the EU.

“The US has the largest amount of oil and gas of any country on Earth, and we’re going to use it,” Trump said. “Not only will this reduce the cost of virtually all goods and services, it will make the US a manufacturing superpower.”

Declaring the US had entered the “golden age of America,” Trump highlighted the sweeping reforms of his administration, which he said were correcting the “disasters” left by his predecessor, Joe Biden.

Trump criticized Biden’s economic policies, saying: “His $8 trillion in wasteful deficit spending, energy restrictions, regulations, and hidden taxes resulted in the worst inflation crisis in modern history.”
 


Italy defends expulsion of wanted Libya police chief

Italy defends expulsion of wanted Libya police chief
Updated 18 min 32 sec ago
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Italy defends expulsion of wanted Libya police chief

Italy defends expulsion of wanted Libya police chief
  • Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi defended before parliament the release on Tuesday of Osama Najim, who is wanted by the ICC for war crimes
  • Piantedosi told the Senate that the court had found the detention of Najim was “irregular” and “not provided for by law”

ROME: Italy’s government said Thursday a Libyan police chief arrested on a war crimes warrant was flown home after a court found no basis to detain him — and he was too dangerous to remain.
Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi defended before parliament the release on Tuesday of Osama Najim, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes and crimes against humanity charges related to his management of migrant detention camps.
Najim was arrested in the northern city of Turin on Sunday but returned to Tripoli Tuesday on an Italian air force plane after the court of appeals in Rome ruled that he could not be held.
Piantedosi told the Senate that the court had found the detention of Najim was “irregular” and “not provided for by law,” ordering him freed.
Najim was “then repatriated to Tripoli for urgent security reasons,” the minister said, citing “the dangerousness of the subject.”
Najim is believed to have been in charge of Tripoli’s Mitiga detention center, and is wanted on charges including murder, rape and sexual violence and torture, committed since 2015.
Italy’s release of the Libyan has drawn vehement criticism from opposition parties and a subtle rebuke from the ICC, which on Wednesday reminded its member state that it had a “duty” to “cooperate fully” in the court’s investigations and prosecutions.
It said Najim had been released and sent home “without prior notice or consultation with the court.”
In its order Tuesday to release Najim, the Rome appeals court wrote that the arrest did not conform to Italian law because ICC requests should first pass through the justice minister, who, “to date, has sent no request on the matter.”
Italian opposition parties have demanded that Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni explain before parliament the reasons for the release of an accused war criminal wanted by the international court.
On Thursday, Sandra Zampa, a senator with the center-left Democratic party, called the affair “shameful.”
“He was not simply released from prison, but he was brought home on a state plane,” Zampa said, charging that “procedural errors have nothing to do with it.”
International human rights groups have long condemned abuses in Libyan detention centers, citing widespread violence and torture.
Rome has a controversial deal with the North African country — dating from 2017 and renewed under Meloni’s hard-right government — to provide funding and training to the Libyan coast guard.
In exchange, Libya was expected to help stem the departure of migrants to Italy or return those already at sea back to Libya, where they were often taken to such detention centers.
In 2011, the United Nations referred the situation in Libya to the ICC for investigation, a few months before a revolt toppled dictator Muammar Qaddafi after four decades of iron-fisted rule.
Najim’s arrest and release come about a week after Rome and Tripoli resumed direct flights between the two capitals after a decade-long hiatus.
Italy’s foreign ministry hailed the “concerted effort” shown by Rome to strengthen ties with its former colony, calling Libya “a strategic and privileged partner for our country.”


From farm to table — handmade cheese finds eager customers in Eastern Province

From farm to table — handmade cheese finds eager customers in Eastern Province
Updated 21 min 32 sec ago
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From farm to table — handmade cheese finds eager customers in Eastern Province

From farm to table — handmade cheese finds eager customers in Eastern Province
  • Aziza Alghanim’s love of farming developed into a sustainable agriculture business
  • She offers classes on the fundamentals of cheesemaking

QATIF: Aziza Alghanim is the woman behind Khairat Laziza, an initiative born from her passion for the land on her picturesque farm in the charming town of Saihat, which became a sustainable agriculture business.

Her journey began in 2001 when she began growing aromatic citrus fruits and vibrant buckthorn trees while also tending to a small herd of goats.

In 2014, she began making cheese by hand. Her initial offerings were met with overwhelming enthusiasm, selling out swiftly and fueling her motivation to pursue her passion.

Building on this success, she established a specialist factory in 2016, which allowed her to expand the range of crops and products available.

To meet the ever-growing demand, she founded a second specialist factory in 2019, taking the total number of products offered to more than 100.

Now, Khairat Laziza is a fully-fledged business dedicated to serving the community, creating a direct pathway from the fields to consumers’ tables.

Alghanim told Arab News: “My journey in cheese making began in 2014 when I established the Khairat Laziza Foundation, a non-profit organization where the entirety of its revenue is dedicated to supporting charitable causes.”

This commitment to giving back has become a fundamental aspect of her work.

Alghanim has participated in a number of festivals, collaborating with the Al-Ataa Charitable Society and other organizations.

What began as a modest selection of only 10 types of cheese has blossomed into a diverse portfolio.

Today, Khairat Laziza features an array of cheeses, labneh, milk, gelatos, flavorful jams, rich sauces, zesty pickles, biscuits and pizzas, pre-made cheese platters and dried produce, in addition to other dairy-free options, bringing the total number of products to 118.

All are 100 percent natural, free from preservatives and harmful chemicals, and mostly made from ingredients sourced from Alghanim’s farm, she said.

She takes immense pride in finding ways to transform the land’s resources into healthy, nutritious products for the community.

Among her standout creations are “zalloum” cheese, which blends the flavor of halloumi with the texture of mozzarella, healthy biscuits, and an eclectic selection of gelato flavors.

Looking to the future, Alghanim says she is entering a new phase in her journey — shifting her focus to teaching the fundamentals of cheese making.

She has been sharing her expertise through a series of workshops designed for enthusiasts and beginners alike. They teach valuable skills, providing participants with the chance to learn the intricacies of cheese production and providing a deeper appreciation of the art of cheese-making.