170 speakers and 1,000+ delegates gather for Gulf Creatives Conference at Harvard University

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Updated 10 May 2024
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170 speakers and 1,000+ delegates gather for Gulf Creatives Conference at Harvard University

  • The 3-day event aims to be ‘the premier gathering for creative minds from the Gulf in the US,’ and to ‘empower, inspire and support Gulf creatives to drive positive change’
  • It is organized by The Diwan, a student-run organization intended to provide a platform for discussion of topics relevant to the Arab world, and particularly the Gulf region

BOSTON: A Gulf Creatives Conference will begin on May 10 at Harvard University, bringing together more than 170 speakers and over 1,000 delegates from sectors such as arts and culture, business and innovation, nonprofits and public policy, healthcare, and science and technology.

The three-day event is organized by The Diwan, a student-run organization at the university in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Abdulla Almarzooqi, chairperson of the organization’s UAE Committee, and a graduate student at Harvard, told Arab News the aim is for the conference to “become the premier gathering for creative minds from the Gulf in the US,” and to “empower, inspire and support Gulf creatives to drive positive change.”

The Diwan was founded in the fall of 2023 as a platform for experts, academics, policymakers and students to discuss topics relevant to the Arab world, and particularly the Gulf region, including entrepreneurship, the empowerment of women and young people, and education, he added.

It organized a conference in November last year titled “Shaping the Arab World: Navigating Opportunities and Challenges” that addressed the geopolitics of the region and the ongoing war in Gaza. Almarzooqi said it was the largest gathering of Arab ambassadors in the history of Harvard University.

Now the organization is hosting the Gulf Creatives Conference, at a time when emotions are running high on many college campuses in the US amid protests against the conflict in Gaza by students and, in some cases, faculty members. However, the Harvard event will focus on “creativity and showcasing the region’s most promising talents,” said Almarzooqi.

“Amid the rising tensions on US college campuses, we believe firmly in the power of creativity and the arts in healing wounds and bridging divides,” he added.

The conference will include 24 discussion sessions and five workshops, covering topics such as public policy, innovation strategies, and the future of healthcare, in which all delegates are encouraged to actively participate, organizers said.

The speakers include prominent figures such as: Dr. Mahmoud Al-Yamany, sector head of health and well-being at the NEOM urban development megaproject in Saudi Arabia; Majid Ibrahim Al-Fayyadh, CEO of the King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center in Riyadh; and Deemah Al-Yahya, secretary-general of the Digital Cooperation Organization.

The Gulf Creatives Conference will take place from May 10 to 12 at Harvard University.


Donald Trump joins the TikTok video platform he once sought to ban

Updated 02 June 2024
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Donald Trump joins the TikTok video platform he once sought to ban

  • The account, President Donald J. Trump with the address @realdonaldtrump, had more than 450,000 followers by 0800 GMT

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has joined TikTok, the short video social media platform that is owned by China-based tech giant ByteDance and that he tried to ban as president, ahead of the US elections in November.
Politico, which first reported the news, said he posted a launch video on his account on Saturday night. The video showed Trump greeting fans at an Ultimate Fighting Championship fight in Newark, New Jersey.
The account, President Donald J. Trump with the address @realdonaldtrump, had more than 450,000 followers by 0800 GMT.
ByteDance is challenging in courts a US law that came into effect in April requiring it to sell TikTok by next January or face a ban. The White House says it wants to see Chinese-based ownership ended on national security grounds, but not a ban on TikTok.
TikTok has argued that it will not share US user data with the Chinese government and that it has taken substantial measures to protect the privacy of its users.
Trump’s attempt to ban TikTok in 2020 when he was president was blocked by the courts. He said in March that the platform was a national security threat but also that a ban on it would hurt some young people and only strengthen Meta Platforms’ Facebook, which he has strongly criticized.
President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign joined the app in February.


New deal brings full Warner Bros. film catalog to OSN for ‘first time since 2016’

Updated 01 June 2024
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New deal brings full Warner Bros. film catalog to OSN for ‘first time since 2016’

  • The multi-year agreement also includes the exclusive rights to first-run Max Originals
  • Titles include recent movies such as “Barbie,” “Wonka” and “Dune: Part Two,” plus upcoming Max Original TV shows “Dune: Prophecy” and “The Penguin”

DUBAI: OSN has acquired the rights to all first-run Max Originals and the full Warner Bros. Pictures feature film library.

As part of an exclusive multi-year deal with Warner Bros. Discovery, subscribers to OSN’s traditional TV and streaming services will be able to watch new films after their theatrical and home entertainment release windows.

The titles include recent movies such as “Barbie,” “Wonka” and “Dune: Part Two,” as well as upcoming Max Original TV shows such as “Dune: Prophecy,” a prequel to the recent films, and “The Penguin,” a spin-off from 2022 superhero movie “The Batman.” The agreement also includes new shows such as “Rescue: Hi-surf” and “Emperor of Ocean Park.”

“This deal is significant as it will bring the full Warner Bros. Pictures film catalog and exclusive features to OSN for the first time since 2016, widely expanding our content offering for MENA audiences to bring some of the biggest global titles and latest blockbusters,” Joe Kawkabani, Group CEO at OSN, told Arab News.

The agreement builds upon an existing multi-year deal between OSN and Warner Bros. Discovery, and means OSN is the only company in the region offering HBO content. He said: “By also securing the rights to premiere all new, first-run Max Originals in the region, we have further strengthened our proposition.”

The content included under the deal will “complement our existing catalog of HBO Original content,” in keeping with the company’s “larger content strategy and commitment to bringing the best and most premium content to our customers first,” Kawkabani said.


Digital advertising showcase ‘Ignite the Ads’ attracts professionals from the Kingdom and beyond

Updated 01 June 2024
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Digital advertising showcase ‘Ignite the Ads’ attracts professionals from the Kingdom and beyond

  • Riyadh’s King Abdullah Financial District Conference Center hosted event 

RIYADH: “Ignite the Ads,” a digital advertising event organized by the Digital Content Council and the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology in Saudi Arabia, brought together startups, entrepreneurs and advertising professionals at Riyadh’s King Abdullah Financial District Conference Center from May 28 to 31.

The first two days of the conference were dedicated to businesses and advertising professionals to help them network and collaborate.

The last two days were open to all advertising professionals and focused on brand awareness, product and service education, social media, and word-of-mouth marketing.

Speakers included Lynnwood Bibbens, CEO of airport network ReachTV; Franklin Weil, CEO of e-commerce firm Myntr; Lujaen Alkanhal, head of social media at Saudi agency Extend | The Ad Network; and Ahmad Konash, CEO and co-founder of Saudi creative agency Onsor Mosha.

The conference covered a wide range of topics from female empowerment and advertising to Generation Z, to trust, data and artificial intelligence.

Sessions included “Decoding What Drives Gen Z and Alpha,” “The Power of True Stories in Creating Advertising Ideas,” “Women in Tech: Pioneering an Inclusive and Authentic Digital Frontier,” and “Transforming Perceptions of Branded Content in Saudi Arabia.”

In addition to panel discussions and keynote speeches, the conference featured various areas such as the Billboard Zone, which served as an exhibition place for businesses, and the Growth Zone, where those attending could interact with businesses to learn digital advertising skills.

The conference formed part of Saudi Arabia’s Ignite program that was launched in 2022 to foster digital content creation and production, new investments and support for next-generation connectivity and communications infrastructure.

Haytham Al-Ohali, vice minister at the Saudi Ministry of Communications and Information Technology, said that the Ignite digital content program grew 70 percent year-on-year to SR20 billion in 2023.


Israeli journalist threatened over probe into spy chief’s intimidation of ICC: Report

Updated 31 May 2024
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Israeli journalist threatened over probe into spy chief’s intimidation of ICC: Report

  • Gur Megiddo claimed authorities summoned him to issue a ‘polite threat’ about the consequences of his investigation
  • Revelation comes days after story of Mossad’s alleged attempt to pressure former prosecutor to drop ICC case against Israel

LONDON: An Israeli journalist has claimed he was threatened by senior security officials to ensure he dropped his investigation into claims that Mossad had intimidated a former prosecutor of the International Criminal Court.

In an article published on Thursday, Gur Megiddo, an investigative reporter at Haaretz, claimed that Mossad officials, a few years ago, sought to block any reporting on the matter using intimidating tactics.

This comes in the wake of a report by The Guardian earlier this week that Mossad’s former head Yossi Cohen had tried to intimidate then-ICC prosecutor Fatou Bensouda. Cohen had allegedly attempted to stop Bensouda from investigating Israel for war crimes and crimes against humanity in the occupied Palestinian territories.

That investigation, launched in 2021, culminated last week in Bensouda’s successor, Karim Khan, announcing he was seeking an arrest warrant for Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over the country’s conduct in its war on Gaza.

“At the beginning of 2022, I attempted to contact the former prosecutor through a third party who knew her,” Megiddo wrote.

“Bensouda never responded to the approach, but days after the attempt, when I wanted to publish the story, my phone rang and on the other end of the line was the voice of a senior security official. ‘Can you come to see me tomorrow?’ he asked.”

The journalist claimed that during the meeting with two officials, he was told to drop the case or face the “consequences” of his actions.

“It was a polite conversation, a polite threat,” Megiddo wrote. “The tone was calm, the content much less so. I was explained that if I publish the story, I would suffer the consequences and get to know the interrogation rooms of the Israeli security authorities from the inside.

“In the end, it was made clear to me that even sharing the information ‘with my friends abroad,’ referring to foreign media outlets, would lead to the same results,” he added.

Megiddo’s revelations appear to confirm The Guardian’s report, which was part of a wider investigation. This was conducted by the outlet with the Israeli-based magazines +972 and Local Call on Israel’s use of its intelligence agencies to allegedly surveil, hack, pressure, smear, and threaten senior staff at the ICC to derail its inquiries relating to Palestine.

He explained that after the meeting, he “took the threats very seriously” and decided to publish a redacted version of the story he was working on, reporting only on Cohen’s trips to the Congo.

He left out the part about the agency’s effort to persuade Congo’s president, Joseph Kabila, to assist with efforts to pressure Bensouda and disrupt the proceedings in The Hague.

The revelations come amid a backdrop of declining media freedom in Israel. The +972 magazine and the Movement for Freedom of Information in Israel reported that in 2023, the military censor barred the publication of 613 articles — a record annual number since +972 began collecting data in 2011.

Earlier in May, authorities shut down the offices of Qatar’s media outlet Al Jazeera after passing a highly controversial law granting Israel the power to temporarily close foreign media outlets if deemed a threat to security.

Last week, equipment belonging to The Associated Press was briefly seized, prompting an intervention by the US government.


Google launches Gemini Advanced & Gemini mobile app in Arabic

Updated 31 May 2024
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Google launches Gemini Advanced & Gemini mobile app in Arabic

  • Android users can download a dedicated Gemini app while iOS users can access it through the Google app
  • ‘We’re excited to see how people will utilize generative AI to enhance their productivity and creativity,’ says Google’s regional marketing chief

DUBAI: Google has added Arabic support to the mobile app for Gemini, its multimodal artificial intelligence model. Users worldwide can access it for free through a dedicated app for Android devices, or from within the Google app on iOS.

An Arabic version of its latest conversational AI model, Gemini Advanced, is also now available through the app to subscribers with a Google One AI Premium plan.

“Businesses now have access to our latest Gemini model (Gemini Advanced) in Arabic to help increase their efficiency in complex and collaborative tasks,” Najeeb Jarrar, Google’s regional marketing director for the Middle East and North Africa region, told Arab News.

“With access to Gemini on mobile, we’re excited to see how people will utilize generative AI to enhance their productivity and creativity.”

The app also provides access to Gemini 1.0 Pro, a different AI model, for free, and to Gemini 1.5 Pro with a Google One AI Premium plan. The 1.5 Pro model is more capable at complex tasks such as coding, logical reasoning, following detailed and specific instructions, and collaborating on creative projects, Google said.

Users can access other Google apps and services from within the Gemini app through the use of extensions launched this year. The services provided by these extensions include access to real-time flight and hotel booking information, location-based information from Google Maps, and summaries of content from Google Docs or Gmail.

The Arabic version of Gemini, then called Bard, was launched in July last year. Google described Bard as an “AI experiment,” not a chatbot, and Jarrar said it would allow the company to explore a “new paradigm in computing.”

He told Arab News at the time: “We’re learning together how large language models can be helpful, and how to minimize poor experiences.”

Now, the Arabic capabilities have been added to the Gemini mobile app and Gemini Advanced. The AI is able to understand questions in more than 16 Arabic dialects and provide responses in modern, standard Arabic.

Google announced several new developments in its AI projects during its developer conference Google I/O 2024 this month. Arabic support for these new features is expected to be added soon.

“As we’re seeing more interest from the region, we’re committed to bringing more features in Arabic later this year,” Jarrar added.