Basel Al-Omair, founding director of KACST’s National Center for Cybersecurity Technologies

Basel Al-Omair
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Updated 06 September 2020
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Basel Al-Omair, founding director of KACST’s National Center for Cybersecurity Technologies

  • Al-Omair did a master’s in electrical and computer engineering from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2003 and obtained another master’s degree in computer science at the same university

Saudi Arabia is developing a secure alternative to WhatsApp that will help ensure the protection of confidential data.
It is being developed by a team of Saudi engineers and researchers at the King Abdul Aziz City for Science and Technology (KACST).
Commenting on the project, Basel Al-Omair, an associate professor and founding director at National Center for Cybersecurity Technologies at KACST, said: “The advantage of the app, designed by the all-Saudi workforce, is that it is free from external servers controlled by foreign agencies and will hence ensure confidentiality.” Al-Omair has been associated with the center since January 2017.
He obtained his bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering at King Saud University (KSU) in 1998. Al-Omair did a master’s in electrical and computer engineering from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2003 and obtained another master’s degree in computer science at the same university.
Al-Omair did his Ph.D. in information security and cryptology from the University of Washington, Seattle in 2011.
He worked at the Technology Control Company as an information security consultant between March 2012 and December 2013, and an information security officer between December 2013 and March 2016.
Al-Omair has been an advisory board member at Al-Yamamah University since June 2019.
He has been an advisory board member at Al-Faisal University since June 2018 and an adjunct professor of software engineering since January 2019. He is also an adjunct professor of electrical engineering at KSU since January 2013.
Al-Omair has also been associated with the University of Washington as an affiliate professor and co-director of its Network Security Lab since July 2014. He is also a member of Al-Imam Muhammad Ibn Saud Islamic University and adjunct professor of computer science.

 


Rainfed agriculture booms 1,100% under Saudi rural development initiative

Updated 17 sec ago
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Rainfed agriculture booms 1,100% under Saudi rural development initiative

  • It is one of eight agricultural segments receiving program support

RIYADH: The Sustainable Agricultural Rural Development Program, known as Saudi Reef, has announced exceptional growth in its rainfed crops sector, one of eight agricultural segments receiving program support, the Saudi Press Agency reported. 

The sector has registered extraordinary expansion, surpassing 1,100 percent, with participant numbers climbing to over 13,300 beneficiaries nationwide.

Program spokesman Majed Al-Buraikan identified rainfed agriculture as a cornerstone of Saudi Reef’s achievements, highlighting its role in boosting production efficiency, bolstering food security and self-reliance, enabling sustainable farming in water-scarce regions, and raising income levels and quality of life for smallholder farmers — all consistent with Vision 2030 priorities.

Al-Buraikan outlined the program’s principal aims, including broadening the agricultural production foundation, securing food independence across multiple crop categories, enhancing smallholder farmer prosperity and employment prospects to foster social cohesion, and safeguarding environmental and natural resources throughout rural Saudi Arabia.

Saudi Reef extends support and technical assistance across eight distinct sectors: honey production, fruit cultivation, coffee production, rose farming, rainfed crops, livestock raising, artisanal fishing, and value-added agricultural products.