Anghami launches Live Radio

Elie Habib, Co-founder and Chairman of Anghami (L) Middle Eastern streaming app Anghami has launched new feature Live Radio. (Supplied)
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Updated 04 May 2021
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Anghami launches Live Radio

  • New feature allows users to talk and listen in real-time

DUBAI: Middle Eastern streaming app Anghami has launched Live Radio, a new feature that allows users to speak and listen in real-time.

Developed in-house by Anghami, this is the first time that a streaming service is enabling users and contributors to create a social audio experience for sharing music and conversation in this format.

Available on both iOS and Android devices, the feature allows users to talk while any audio — songs, playlists and podcasts — is being played. Users can also participate by using features such as applauding the host, sending text comments and engaging in side-chats.

Elie Habib, co-founder and chairman of Anghami, said that the “social element” of music had always been part of Anghami’s vision and was even part of its original business pitch back in 2011.

The company has been integrating social features such as stories and chats since 2017, and “now we are leading the way in delivering the next level of social audio to our users and our contributors,” Habib added.

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Arabic music streaming service Anghami is set to become the first technology company from the region to list on New York’s Nasdaq stock exchange as part of a merger deal valuing the platform at up to $230 million. Click here for more.

Anghami launched Live Radio in beta in mid-2020, featuring text chats and other functionalities ahead of the full launch, which now includes voice chat as well. Data from the beta phase shows that active social users have a 30 percent higher retention rate, and social users overall stream 33 percent more average daily seconds than a standard active user.

The launch of Anghami’s Live Radio is indicative of the growth of audio in the social media sphere. Last year, Twitter started allowing audio tweets and has now launched Spaces, which allows users to host and participate in live audio conversations. Similarly, the invitation-only social app Clubhouse, which became massively popular, allows only audio formats for users to hold virtual conversations and chats. Discord, primarily a gaming platform, also pivoted to become an audio platform for everyone, even changing its tagline to “Your place to talk.”

The pandemic, which resulted in people spending more time on digital screens, led to screen fatigue as well as a lack of intimacy and personal connection. Audio formats address both of these concerns by allowing users to go hands-free and have more intimate conversations while remaining socially distant.

Habib said: “With the pandemic keeping people at home and apart, the intimacy of voice and the need to be closer to others has become more valuable, and we expect to see the social audio market realize significant growth.”


Apple, Google offer app store changes under new UK rules

Updated 10 February 2026
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Apple, Google offer app store changes under new UK rules

LONDON: Apple and Google have pledged changes to ensure fairness in their app stores, the UK competition watchdog said Tuesday, describing it as “first steps” under its tougher regulation of technology giants.
The Competition and Markets Authority placed the two companies under “strategic market status” last year, giving it powers to impose stricter rules on their mobile platforms.
Apple and Google have submitted packages of commitments to improve fairness and transparency in their app stores, which the CMA is now consulting market participants on.
The proposals cover data collection, how apps are reviewed and ranked and improved access to their mobile operating systems.
They aim to prevent Apple and Google from giving priority to their own apps and to ensure businesses receive fairer terms for delivering apps to customers, including better access to tools to compete with services like the Apple digital wallet.
“These are important first steps while we continue to work on a broad range of additional measures to improve Apple and Google’s app store services in the UK,” said CMA chief executive Sarah Cardell.
The commitments mark the first changes proposed by US tech giants in response to the UK’s digital markets regulation, which came into force last year.
The UK framework is similar to a tech competition law from the European Union, the Digital Markets Act, which carries the potential for hefty financial penalties.
“The commitments announced today allow Apple to continue advancing important privacy and security innovations for users and great opportunities for developers,” an Apple spokesperson said.
The CMA in October found that Apple and Google held an “effective duopoly,” with around 90 to 100 percent of UK mobile services running on their platforms.
A Google spokesperson said existing practices in its Play online store are “fair, objective and transparent.”
“We welcome the opportunity to resolve the CMA’s concerns collaboratively,” they added.
The changes are set to take effect in April, subject to the outcome of a market consultation.