Saudi data chiefs issue new guidelines on safe use of generative AI

Dr. Abdullah Alakeel, Chairman of Saudi Scientific Research and Innovation Association. (Supplied)
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Updated 12 January 2024
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Saudi data chiefs issue new guidelines on safe use of generative AI

  • The move by the Saudi Data and AI Authority is aimed at helping government agencies
  • Generative AI can produce various types of content, including text, imagery, audio, and synthetic data

RIYADH: Officials in Saudi Arabia have issued new guidelines on the safe use of generative artificial intelligence tools.
The move by the Saudi Data and AI Authority is aimed at helping government agencies — and consequently companies and individuals — to keep up to date with the rapid developments taking place in digital technology.
Generative AI can produce various types of content, including text, imagery, audio, and synthetic data.
The document covers government data usage related to integrity, fairness, reliability, safety, ‎transparency, interpretability, accountability, responsibility, privacy, ‎security, and social and environmental benefits.‎
AI tools can be applied to areas such as customer service, marketing, design, programming, banking, health care, media, entertainment, tourism, sports, real estate, energy, and agriculture.
The technology can reduce lengthy passages of text into brief summaries in seconds, simplify content, draft memos, letters, and job descriptions, and quickly produce images, audio, and videos.‎
It can also be used to help avoid data leaks, identify misinformation, deep fakes, bias, and injustice, and verify facts.
The authority’s latest guidance complements existing rules and regulations on matters including AI ethics, data governance, privacy, security, intellectual property, and human rights.
Generative AI interprets and responds to verbal or written commands given by users, and in the process learns and problem solves.
Dr. Abdullah Alakeel, chairman of the Saudi Scientific Research and Innovation Association, told Arab News: “AI’s uses and applications have expanded and developed from its previously limited use in games of probability, such as chess and the like, or banking services.
“Despite the importance of AI applications today in helping researchers, designers, and developing businesses, we are still faced with the caveats of using it in the learning environment, which to this day does not allow students to use it, especially in the Kingdom, unlike other countries such as Britain, which allowed students to use it.
“Reason and logic emphasized that the problem is not in enumerating or confirming the advantages of AI applications whose models have expanded, rather, it is about how to deal with it and how to benefit from it.
“The main goal of any application is to improve life and provide services to society, which stresses the importance of taking into account information security and data privacy in such software.
“Generative AI technology has advantages that help even in the field of legal consultations by accessing thousands of similar judicial cases,” Alakeel said.
To view the authority’s latest guidelines, go to https://sdaia.gov.sa/ar/SDAIA/about/Files/GenAIGuidelinesForGovernmentAR....


Saudi Arabia condemns blast that hit mosque in Alawite area of Syria’s Homs

A view shows the interior of a damaged mosque after several people were killed in explosion at a mosque of the Alawite minority.
Updated 26 December 2025
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Saudi Arabia condemns blast that hit mosque in Alawite area of Syria’s Homs

  • Homs’s press office said an explosive device had detonated inside the Imam Ali bin Abi Talib mosque and that security forces had cordoned off the area

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia condemned an explosion at a mosque of the ​Alawite minority sect in the Syrian city of Homs on Friday that killed eight people.

The city’s press office said an explosive device had detonated inside the Imam Ali bin Abi Talib mosque and that security forces had cordoned off the area.

Syrian news agency SANA ‌cited health ‌ministry official Najib Al-Naasan as saying ‌18 others ​were ‌wounded and that the figures were not final, indicating they could rise.

Extremist Syrian group Saraya Ansar Al-Sunnah said on its Telegram channels that it carried out the attack. The group previously claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing at a Damascus church in June that killed 20 people.

In a statement, the Foreign Ministry said: “The Kingdom affirms its categorical rejection of terrorism, extremism, targeting of mosques and places of worship, and terrorizing innocent people. It expresses its solidarity with Syria in this great tragedy, and its support for the Syrian government’s efforts to establish security and stability.”

The statement extended the Kingdom’s condolences to the families of the victims and to the government and people of Syria. It also wished the injured a speedy recovery.