GCC’s role in shaping an ethical AI framework

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 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.

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 seeks to make the Kingdom a global leader in AI.

For instance, AI is revolutionizing ’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. ’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 ’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 ’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.

’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 .

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. ’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

Protests and heavy security as Maccabi Tel Aviv faces PAOK in Greece

Protests and heavy security as Maccabi Tel Aviv faces PAOK in Greece
Updated 6 min 38 sec ago

Protests and heavy security as Maccabi Tel Aviv faces PAOK in Greece

Protests and heavy security as Maccabi Tel Aviv faces PAOK in Greece
  • Protests called for Israeli clubs to be expelled from European competition in response to mass casualties in the Gaza war
  • Police detained several protesters at the scene

THESSALONIKI, Greece: Police conducted a large-scale security operation outside the stadium Wednesday ahead of Israeli team’ Maccabi Tel Aviv’s game against Greek club POAK in the Europa League.
Two small protests took place earlier in Thessaloniki in northern Greece, calling for Israeli clubs to be expelled from European competition in response to mass casualties in the war in Gaza.


Around 120 Israeli fans traveled to Greece for the match and were held behind a police cordon before entering the 28,000-seat Toumba Stadium.
Officers from a special forces unit escorted the Maccabi team bus to the venue, while bomb squad sniffer dogs inspected the site.
Earlier, protesters climbed scaffolding on a building complex that also houses the US consulate and unfurled a banner reading “Genocide” in English from the side of the building.
Police detained several protesters at the scene.


Camilo Ospina set to be crowned champion jockey as Taif summer season draws to a close

Camilo Ospina set to be crowned champion jockey as Taif summer season draws to a close
Updated 2 min 48 sec ago

Camilo Ospina set to be crowned champion jockey as Taif summer season draws to a close

Camilo Ospina set to be crowned champion jockey as Taif summer season draws to a close
  • 10 weeks of racing come to an end with the King Khalid Racecourse Championships on Saturday
  • Camilo Ospina has amassed 20 winners and is seven clear of his nearest rivals, so victory looks assured

TAIF: Camilo Ospina is poised to become Taif Winter Season champion jockey as 10 weeks of racing come to an end with the King Khalid Racecourse Championships on Saturday.

Although the Colombian rider is without a mount in the final event of the campaign, he has amassed 20 winners and is seven clear of his nearest rivals, so victory looks assured.

The SR300,000 ($80,000) King Khalid Racecourse Championship for older horses over 1600m brings the curtain down on the summer season before racing resumes in Riyadh on Oct. 16, and many familiar names have been declared among the 17 runners.

Adel Al-Fouraidi’s mount Waqtuk (USA) is top-rated with the Tuwaiq Cup runner-up on a hat-trick bid after his two Taif wins, including when beating the reopposing Final Destination (GB) and Ibn Toulon (KSA) among others in the King Khalid Racecourse Championship Prep earlier this month.

In addition to Final Destination, trainer Thamer Al-Daihani also sends out Uncle (GB) for owner Sheikh Abdullah Homoud Almalek Al-Sabah, while the Red Stable team of Prince Faisal bin Khaled bin Abdulaziz has four runners, including the highly rated Salfan (KSA), who makes a belated return to action.

Nine will go to post in the SR300,000 King Khalid Racecourse Championship for fillies and mares over 1400m with Ospina primed to add to his seasonal haul on the White Stables of King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz & Sons’ Aeadat (KSA).

The 6-year-old mare hasn’t tasted defeat since March of last year and looks for a remarkable 10th straight win and her third of the Taif campaign.

Her main rival appears to be fellow White Stables runner and Al-Fouraidi’s mount Halaa (USA), who was fourth in the Group 2 Riyadh Dirt Sprint at The Saudi Cup meeting and had Ospina in the plate on her only start of this term when second on July 26.

The King Khalid Racecourse Championship for Purebred Arabians is also worth SR300,000 and could be another big win for trainer Nasser Mutlaq with Mutwakel Al-Khalediah (KSA) following on from Tilal Al-Khalediah’s (KSA) triumph last weekend.

Mutwakel Al-Khalediah is top-rated in the 10-strong field but hasn’t been seen since August 2023, with recent fitness and form resting with the Fahad Al-Fouraidi-ridden Turki Al-Khalediah II (KSA), who beat several of his rivals on Sept. 12.

Ospina has another stand-out chance on Saturday with White Stable’s unbeaten Kanzie (USA), who looks for a third success in the SR150,000 JCSA Challenge, in which the Red Stables have Taif Sprint Cup winner Newtown Runner (USA) stepping back up to 1600m under Nawaf Al-Mudiani.

Friday’s card also has big prize money available to the sprint specialists, with three races over 1200m each offering SR300,000.

The final of those is the Sprint Championship for 3-year-old colts and geldings and features Al-Daihani’s Fouj (USA), who has won both starts this campaign, and Alexis Moreno’s mount, Riyadh Central (USA), who won an equivalent race for juveniles last year and shaped well on his recent return.

Kawafill (KSA) has been dropped back to 1200m on her last two starts and looks interesting in the 3-year-old fillies’ event, with Sprint Championship Prep winner Baseqm And Bake (USA) looking set to go close under Moreno in the Purebred Arabian race.


Meta CEO Zuckerberg says Instagram has grown to 3 billion monthly active users

Meta CEO Zuckerberg says Instagram has grown to 3 billion monthly active users
Updated 16 min 27 sec ago

Meta CEO Zuckerberg says Instagram has grown to 3 billion monthly active users

Meta CEO Zuckerberg says Instagram has grown to 3 billion monthly active users
  • Some firms have estimated that Instagram will make up more than half of Meta’s US ad revenue this year

LONDON: Meta Platforms’ Instagram has grown to 3 billion Monthly Active Users, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said on Wednesday, marking another milestone for one of the most popular social media apps in the world.
Meta last disclosed Instagram’s user figures in 2022 when Zuckerberg said the app had hit more than 2 billion monthly active users.
Meta, previously known as Facebook, bought Instagram for $1 billion in 2012, a move that had raised questions about the company’s strategy as the social media app had begun with just photo-sharing without significant revenue.
Since then the app has grown astronomically and some firms have estimated it will make up more than half of Meta’s US ad revenue this year.
A major factor contributing to Instagram’s success is the Reels feature which launched in 2020 and allows users to create short-form content — a market that faces fierce competition from rivals such as TikTok and Google-owned YouTube shorts.
TikTok, owned by Chinese technology behemoth ByteDance, has more than 1 billion users globally who visit monthly, a company spokesperson said earlier this month.


Gilgit-Baltistan traders end months-long protest at China border as Pakistan grants tax relief

Gilgit-Baltistan traders end months-long protest at China border as Pakistan grants tax relief
Updated 20 min 8 sec ago

Gilgit-Baltistan traders end months-long protest at China border as Pakistan grants tax relief

Gilgit-Baltistan traders end months-long protest at China border as Pakistan grants tax relief
  • Hundreds of traders staged sit-in protest near northern border with China since July, demanding tax relief for region
  • Pakistan last year collected around $57.35 million in taxes from northern Sost port near China border, says GB official

 ISLAMABAD: Traders in Pakistan’s northern Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) announced ending a two-month-long protest near the country’s border with China on Wednesday, after the federal government accepted their demands and announced significant tax exemptions for the region’s residents. 

GB’s importers, exporters, small traders, customs clearing agents and members of the area’s local chamber of commerce launched a sit-in protest in late July at the Sost dry port. Protesters demanded the government exempt traders from taxes as the semi-autonomous region was a “non-tariff” area and therefore should be exempt from sales and income taxes. 

The protest had brought trade between Pakistan and China via the northern Khunjerab Pass to a halt, with the movement of people also adversely affected. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif formed a committee on Aug. 17, headed by Energy Minister Sardar Awais Leghari, to resolve the crisis. 

Federal Bureau of Revenue (FBR) Chairman Rashid Mahmood Langrial explained at a news conference that previously, duties and consumption taxes used to be collected from GB traders at the Sost port near the border with China.

“While there is no consumption tax for GB, we did not have a mechanism to ensure that the exemption is offered only to the local population,” Langrial told reporters at the news conference. He was flanked by Leghari, GB Chief Minister Hajji Gulbar Khan and Senator Saleem Mandviwalla.

“Under the new mechanism, sales tax, income tax and federal excise duty will no more be collected at the border, but custom duty and regulatory duty will still be collected,” he added. 

As per the agreement, a copy of which is available with Arab News, the tax exemptions will only be offered to local firms registered with the GB government. The total amount of tax exemptions shall not exceed Rs4 billion [$14.34 million] per annum.

The GB government will now implement the agreement and ensure that its various clauses are implemented.

Ashafaq Ahmad, a leader of the region’s traders who is also the chairman of the GB Chamber of Commerce and Industry, welcomed the deal. 

“We are thankful to the government for granting us tax exemptions and hope the written agreement will be implemented,” Ahmad said. 

He called on traders to resume cross-border trade activities at the Sost border starting Thursday, expressing hope that the tax relief would rejuvenate commercial momentum and strengthen regional trade ties. 

Faizullah Faraq, GB chief minister’s spokesperson, told Arab News that the agreement would impact trade worth over Rs100 billion [$358.42 million] between Pakistan and China through the Sost dry port. 

He said last year, the government collected around Rs16 billion [$57.35 million] in taxes from the Sost border alone.

Speaking at the press conference, Mandviwalla said the prolonged protest had worried Pakistan and China. 

Pakistan’s trade with China is worth around $20 billion but the balance is heavily tilted in Beijing’s favor.

The commerce ministry this week told a parliamentary panel that Pakistan’s imports from China peaked at $20.8 billion in 2020–21, against exports of around $3.1 billion.

Ministry officials told the National Assembly Standing Committee on Commerce that figures from last fiscal year (2024-25) show that Pakistan’s imports from China stand at $17 billion against the country’s exports to Beijing, which were recorded at $2.7 billion. 

The committee voiced deep concern over Pakistan’s widening trade deficit with China and highlighted the need to shrink it through value addition measures and institutional reforms.


More than 100 Roma fans arrested in Nice before Europa League match

More than 100 Roma fans arrested in Nice before Europa League match
Updated 40 min 50 sec ago

More than 100 Roma fans arrested in Nice before Europa League match

More than 100 Roma fans arrested in Nice before Europa League match
  • A violent altercation broke out Tuesday night and objects were thrown at police officers
  • The two sets of fans reportedly never came into contact as they couldn’t breach the police lines

NICE: More than 100 Roma supporters have been arrested in Nice ahead of Wednesday’s Europa League match between the two teams.
A violent altercation broke out Tuesday night and objects were thrown at police officers, while Nice fans reportedly riled up their Roma counterparts by chanting “there’s only Lazio in Rome.” Lazio are Roma’s fierce rival in the Italian capital.
The two sets of fans reportedly never came into contact as they couldn’t breach the police lines.
“A force of more than 200 personnel, including two mobile units, has been deployed in the city center of Nice since yesterday, to prevent any disturbance of public order and has arrested 102 individuals identified as Roma ultras in possession of weapons,” read a statement by the region’s prefecture.
“These individuals have been taken into custody ... All weapons found have been seized. The rapid and massive intervention of the security forces prevented any physical harm or material damage.”
The Alpes-Maritimes department’s prefecture added that uniformed and plainclothes security forces will be mobilized in even greater numbers Wednesday night, with more than 400 officers involved, to “ensure a visible and dissuasive presence.”
Nice host Roma at Allianz Riviera stadium in the opening round of Europa League matches.
Three years ago, 32 people were injured in a mass brawl between ultras from Nice and German club Cologne before a Europa Conference League match.