Traditional and digital media should not be at ‘war,’ says social media star Anas Bukhash

Traditional and digital media should not be at ‘war,’ says social media star Anas Bukhash
“When I presented my concept to some social media platforms, when I wanted to start back in 2014, everybody told me not to do it. Every platform told me nobody would watch it. It’s too long. Because at the time no Arabic interviews were long form,” he explained. (AN photo)
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Updated 12 February 2025

Traditional and digital media should not be at ‘war,’ says social media star Anas Bukhash

Traditional and digital media should not be at ‘war,’ says social media star Anas Bukhash

DUBAI: Traditional and digital media should not be at war, social media star, podcast host and entrepreneur Anas Bukhash has told the World Governments Summit in Dubai.

During a session called “How to build a social media empire in Dubai” he explained: “I think it (traditional and digital media) should be a marriage and a good marriage, not a miserable marriage. If you have a good marriage … and they talk to each other nicely, it’s the most powerful combination rather than having either-or.”

He added he established his social media success by being consistent.

“I think a lot of things have to align, considering your consistency, your effort, your skill. All of it has to come together for you to be successful. And we've been doing it for ... we haven’t missed a Tuesday I think in like five years or six,” he said.

With more than 2 million subscribers, Bukhash’s show, AB Talks, is one of the most popular channels in the Arab world.

“When I presented my concept to some social media platforms, when I wanted to start back in 2014, everybody told me not to do it. Every platform told me nobody would watch it. It’s too long. Because at the time no Arabic interviews were long form,” he explained.

Bukhash said he valued longevity over virality in all his projects.

“Every startup I’ve done, I just do it well and I do it consistently and then suddenly it blows up. And I think people respect that more than somebody who just got viral because of one interview or one clip,” he added.

After studying mechanical engineering, Bukhash decided he wanted to branch out into other areas. He says he enjoys wearing many different hats rather than being stuck on one path.

“I’ve always looked at things and thought, how can I make it better or solve a problem for people? It’s funny how a mechanical engineer has an interview show, a hair salon, a cafe, a social media agency. But that’s the beauty of us as people. I always say, how can you sell something if you don’t believe it? You have to believe it,” he said.

“God made you so multi-dimensional. You just made yourself one dimension, but you were never born in one dimension. I love the fact that I can be one example of someone who can do a few things although I study something irrelevant.”

Bukhash said social media could be a powerful tool to help with storytelling and show people what was happening around the world — especially in recent times.

“In the US, young people have seen the tragedy and the conflict in Gaza in a way they were never able to see several years ago … You don’t have to be from a certain country to see what happens in Gaza, what happens in Lebanon, what happens in so many countries. You just have to be human to know that something is off,” he said.


Coalition launches anti-terror media initiative in Jordan

Coalition launches anti-terror media initiative in Jordan
Updated 09 September 2025

Coalition launches anti-terror media initiative in Jordan

Coalition launches anti-terror media initiative in Jordan

RIYADH: The Saudi-backed Islamic Military Counter Terrorism Coalition launched a new initiative in Amman, Jordan, to raise awareness about terrorism and counter inciting media campaigns.

The initiative includes a three-day workshop for Jordanian journalists on the role of conventional and digital media in preventing terrorism, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Mohammad Al-Momani, Jordan’s minister of government communication and government spokesman, said the initiative aligns with Jordan’s firm stance against terrorism and extremism.

He emphasized the importance of collective action to confront extremist ideology and promote a culture of moderation, the SPA reported.

Maj. Gen. Mohammed Al-Moghedi, the coalition's secretary-general, said the initiative reflects the coalition’s belief in the media’s impact and highlighted Jordan’s key role in addressing regional security challenges.

Meanwhile, the coalition received a delegation from the Bangladesh Defense Services Command and Staff College in Riyadh.

Maj. Gen. Abdullah Al-Qurashi, the coalition’s assistant military commander, welcomed the delegation and highlighted the importance of familiarizing them with the coalition’s efforts to combat all forms of terrorism.

The delegation was briefed on the coalition’s mechanisms, including its strategic initiatives, training programs, and counterterrorism operations.


Saudi students offered year’s free subscription to Google’s Gemini Pro

Saudi students offered year’s free subscription to Google’s Gemini Pro
Updated 07 September 2025

Saudi students offered year’s free subscription to Google’s Gemini Pro

Saudi students offered year’s free subscription to Google’s Gemini Pro
  • Promotion, worth $229, runs until Nov. 3

RIYADH: University students in are being offered a free one-year subscription to the pro version of Google’s generative AI tool, Gemini, the tech company announced on Sunday.

The offer, worth SR860 ($229), gives students access to interactive audio and video learning tools and advanced research features that can be used in the writing of assignments and for exam preparation.

Powered by Veo 3, Gemini Pro 2.5 allows users to transform text or images into eight-second videos. It also integrates NotebookLM, which enables complex research insights, videos and documents to be converted into audio content.

“The Gemini app offers various features to help students summarize specific information, create interactive quizzes or listen to a short podcast that summarizes lecture notes,” Google said.

The offer is available to all university students in aged 18 and above. It runs until Nov. 3 and the free subscription starts from the date of registration.

Google said it was collaborating with the International Center for AI Research & Ethics to ensure all university students could benefit from the latest version of Gemini.

The promotion comes amid a wave of student interest in AI tools. According to Google Trends, search interest in AI, studying and universities in rose by 80 percent over the past two months compared to the same period last year.

“This indicates a growing interest among students and educators in how to use current technologies for studying and exam preparation,” the company said.

With 2 terabytes of storage space, the AI model allow students to save and access their notes, projects, photos and papers on Google Photos, Drive and Gmail.

The app is available on the web and on mobile via Android and iOS. It supports various languages, including Arabic.

The free subscription offer is also available in Egypt and is set to be rolled out to other countries in the near future, the tech giant said.

Students in and Egypt can avail the offer .


Anthropic to pay authors $1.5 billion to settle lawsuit over pirated books used to train AI chatbots

Anthropic to pay authors $1.5 billion to settle lawsuit over pirated books used to train AI chatbots
Updated 07 September 2025

Anthropic to pay authors $1.5 billion to settle lawsuit over pirated books used to train AI chatbots

Anthropic to pay authors $1.5 billion to settle lawsuit over pirated books used to train AI chatbots
  • The company has agreed to pay authors or publishers about $3,000 for each of an estimated 500,000 books covered by the settlement
  • Anthropic, founded by ex-OpenAI leaders in 2021, earlier this week put its value at $183 billion after raising another $13 billion in investments

NEW YORK: Artificial intelligence company Anthropic has agreed to pay $1.5 billion to settle a class-action lawsuit by book authors who say the company took pirated copies of their works to train its chatbot.
The landmark settlement, if approved by a judge as soon as Monday, could mark a turning point in legal battles between AI companies and the writers, visual artists and other creative professionals who accuse them of copyright infringement.
The company has agreed to pay authors or publishers about $3,000 for each of an estimated 500,000 books covered by the settlement.
“As best as we can tell, it’s the largest copyright recovery ever,” said Justin Nelson, a lawyer for the authors. “It is the first of its kind in the AI era.”
A trio of authors — thriller novelist Andrea Bartz and nonfiction writers Charles Graeber and Kirk Wallace Johnson — sued last year and now represent a broader group of writers and publishers whose books Anthropic downloaded to train its chatbot Claude.

Thriller novelist Andrea Bartz is photographed in her home, in the Brooklyn borough of New York, on Sept. 4, 2025 (AP)

A federal judge dealt the case a mixed ruling in June, finding that training AI chatbots on copyrighted books wasn’t illegal but that Anthropic wrongfully acquired millions of books through pirate websites.
If Anthropic had not settled, experts say losing the case after a scheduled December trial could have cost the San Francisco-based company even more money.
“We were looking at a strong possibility of multiple billions of dollars, enough to potentially cripple or even put Anthropic out of business,” said Thomas Long, a legal analyst for Wolters Kluwer.
US District Judge William Alsup of San Francisco has scheduled a Monday hearing to review the settlement terms.
Anthropic said in a statement Friday that the settlement, if approved, “will resolve the plaintiffs’ remaining legacy claims.”
“We remain committed to developing safe AI systems that help people and organizations extend their capabilities, advance scientific discovery, and solve complex problems,” said Aparna Sridhar, the company’s deputy general counsel.
As part of the settlement, the company has also agreed to destroy the original book files it downloaded.
Books are known to be important sources of data — in essence, billions of words carefully strung together — that are needed to build the AI large language models behind chatbots like Anthropic’s Claude and its chief rival, OpenAI’s ChatGPT.
Alsup’s June ruling found that Anthropic had downloaded more than 7 million digitized books that it “knew had been pirated.” It started with nearly 200,000 from an online library called Books3, assembled by AI researchers outside of OpenAI to match the vast collections on which ChatGPT was trained.
Debut thriller novel “The Lost Night” by Bartz, a lead plaintiff in the case, was among those found in the dataset.
Anthropic later took at least 5 million copies from the pirate website Library Genesis, or LibGen, and at least 2 million copies from the Pirate Library Mirror, Alsup wrote.
The Authors Guild told its thousands of members last month that it expected “damages will be minimally $750 per work and could be much higher” if Anthropic was found at trial to have willfully infringed their copyrights. The settlement’s higher award — approximately $3,000 per work — likely reflects a smaller pool of affected books, after taking out duplicates and those without copyright.
On Friday, Mary Rasenberger, CEO of the Authors Guild, called the settlement “an excellent result for authors, publishers, and rightsholders generally, sending a strong message to the AI industry that there are serious consequences when they pirate authors’ works to train their AI, robbing those least able to afford it.”
The Danish Rights Alliance, which successfully fought to take down one of those shadow libraries, said Friday that the settlement would be of little help to European writers and publishers whose works aren’t registered with the US Copyright Office.
“On the one hand, it’s comforting to see that compiling AI training datasets by downloading millions of books from known illegal file-sharing sites comes at a price,” said Thomas Heldrup, the group’s head of content protection and enforcement.
On the other hand, Heldrup said it fits a tech industry playbook to grow a business first and later pay a relatively small fine, compared to the size of the business, for breaking the rules.
“It is my understanding that these companies see a settlement like the Anthropic one as a price of conducting business in a fiercely competitive space,” Heldrup said.
The privately held Anthropic, founded by ex-OpenAI leaders in 2021, earlier this week put its value at $183 billion after raising another $13 billion in investments.
Anthropic also said it expects to make $5 billion in sales this year, but, like OpenAI and many other AI startups, it has never reported making a profit, relying instead on investors to back the high costs of developing AI technology for the expectation of future payoffs.
The settlement could influence other disputes, including an ongoing lawsuit by authors and newspapers against OpenAI and its business partner Microsoft, and cases against Metaand Midjourney. And just as the Anthropic settlement terms were filed, another group of authors sued Apple on Friday in the same San Francisco federal court.
“This indicates that maybe for other cases, it’s possible for creators and AI companies to reach settlements without having to essentially go for broke in court,” said Long, the legal analyst.
The industry, including Anthropic, had largely praised Alsup’s June ruling because he found that training AI systems on copyrighted works so chatbots can produce their own passages of text qualified as “fair use” under US copyright law because it was “quintessentially transformative.”
Comparing the AI model to “any reader aspiring to be a writer,” Alsup wrote that Anthropic “trained upon works not to race ahead and replicate or supplant them — but to turn a hard corner and create something different.”
But documents disclosed in court showed Anthropic employees’ internal concerns about the legality of their use of pirate sites. The company later shifted its approach and hired Tom Turvey, the former Google executive in charge of Google Books, a searchable library of digitized books that successfully weathered years of copyright battles.
With his help, Anthropic began buying books in bulk, tearing off the bindings and scanning each page before feeding the digitized versions into its AI model, according to court documents. That was legal but didn’t undo the earlier piracy, according to the judge.
 


Fire breaks out at former BBC headquarters in west London, broadcaster reports

Fire breaks out at former BBC headquarters in west London, broadcaster reports
Updated 06 September 2025

Fire breaks out at former BBC headquarters in west London, broadcaster reports

Fire breaks out at former BBC headquarters in west London, broadcaster reports
  • The London Fire Brigade said firefighters were mobilized after it was called to a fire at a nine-story building soon after 3 a.m. UK time (0200 GMT)

Around 100 firefighters were called to a blaze on Saturday at the former BBC headquarters Television Center in London’s White City, the British public broadcaster reported.
The London Fire Brigade said firefighters from Hammersmith, North Kensington, Kensington, Chiswick and surrounding fire stations were mobilized after it was called to a fire at a nine-story building soon after 3 a.m. UK time (0200 GMT).
The blaze is currently affecting floors toward the top of the structure, with a restaurant, external decking and ducting all currently alight, the fire brigade said. An unknown number of flats have also potentially been affected, it added.
The cause of the fire is currently unknown. There are no reports of injuries or deaths. 


British TV presenter Adil Ray reveals death threats amid rising anti-Muslim sentiment in UK

British TV presenter Adil Ray reveals death threats amid rising anti-Muslim sentiment in UK
Updated 05 September 2025

British TV presenter Adil Ray reveals death threats amid rising anti-Muslim sentiment in UK

British TV presenter Adil Ray reveals death threats amid rising anti-Muslim sentiment in UK
  • The 51-year-old said prominent Muslim politicians had also received violent threats, and members of the public told him they were living in fear.

LONDON: British TV presenter Adil Ray revealed on Friday that he has received “horrendous” threats and racist abuse amid a reported surge in Islamophobic incidents across the UK.

Ray, who co-hosts ITV’s “Good Morning Britain,” said the wave of anti-Muslim hostility came as tensions escalated over the government’s handling of asylum-seekers and immigration.

“I’ve experienced it, I’ve had people DM me on Instagram, talk about remigration,” said Ray, who is of Pakistani Muslim background, during his show appearance. “I’ve had threats to watch myself on the streets.”

The 51-year-old said prominent Muslim politicians had also received violent threats, and members of the public told him they were living in fear.

“People who work here, and several friends of theirs who are Muslim, don’t want to go to the mosque anymore,” he added.

His remarks follow a rise in anti-Muslim incidents reported across the country. Several mosques have been vandalized in recent weeks.

Ray criticized the lack of political response. “The thing that strikes me about this is no one seems to be talking about it. These are anti-Muslim hate crimes,” he said. “There doesn’t seem to be any politician that’s standing up and reassuring millions of Muslims in this country that the country is behind them.”

He warned that this silence was “deeply concerning,” adding: “We’re seeing a rise in anti-Muslim hate crime.”