黑料社区

People must see themselves in the AI revolution

People must see themselves in the AI revolution

People must see themselves in the AI revolution
The AI revolution is coming. But it must belong to the people. Otherwise, it will never become a revolution. (SDAIA photo)
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President Donald Trump鈥檚 historic visit to 黑料社区 was not merely another high-profile diplomatic stop. It was a signal, one that reverberates far beyond ceremonial pageantry or economic accords. With a sweeping agenda anchored in regional security and technological advancement, the visit marked a profound turning point: the introduction of artificial intelligence as a centerpiece in reimagining international alliances and national futures. 

As 黑料社区 deepens its strategic commitment to AI, the spotlight now turns to a less discussed 鈥 yet far more consequential 鈥 question: Who truly owns the AI revolution?

For too long, the narrative has belonged to technologists. From Silicon Valley labs to national AI strategies, the story of AI has been told in the language of algorithms, architectures, and compute. And while the technical infrastructure is essential, we argue that such a narrow view of AI is not only incomplete, it is dangerous.

When the American Institute of Artificial Intelligence and Quantum was launched in the US in 2016, the institutional landscape for AI was highly specialized. Data scientists, computer engineers, and mathematicians dominated the discourse. Policymakers and business leaders, overwhelmed by complexity, often stood at a distance. AI was regarded as something technical 鈥 a toolset, a model, an optimization system.

The same pattern is now emerging in 黑料社区 and across the Gulf. Government agencies are in search of use cases. Consultants are offering solutions in search of problems. Infrastructure projects are underway to create sovereign large language models and national AI platforms. In these efforts, AI is often reduced to a software engineering challenge 鈥 or worse, a procurement exercise.

But this lens fails to capture the essence of the revolution underway. What鈥檚 at stake is not simply how nations compute. It鈥檚 how they think, organize, and act in a new age of machine cognition.

We鈥檝e long argued that AI cannot 鈥 and must not 鈥 be the exclusive domain of technologists. A true revolution occurs only when the masses engage. Just as the internet went mainstream not through protocols and standards, but through wide-scale adoption and imaginative use, AI must be demystified and integrated into the fabric of society.

It is neither feasible nor necessary to turn an entire nation into data scientists. We need a nation of informed leaders, innovators, teachers, managers, and citizens who can speak the language of AI, not in code, but in context.

This conviction led AIAIQ to become the world鈥檚 first applied AI institute focused not on producing more PhDs, but on educating professionals across sectors 鈥 from finance and healthcare to logistics and public service. Our mission was clear: to build a movement of AI adoption engineering, centered on human understanding, social responsibility, and economic impact.

History has shown that every technological revolution requires more than invention. It requires meaning. When the automobile first arrived in America, it was met with skepticism. Roads were unprepared. Public opinion was divided. Without storytelling, explanation, and cultural adaptation, the car might have remained a niche novelty.

AI is no different, but the stakes are higher. Unlike past revolutions, AI directly threatens to reshape or eliminate jobs across virtually all sectors. It raises moral questions about decision-making, power, privacy, and the nature of intelligence itself. Without a serious effort to prepare populations, the result will be confusion, fear, and backlash.

Adoption is not just about teaching Python or TensorFlow. It is about building cognitive readiness in society 鈥 a collective ability to make sense of AI as a force that operates both with us and around us.

What鈥檚 at stake is not simply how nations compute. It鈥檚 how they think, organize, and act in a new age of machine cognition.

Ali Naqvi and Mohammed Al-Qarni

AIAIQ鈥檚 work in the US, and now in the Kingdom, reflects this ethos. We don鈥檛 approach AI as a product to be sold. We approach it as a paradigm to be understood, negotiated, and lived.

Over nearly a decade of pioneering applied AI education, we鈥檝e identified four essential elements for ensuring that technological revolutions 鈥 especially this one 鈥 take root meaningfully within society.

People need help interpreting what AI actually is and how it is changing their world. It鈥檚 not just a black box; it鈥檚 a new kind of collaborator, a new model of thought.

Technologies cannot remain in labs or behind firewalls. They must be translated into the language and workflow of everyday people. Mass understanding is more vital than mass compute.

Every revolution carries moral implications. If not carefully navigated, AI can create a deep dissonance between traditional societal values and new forms of digital governance.

Above all, people must see themselves in the revolution. They must feel empowered to participate, to lead, and to shape what comes next.

Much has been made of 鈥渟overeign AI鈥 鈥 the ambition of nations to build homegrown LLMs and nationalized data infrastructure. Several Gulf nations are investing heavily in this vision. And yet, we caution: True sovereignty is not measured by the size of your datacenter, but by the sophistication of your human capital.

You can localize your AI stack, but unless you cultivate a generation of researchers, engineers, business innovators, and public thinkers, your systems will be technologically impressive but strategically hollow. Sovereignty is about stewardship. That requires education, experimentation, and the freedom to adapt.

As 黑料社区 targets massive economic transformation, the challenge is not just to build smart systems, but to build a smart society that knows what to do with them.

President Trump鈥檚 visit, and the unprecedented alignment between American and Saudi priorities around AI, is not just symbolic. It marks a deeper shift in how global partnerships are defined. Oil once defined alliances. Now, intelligence 鈥 both human and machine 鈥 will.

For the first time, nations are collaborating not to dominate territory, but to co-develop cognition. The tools may be digital, but the outcome will be profoundly human.

The alignment between global and local initiatives in 黑料社区 represents a shared belief that the future is not only coded in silicon but shaped in classrooms, boardrooms, war rooms, and living rooms.

The AI revolution is coming. But it must belong to the people. Otherwise, it will never become a revolution.

Mohammed Al-Qarni is a leading voice in AI policy and governance in the Gulf and Ali Naqvi is the founder of the American Institute of Artificial Intelligence and Quantum.

 

Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News' point of view

Israeli demolitions of Palestinian homes 鈥榬aise ethnic cleansing concerns鈥

Israeli demolitions of Palestinian homes 鈥榬aise ethnic cleansing concerns鈥
Updated 3 min 53 sec ago

Israeli demolitions of Palestinian homes 鈥榬aise ethnic cleansing concerns鈥

Israeli demolitions of Palestinian homes 鈥榬aise ethnic cleansing concerns鈥
  • Destruction is aimed at permanently clearing the population from Gaza City, Palestinian bank worker says

GAZA CITY: For a decade, Palestinian bank worker Shady Salama Al-Rayyes paid into a $93,000 mortgage on his flat in a tall, modern block in one of Gaza City鈥檚 prime neighborhoods. Now, he and his family are destitute, after fleeing an Israeli demolition strike that collapsed the building in a cloud of black smoke and dust.
The Sept. 5 attack on the 15-story Mushtaha Tower marked the start of an intensified Israeli military demolition campaign targeting high-rise buildings ahead of a ground assault toward the heart of the densely populated city, which started this week.
Over the past two weeks, Israel鈥檚 armed forces say they have demolished up to 20 Gaza City tower blocks they say are used by Hamas. 
The campaign has made hundreds of people homeless. 

I never thought I would leave Gaza City, but the explosions are non-stop. I can鈥檛 risk the safety of my children, so I am packing up and will go for the south.

Shady Salama Al-Rayyes, Bank worker

In a similar time frame, Israeli forces have flattened areas in the city鈥檚 Zeitoun, Tuffah, Shejaia, and Sheikh Al-Radwan neighborhoods, among others, 10 residents said. 
The damage to scores of buildings in Sheikh Al-Radwan since August is visible in satellite imagery reviewed by the news agency.
Al-Rayyes said he feared the destruction was aimed at permanently clearing the population from Gaza City, a view shared by the UN Human Rights Office, or OHCHR. 
Its spokesperson, Thameen Al-Kheetan, said in a statement that such a deliberate effort to relocate the population would be tantamount to ethnic cleansing.
鈥淚 never thought I would leave Gaza City, but the explosions are non-stop,鈥 Al-Rayyes said. 
鈥淚 can鈥檛 risk the safety of my children, so I am packing up and will leave for the south.鈥
Al-Rayyes vowed, however, never to leave Gaza entirely.
Israel鈥檚 Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said in May that most of Gaza would soon be 鈥渢otally destroyed鈥 and the population confined to a narrow strip of land near the border with Egypt.
Israel, which has called for all of Gaza City鈥檚 civilian residents to leave during the offensive, last week closed a crossing into northern Gaza, further limiting scarce food supplies.
In response to questions for this story, Israel鈥檚 military spokesperson Lt-Col. Nadav Shoshani said 鈥渢here鈥檚 no strategy to flatten Gaza.鈥 
The goals of Israel鈥檚 military and its politicians are not always aligned, two Israeli security sources said, with one citing ideas such as clearing Palestinians from areas of Gaza for future redevelopment as diverging from military goals.
The offensive is the latest phase in Israel鈥檚 war in Gaza.
Before the war, Mushtaha Tower was popular with Gaza City鈥檚 professional class and students drawn to its ocean views and convenient location near a public park and two universities.
It originally housed about 50 families, but that number had tripled in recent months as people took in relatives displaced from other parts of Gaza, said Al-Rayyes.
Scores of tents housing more displaced families had spread around the tower鈥檚 base. Previous strikes had damaged the upper floors of the building.
On the morning of Sept. 5, a neighbor got a call from an Israeli army officer instructing him to spread the word to evacuate the building within minutes or they were 鈥済oing to bring it down on our heads,鈥 Al-Rayyes said.
鈥淧anic, fear, confusion, loss, despair, and pain overwhelmed all of us. I saw people running on our bare feet; some didn鈥檛 even take their mobile phones or documents. I didn鈥檛 take passports or identity cards,鈥 said Al-Rayyes, who had once hoped to pay off his mortgage by this year.
鈥淲e carried nothing with us, my wife and my two children, Adam, 9, and Shahd, 11, climbed down the stairs and ran away.鈥
Video filmed by Reuters shows what happened next. From the air, two projectiles exploded almost simultaneously into the base of the tower, demolishing it in around six seconds. 
Dust, smoke, and debris billowed over the streets and tents of displaced people, who scattered, running and screaming.
The UN鈥檚 OHCHR said the Israeli military had also not provided evidence to demonstrate that other buildings described as terrorist infrastructure were valid military targets.
Al-Rayyes, who headed the building鈥檚 residents鈥 association, said the tactic of demolition 鈥渕akes no sense,鈥 even if there was a Hamas presence, which he denied.
鈥淭hey could have dealt with it in a way that doesn鈥檛 even scratch people, not to destroy a 16-floor building,鈥 he said, using a different count of its height.
After a couple of weeks with family in the city鈥檚 Sabra district, Al-Rayyes has left, and was setting up a tent in central Gaza鈥檚 Deir Al-Balah on Thursday.
In preparation for the ground assault, in recent weeks, up to a dozen homes have been destroyed daily in Zeitoun, Tuffah, and Shejaia, the residents said.
Amjad Al-Shawa, head of the Palestinian Local NGOs Network, estimated that over 65 percent of buildings and homes in Gaza City had been destroyed or heavily damaged during the war. 
Extensive damage to suburban areas in recent weeks is visible in satellite images of several neighborhoods.

 


鈥楤etter late than never鈥: Palestinian FM says UK recognition of state a 鈥榗ourageous step鈥

鈥楤etter late than never鈥: Palestinian FM says UK recognition of state a 鈥榗ourageous step鈥
Updated 5 min 43 sec ago

鈥楤etter late than never鈥: Palestinian FM says UK recognition of state a 鈥榗ourageous step鈥

鈥楤etter late than never鈥: Palestinian FM says UK recognition of state a 鈥榗ourageous step鈥
  • The UK, alongside France, Canada and Australia, is preparing to formally recognize the State of Palestine at the UN

LONDON: The UK will be taking 鈥渁 courageous step at a very difficult time鈥 by officially recognizing a Palestinian state, the Palestinian Authority鈥檚 foreign minister has said, predicting the move will inspire other countries to follow suit.

that the UK鈥檚 expected announcement in the coming days was 鈥渂etter late than never.鈥

She added: 鈥淏ritain, with its weight, can influence other countries to come forward and recognise, because that is the right thing to do.鈥

The UK, alongside France, Canada and Australia, is preparing to formally recognize the State of Palestine at the United Nations.

Aghabekian said the move should be seen as upholding international law and supporting the rights of both Israelis and Palestinians.

鈥淏ritain has been supporting the existence and flourishing of Israel for some time,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut today Britain is looking at the matter objectively 鈥 in terms of people鈥檚 rights, in terms of complying with international law, and in terms of the future of this area.鈥

She dismissed claims that recognition rewards Hamas terrorism, arguing that withholding recognition would only 鈥渞eward extremists.鈥

She added: 鈥淚f we wait until Israel decides it wants to go into negotiations with the Palestinians, then it won鈥檛 happen.鈥 Aghabekian also said she expected Gaza to eventually return to Palestinian governance.

Three-quarters of UN member states already recognize Palestine, which comprises the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip 鈥 collectively known as the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

The West Bank has been under Israeli occupation since 1967, while Gaza has endured repeated bombardment since Hamas鈥 Oct. 7, 2023, attacks on Israel, which killed nearly 1,200 people and saw around 250 taken hostage. Since then, more than 65,000 people have been killed in Gaza, according to Palestinian figures, while 48 hostages remain in captivity, 20 of whom are believed to be alive.

Aghabekian confirmed that Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has provided assurances to world leaders that Hamas will not be part of Gaza鈥檚 governance.

But she cautioned against talk of eliminating the group entirely.

鈥淗amas is an ideology, not a building that you bring down,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hose who support Hamas need to see a future 鈥 that there might be a state in which their children and grandchildren might prosper. What people see today is darkness and destruction, violation of rights, helplessness and hopelessness. People need to see progress, and once that happens, the mood will shift.鈥


Gloom deepens at West Ham as loss to Crystal Palace follows protests

Gloom deepens at West Ham as loss to Crystal Palace follows protests
Updated 17 min 12 sec ago

Gloom deepens at West Ham as loss to Crystal Palace follows protests

Gloom deepens at West Ham as loss to Crystal Palace follows protests
  • Many carried banners calling for change at the club which has been under the control of Sullivan and Brady since 2010
  • 鈥淪old our soul 鈥 15 years of destroying West Ham United,鈥 one banner said

LONDON: West Ham United fans staged demonstrations against the club鈥檚 owners before their home Premier League derby against Crystal Palace on Saturday and a 2-1 defeat at the London Stadium only added to the early-season gloom at the club.
West Ham鈥檚 fourth defeat in five games left them third from bottom and with manager Graham Potter under increasing pressure.
Since being appointed as Julen Lopetegui鈥檚 successor in January, Potter has overseen only six league wins from 25 games.
By the final whistle there were swathes of empty seats and the cheers of the Palace fans was in marked contrast to the dejection of the home fans who had stayed to the end.
Thousands of them had gathered two hours before kickoff for two separate protests against the running of the club by chairman David Sullivan and vice-chair Karren Brady.
Many carried banners calling for change at the club which has been under the control of Sullivan and Brady since 2010.

鈥淪old our soul 鈥 15 years of destroying West Ham United,鈥 one banner said, relating to the club鈥檚 move away from its atmospheric Upton Park to the London Olympic stadium in 2016.
鈥淪old us a dream, we are living the nightmare,鈥 another read.
The protests, organized by fan groups Hammers United and Crossed Hammers, came two weeks after West Ham鈥檚 Fan Advisory Board issued a vote of no confidence in the club board, accusing them of not capitalizing on the club鈥檚 UEFA Conference League triumph in 2023 and of providing a poor match-day experience.
In response, the club said it had taken steps to implement a new strategy and approach 鈥 particularly in the area of player recruitment and appointing Potter as head coach.
While West Ham鈥檚 woes continue, Palace are flying high with nine points from their opening five games.
Jean-Philippe Mateta nodded in a rebound after goalkeeper Alphonse Areola had pushed Marc Guehi鈥檚 header against the bar in the 37th minute.
There were boos from the home fans at halftime but the mood was briefly raised when Jarrod Bowen equalized with a header soon after the interval.
But Tyrick Mitchell slammed in a volley to win it for Palace.
Another protest by West Ham fans is planned for the home game against Brentford on Oct. 20.


Lebanon says one dead in Israel strike on south

Lebanon says one dead in Israel strike on south
Updated 20 September 2025

Lebanon says one dead in Israel strike on south

Lebanon says one dead in Israel strike on south
  • 鈥淭he Israeli enemy strike on a vehicle on the Al-Khardali road killed one person,鈥 the health ministry said
  • Israel has continued to carry out attacks on Lebanon despite the November truce

BEIRUT: Lebanon said an Israeli strike killed one person in the south on Saturday, the latest deadly attack despite a months-old ceasefire between Israel and the Hezbollah militant group.
An AFP correspondent saw first responders attending the scene in the Marjayoun area, where the partially burnt-out wreckage of a white vehicle sat beside the road.
鈥淭he Israeli enemy strike on a vehicle on the Al-Khardali road killed one person,鈥 the health ministry said in a statement.
Israel has continued to carry out attacks on Lebanon despite the November truce that sought to end more than a year of hostilities with the Iran-backed group.
It has also maintained troops in five areas of the south it deems strategic.
The Israeli military has said previous strikes targeted suspected Hezbollah militants or facilities.
On Friday, Israeli strikes killed two people in the south the military said were Hezbollah operatives.
A day earlier, the Israeli military said it struck Hezbollah weapons storage facilities in several areas after urging civilians to flee.
In the face of heavy US pressure and fears of expanded Israeli strikes, the Lebanese government is seeking to disarm Hezbollah.
Foreign Minister Youssef Raggi has said the army will complete the disarmament of its militants in the border area within three months.
The army said Thursday鈥檚 strikes took Israeli violations of the ceasefire to 4,500 and warned they risked slowing down Hezbollah鈥檚 disarmament.


Austrian energy executive fired over alleged Russian spying links 鈥 magazine report says

Updated 20 September 2025

Austrian energy executive fired over alleged Russian spying links 鈥 magazine report says

Austrian energy executive fired over alleged Russian spying links 鈥 magazine report says
The OMV employee allegedly attracted attention through meetings with a Russian diplomat
OMV told Reuters it had terminated the employee鈥檚 contract with immediate effect

VIENNA: Austrian oil, gas and chemicals group OMV has fired an executive over allegations of spying for Russia and a Russian diplomat has been summoned to the Foreign Ministry in Vienna as a result of the affair, news magazine Profil reported.
Profil magazine said the OMV employee allegedly attracted attention through meetings with a Russian diplomat suspected by Western intelligence services of being an agent of Russia鈥檚 domestic intelligence service FSB.
The magazine said that Austria鈥檚 Directorate of State Security and Intelligence had been monitoring the OMV executive, who was not identified, for several months.
OMV told Reuters it had terminated the employee鈥檚 contract with immediate effect and the company was cooperating fully with the relevant authorities.
鈥淔or data protection reasons, we cannot comment on further details regarding individual employment relationships,鈥 an OMV spokesman said.
The Austrian Foreign Ministry told Reuters it was aware of the allegations and the pending criminal proceedings against a Russian diplomat.
The charg茅 d鈥檃ffaires of the Russian embassy in Vienna has been summoned to the Foreign Ministry, and asked to waive the diplomat鈥檚 immunity.
鈥淥therwise, he would have been considered persona non grata and would have to leave Austria,鈥 the Ministry told Reuters.
The Russian Foreign Ministry could not be reached for comment.