Warren Buffett says AI may be better for scammers than society. And he’s seen how

Warren Buffett says AI may be better for scammers than society. And he’s seen how
Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren Buffett attends the Berkshire Hathaway Inc annual shareholders’ meeting in Omaha, Nebraska, US, May 3, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 05 May 2024
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Warren Buffett says AI may be better for scammers than society. And he’s seen how

Warren Buffett says AI may be better for scammers than society. And he’s seen how
  • The billionaire investing guru predicted scammers will seize on the technology, and may do more harm with it than society can wring good

OMAHA, Nebraska: Warren Buffett cautioned the tens of thousands of shareholders who packed an arena for his annual meeting that artificial intelligence scams could become “the growth industry of all time.”
Doubling down on his cautionary words from last year, Buffett told the throngs he recently came face to face with the downside of AI. And it looked and sounded just like him. Someone made a fake video of Buffett, apparently convincing enough that the so-called Oracle of Omaha himself said he could imagine it tricking him into sending money overseas.
The billionaire investing guru predicted scammers will seize on the technology, and may do more harm with it than society can wring good.
“As someone who doesn’t understand a damn thing about it, it has enormous potential for good and enormous potential for harm and I just don’t know how that plays out,” he said.
EARNINGS BEFORE MUSINGS
The day started early Saturday with Berkshire Hathaway announcing a steep drop in earnings as the paper value of its investments plummeted and it pared its Apple holdings. The company reported a $12.7 billion profit, or $8.825 per Class A share, in first the quarter, down 64 percent from $35.5 billion, or $24,377 per A share a year ago.
But Buffett encourages investors to pay more attention to the conglomerate’s operating earnings from the companies it actually owns. Those jumped 39 percent to $11.222 billion, or $7,796.47 per Class A share, led by insurance companies’ performance.
None of it that got in the way of the fun.
Throngs flooded the arena to buy up Squishmallows of Buffett and former Vice Chairman Charlie Munger, who died last fall. The event attracts investors from all over the world and is unlike any other company meeting. Those attending for the first time are driven by an urgency to get here while the 93-year-old Buffett is still alive.
“This is one of the best events in the world to learn about investing. To learn from the gods of the industry,” said Akshay Bhansali, who spent the better part of two days traveling from India to Omaha.
A NOTABLE ABSENCE
Devotees come from all over the world to vacuum up tidbits of wisdom from Buffett, who famously dubbed the meeting ‘Woodstock for Capitalists.’
But a key ingredient was missing this year: It was the first meeting since Munger died.
The meeting opened with a video tribute highlighting some of his best known quotes, including classic lines like “If people weren’t so often wrong, we wouldn’t be so rich.” The video also featured skits the investors made with Hollywood stars over the years, including a “Desperate Housewives” spoof where one of the women introduced Munger as her boyfriend and another in which actress Jaimie Lee Curtis swooned over him.
As the video ended, the arena erupted in a prolonged standing ovation honoring Munger, whom Buffett called “the architect of Berkshire Hathaway.”
Buffett said Munger remained curious about the world up until the end of his life at 99, hosting dinner parties, meeting with people and holding regular Zoom calls.
“Like his hero Ben Franklin, Charlie wanted to understand everything,” Buffett said.
For decades, Munger and Buffett functioned as a classic comedy duo, with Buffett offering lengthy setups to Munger’s witty one-liners. He once referred to unproven Internet companies as “turds.”
Together, the pair transformed Berkshire from a floundering textile mill into a massive conglomerate made up of a variety of interests, from insurance companies such as Geico to BNSF railroad to several major utilities and an assortment of other companies.
Munger often summed up the key Berkshire’s success as “trying to be consistently not stupid, instead of trying to be very intelligent.” He and Buffett also were known for sticking to businesses they understood well.
“Warren always did at least 80 percent of the talking. But Charlie was a great foil,” said Stansberry Research analyst Whitney Tilson, who was looking forward to his 27th consecutive meeting.
NEXT GEN LEADERS

Munger’s absence, however, created space for shareholders to get to know better the two executives who directly oversee Berkshire’s companies: Ajit Jain, who manages the insurance units; and Abel, who handles everything else and has been named Buffett’s successor. The two shared the main stage with Buffett this year.
The first time Buffett kicked a question to Abel, he mistakenly said “Charlie?” Abel shrugged off the mistake and dove into the challenges utilities face from the increased risk of wildfires and some regulators’ reluctance to let them collect a reasonable profit.
Morningstar analyst Greggory Warren said he believes Abel spoke up more Saturday and let shareholders see some of the brilliance Berkshire executives talk about.
“Greg’s a rock star,” said Chris Bloomstran, president of Semper Augustus Investments Group. “The bench is deep. He won’t have the same humor at the meeting. But I think we all come here to get a reminder every year to be rational.”
A LOOK TO THE FUTURE
Buffett has made clear that Abel will be Berkshire’s next CEO, but he said Saturday that he had changed his opinion on how the company’s investment portfolio should be handled. He had previously said it would fall to two investment managers who handle small chunks of the portfolio now. On Saturday, Buffett endorsed Abel for the gig, as well as overseeing the operating businesses and any acquisitions.
“He understands businesses extremely well. and if you understand businesses, you understand common stocks,” Buffett said. Ultimately, it will be up to the board to decide, but the billionaire said he might come back and haunt them if they try to do it differently.
Overall, Buffett said Berkshire’s system of having all the noninsurance companies report to Abel and the insurers report to Jain is working well. He himself hardly gets any calls from managers anymore because they get more guidance from Abel and Jain.
“This place would work extremely well the next day if something happened to me,” Buffett said.
Nevertheless, the best applause line of the day was Buffett’s closing remark: “I not only hope that you come next year but I hope that I come next year.”


Disney to name CEO Bob Iger’s replacement in 2026, taps Morgan Stanley’s Gorman as chair

Disney to name CEO Bob Iger’s replacement in 2026, taps Morgan Stanley’s Gorman as chair
Updated 3 min 42 sec ago
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Disney to name CEO Bob Iger’s replacement in 2026, taps Morgan Stanley’s Gorman as chair

Disney to name CEO Bob Iger’s replacement in 2026, taps Morgan Stanley’s Gorman as chair
  • This is the first time the storied media and entertainment company has formally announced a timetable for succession
  • Disney said Morgan Stanley veteran James Gorman would become chairman of the board on Jan. 2

Walt Disney said on Monday it would announce a replacement for CEO Bob Iger in early 2026, marking the first time the storied media and entertainment company has formally announced a timetable for succession.
The investor community said the news signaled progress for a company that has struggled to find a successor to Iger, the affable, camera-ready executive who shaped the modern Disney through a series of acquisitions.
Disney said Morgan Stanley veteran James Gorman would become chairman of the board on Jan. 2, after stepping down from his post as executive chair of Morgan Stanley at the end of the year. He served as CEO of the Wall Street bank for 14 years and is credited with growing its wealth management business.
Gorman has been praised for deftly executing Morgan Stanley’s succession plan, in which Ted Pick was chosen from among three contenders for the top job. In a rare outcome on Wall Street, the two other CEO candidates, executives Andy Saperstein and Dan Simkowitz, remain at Morgan Stanley.
One financial executive who has worked with Gorman said Disney has made a choice who will “insist on rigor and transparency” in choosing a successor for Iger.
Succession has been Disney’s Achilles heel.
Activist investor Nelson Peltz criticized Disney’s board, saying its mishandling of succession planning resulted in Iger’s return in November 2022, after the board ousted his hand-picked successor, Bob Chapek.
“Important to see Disney making progress on this critically important initiative,” said Richard Greenfield, LightShed partners’ media and technology analyst. “Most interesting is that it implies that Iger is actually leaving after 2026.”
Iger, who built out Disney’s media empire through the high-profile acquisitions of Pixar, Marvel and the Star Wars franchise, has seen his retirement date extended five times.
Upon his return to Disney, Iger initially planned to stay for two years after coming out of retirement but agreed to extend his tenure through 2026.
“A critical priority before us is to appoint a new CEO, which we now expect to announce in early 2026,” Gorman said in a statement, adding this would “allow ample time for successful transition before the conclusion of Bob Iger’s contract in 2026.”
Disney’s stock closed down 0.68 percent, but rallied in after-hours trading.
Gorman will succeed Mark Parker, who is leaving the Disney board after nine years. Parker, who also serves as executive chair of struggling sports retailer Nike, said he plans “to focus on other areas of my work.” The sneaker giant has undergone its own CEO transition.
“Drawing on his vast experience, James is expertly guiding the extensive search process for a new CEO, which remains a top priority for the board,” Parker said in a statement.
Disney said its board discussed succession planning at each of its regularly scheduled meetings in fiscal 2024 and continues to review both internal and external candidates.

CEO CANDIDATES
Last year, Reuters reported that four Disney executives were seen as contenders for CEO. Among them is Disney Entertainment co-Chair Dana Walden, a creative TV executive in the mold of Iger, with a string of commercial and critical successes and strong talent relationships.
Other internal candidates include Disney Experiences Chairman Josh D’Amaro, an executive with Iger-like charisma whose portfolio includes the company’s most significant revenue engine, its theme parks. Another is ESPN Chairman Jimmy Pitaro, the likable executive who is guiding the sports network’s digital transition.
Disney Entertainment Co-Chairman Alan Bergman, a Disney veteran who oversees the film studio that has released a pair of blockbuster films this year, is also in the running. 


Arab News-YouGov poll predicts huge Arab-American turnout in upcoming election, Palestine tops priorities

Arab News-YouGov poll predicts huge Arab-American turnout in upcoming election, Palestine tops priorities
Updated 21 October 2024
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Arab News-YouGov poll predicts huge Arab-American turnout in upcoming election, Palestine tops priorities

Arab News-YouGov poll predicts huge Arab-American turnout in upcoming election, Palestine tops priorities
  • Despite Trump being seen as more pro-Israel than Harris, survey suggests intent to penalize Democrats over mishandling Gaza

LONDON: A YouGov poll of Arab Americans commissioned by the Arab News Research & Studies Unit suggests a massive Arab-American turnout for the upcoming US presidential election (87 percent), with Palestine being the top priority, and former President Donald Trump enjoying a 2 percentage point lead over Vice President Kamala Harris.

The survey of 500 Arab Americans nationwide from Sept. 26 to Oct. 1 aligns with a poll conducted in May by the Arab American Institute that showed the Democratic Party losing support among Arab Americans due to US President Joe Biden’s handling of the Gaza conflict. His support among the community hovered at just under 20 percent at the time.

During a webinar unveiling the AAI poll’s findings, its President James Zogby said Arab Americans are “still seething over the pain of Gaza … and they’re not willing to put that away.”

The battleground state of Michigan, which has a large Arab-American community, has been the focus of both Trump and Harris.

According to Associated Press tracking of each campaign’s public events, Trump has held 15 events in Michigan since April, while Harris will have visited the state 11 times since she became the Democratic nominee.

In a recent interview with Al Arabiya, Trump spoke of his delight at one of his grandchildren being half Arab, in reference to his daughter Tiffany marrying Lebanese Michael Boulos. 

The Arab News-YouGov poll shows that despite Trump being perceived as more supportive of the Israeli government than Harris, many Arab Americans would still vote for him contrary to their identification as Democrats, which suggests that they are penalizing the Biden administration over its failure to reign in Israel’s devastating military campaigns in Gaza and Lebanon.

When asked what is their top priority, most respondents chose the Israeli-Palestinian conflict over the economy or cost of living.

“The polling figures are very telling. They show that the Las Vegas rules clearly don’t apply to our region — what happens in the Middle East clearly doesn’t stay in the Middle East,” said Arab News Editor-in-Chief Faisal J. Abbas.

“While most of us here in the Arab world might be indifferent, and don’t have a say anyway, as to which candidate ends up winning, clearly Arab voters in America feel strongly about the handling of the Gaza crisis since it erupted last Oct. 7.”

The US has blocked several ceasefire motions at the UN Security Council, and has continued providing arms to Israel. 

Arab Americans constitute only 1 percent of US voters, but according to Firas Maksad, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute in Washington, their vote is significant this year because the race in so many states is so tight.

“The margin is 0.5 percent one way or the other, so that makes the Arab-American vote a crucial one, a crucial constituency to win.”


Lebanon’s Hariri-backed Future TV relaunches after 5 years off air

Lebanon’s Hariri-backed Future TV relaunches after 5 years off air
Updated 20 October 2024
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Lebanon’s Hariri-backed Future TV relaunches after 5 years off air

Lebanon’s Hariri-backed Future TV relaunches after 5 years off air
  • Free-to-air channel broadcast regionally and internationally until suspension by Saad Hariri in 2019

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s Future TV, the media arm of former prime minister Rafik Hariri, announced its relaunch after a five-year suspension.

Hussein Al Wajih, media adviser to Future Movement leader Saad Hariri, announced the return of the network and all its platforms on Sunday.

In a statement published on his X account, Wajih said “as of today, the website of Al Mustaqbal TV and its social media platforms are back in operation, in the hope that this step will constitute a contribution to keeping up with the fateful events that are taking place and confirm the continuity of a national institution that has left its mark in the field of media.”

The Lebanese TV channel, which had been inactive for years, was originally founded in 1993 by Rafik Hariri.

The free-to-air channel broadcast regionally and internationally until its suspension by Saad Hariri in October 2019.

A statement released by Hariri at the time said: “It is with a heavy heart that I announce today the decision to suspend work at Future TV and settle workers’ wages for the same financial reasons that led to the closing of Al-Mustaqbal newspaper. The decision was not an easy one for me or for the men and women of the Future Movement nor is it for the generation of the founding personnel and the millions of Lebanese and Arab viewers of Future TV who had stayed loyal to the station for more than a quarter of a century.”

News of the return of the channel was welcomed with many Lebanese accounts commenting positively and wishing success for Future TV this time around.


Journalism should be seen as essential as humanitarian work, UN expert says

People attend a demonstration at Trafalgar Square in London on Saturday in support of Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip.
People attend a demonstration at Trafalgar Square in London on Saturday in support of Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip.
Updated 19 October 2024
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Journalism should be seen as essential as humanitarian work, UN expert says

People attend a demonstration at Trafalgar Square in London on Saturday in support of Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip.
  • The information industry has changed, Khan said, and the issue of access to conflict situations by international media representatives — who have been banned from Gaza by Israel — must also be affirmed

NEW YORK: Freedom of expression has been threatened more seriously in Gaza than in any recent conflict, with journalists targeted in the war-torn territory and Palestinian supporters targeted in many countries, a UN expert said.
Irene Khan, the UN independent investigator on the right to freedom of opinion and expression, pointed to attacks on the media and the targeted killings and arbitrary detention of dozens of journalists in Gaza.
Khan said she has called on the UN General Assembly and Security Council to strengthen the protection of journalists “as essential civilian workers.”
“Journalism should be seen as essential as humanitarian work,” she said.

FASTFACT

Irene Khan, the UN independent investigator on the right to freedom of opinion and expression, sharply criticized the ‘discrimination and double standards’ that have seen restrictions and suppression of pro-Palestinian protests and speech.

The information industry has changed, Khan said, and the issue of access to conflict situations by international media representatives — who have been banned from Gaza by Israel — must also be affirmed.
“It has to be clarified that denying access to international media is not okay,” she said.
Without naming any countries, Khan asked why nations that pride themselves as champions of the media have been silent in the face of unprecedented attacks on journalists in Gaza and the West Bank.
“My main message is that what is happening in Gaza is sending signals around the world that it is okay to do these things because it’s happening in Gaza and Israel is enjoying absolute impunity — and others around the world will believe that there will be absolute impunity, too.
She added: “The banning of Al Jazeera, the tightening of censorship within Israel and in the occupied territories, seems to indicate a strategy of the Israeli authorities to silence critical journalism and obstruct the documentation of possible international crimes,” she said.
Khan also sharply criticized the “discrimination and double standards” that have seen restrictions and suppression of pro-Palestinian protests and speech.
She cited bans in Germany and other European countries, protests that were “crushed harshly” on US college campuses, and Palestinian national symbols and slogans prohibited and even criminalized in some countries.
The UN special rapporteur also pointed to “the silencing and sidelining of dissenting voices in academia and the arts,” with some of the best academic institutions in the world failing to protect all members of their community, “whether Jewish, Palestinian, Israeli, Arab, Muslim, or otherwise.”
While social media platforms have been a lifeline for communications to and from Gaza, Khan said, they have seen an upsurge in disinformation, misinformation, and hate speech — with Arabs, Jews, Israelis, and Palestinians all targeted online.
She stressed that Israel’s military actions in Gaza and its decades of occupation of Palestinian territories are matters of public interest, scrutiny, and criticism.
Khan earlier presented her report on “the global crisis of freedom of expression arising from the conflict in Gaza” to the General Assembly’s human rights committee.
She said Israel responded to it, explained the country’s laws, and “took the position that the conflict in Gaza was not really of global significance, and my mandate should not engage with it.”
Khan, a former secretary-general of Amnesty International, stressed that “no conflict in recent times has threatened freedom of expression so seriously or so far beyond its borders than Gaza.”
She said attacks on the media “are an attack on the right to information of people around the world who want to know what is happening there.”

 


IMAX in talks for first local Saudi Arabia feature film

IMAX in talks for first local Saudi Arabia feature film
Updated 18 October 2024
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IMAX in talks for first local Saudi Arabia feature film

IMAX in talks for first local Saudi Arabia feature film
  • Plan for more cinemas and content, says CEO Richard Gelfond
  • IMAX eyeing Saudi Arabia, Mideast, to open a flagship location

DUBAI: IMAX Corp. is holding advanced talks with a Saudi Arabia company to produce a local feature film in the next few years, the company’s CEO Richard Gelfond told Arab News during a recent interview.

In Saudi Arabia, the long-term plan is to “not only build a significant theater network, but also lean into the content side,” he said.

IMAX currently has 10 cinemas in the Kingdom, with 22 more set to open in partnership with the top four exhibitors.

This includes the partnership with Saudi Arabia’s largest exhibitor, muvi Cinemas, to open four new IMAX screens by 2025 across the Kingdom.

The goal is to have 50 IMAX screens in the Kingdom in the next five years, said Gelfond.

He said that like everybody else they were “surprised” when Saudi Arabia announced the reopening of cinemas in 2018, and “were fairly early into the market.”

IMAX opened its first screen in the Kingdom in 2019. Since then, the country has consistently ranked among IMAX’s top 20 markets worldwide and was the No. 14 market globally in 2024.

The Kingdom is an “excellent location” for IMAX due to the young movie-going population that has a high disposable income, likes quality and is willing to pay for it, he explained.

Moreover, he added, IMAX has been in other Middle Eastern countries for a long time and has been involved in local, successful movies, so “this (Saudi Arabia) wasn’t a startup opportunity.”

For example, IMAX was involved in the making of the 2009 film “Journey to Mecca” and the 1992 film “Fires of Kuwait.”

“Saudi Arabia has really proven in a short period of time that the population really wants something special and the best and cutting-edge (movies and entertainment), and not just something that was done years ago,” Gelfond said.

He added that IMAX was eyeing Saudi Arabia, and other markets in the Middle East region, to open a flagship location.

This would be similar to international ones such as the British Film Institute in London, Lincoln Square in New York City, Grand Cinema Sunshine in Tokyo, and IMAX Sydney in Australia.

A delegation from the company recently visited the region and met with potential investors and partners to explore opportunities for collaboration, he said.

Last year, over 20 percent of IMAX’s box office revenue came from local productions across China, Japan, India, Indonesia, Thailand and Korea, Gelfond said.

Many of these productions, particularly Indian and Japanese films, are popular in Saudi Arabia, along with Hollywood films and local-language content.

He said that what makes the firm’s “economics work” is not only establishing IMAX screens but generating box office success from Hollywood and local films.

He added that it makes sense to “accelerate” network growth and maximize revenues by doing both “the theaters and the content side.”

“IMAX is probably one of the few truly global entertainment brands, and one of the keys to our success has been mixing Hollywood content with local-language content,” Gelfond added.