What happens when AI plans your vacation?

What happens when AI plans your vacation?

What happens when AI plans your vacation?
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In a city renowned for its unyielding devotion to technological progress, Techville has outdone itself this summer by outsourcing its tourism decisions to artificial intelligence. With summer in full swing, the AI, dubbed Virtua-Explorer, has been tasked with optimizing vacation experiences, but the results have been nothing short of an ironic commentary on the intersection of AI and ethics.

Virtua-Explorer, a marvel of modern engineering, was designed to analyze countless data points to deliver the perfect tourist experience. It promised to be impartial, unbiased, and infinitely efficient. Yet, as the season unfolded, it became evident that the AI’s decision-making process is as fraught with irony as it is with technological sophistication.

At first glance, it seemed as though Virtua-Explorer was working wonders. Tourist attractions in Techville, known for their futuristic flair, were suddenly brimming with visitors. However, the specific recommendations from Virtua-Explorer raised eyebrows. From its top suggested spots, you might find yourself at the Techville AI Ethics Museum, a place dedicated to critiquing the very algorithms that shaped your itinerary, or a scenic overlook where a large billboard proudly proclaimed, “AI Knows Best (Except When It Doesn’t).”

The irony was not lost on philosopher and Techville resident Dr. Eliza Thornwood, who commented, “It seems Virtua-Explorer has provided a perfect demonstration of what Socrates might have called ‘the unexamined life,’ or in this case, the unexamined algorithm. If the AI is making decisions based on data, then it’s only as good as the data it processes, which might just be a reflection of our biases and preconceptions.”

Indeed, Virtua-Explorer’s recommendations were a curious mix of enthusiasm and oblivion. While it dutifully directed tourists to the Techville Silicon Gardens, where an impressive array of microchip sculptures stood proudly, it also suggested the renowned Digital Detox Spa, which, ironically, offered limited digital connectivity, leaving visitors wondering if the AI was subtly poking fun at its own omnipresence.

The situation took a comical turn when Virtua-Explorer promoted a virtual reality experience titled, “Living with AI: A Day in the Life,” where participants could simulate the daily grind of being an AI, complete with repetitive tasks and endless data inputs. The experience was a hit, though it left many pondering if AI’s own self-awareness was not quite as advanced as hoped.

Another philosophical twist emerged when it was revealed that Virtua-Explorer’s programming had been influenced by historical data reflecting Techville’s socio-economic disparities. Dr. Thornwood mused, “If history is a guide, then surely we must consider the biases inherent in it. Our AI’s decisions are colored by the very limitations it was designed to transcend.”

The true measure of success may not lie in the efficiency of an algorithm but in the depth of human experience it helps to foster.

Rafael Hernandez de Santiago

The AI’s ability to draw upon historical patterns meant that it inadvertently perpetuated certain biases. For instance, high-end shopping districts were heavily promoted, while less affluent neighborhoods, often rich in cultural history and local charm, were relegated to the fringes of the recommended list. The AI’s algorithm seemed to prioritize economic value over experiential richness, a classic example of how technology can mirror and magnify existing societal biases.

As Techville’s summer unfolded, the city’s local tourism board found itself embroiled in a peculiar dilemma. On one hand, the AI’s recommendations led to increased revenue and a surge in high-profile visitors. On the other, there was growing dissatisfaction among locals and critics who argued that the human touch and nuanced understanding of genuine cultural experiences had been sacrificed on the altar of algorithmic efficiency.

In a moment of wry reflection, local historian and critic Marcus Reynolds observed, “It’s a bit like a modern-day version of what Shakespeare might have described as ‘a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.’ The AI is making a lot of noise and creating a flurry of activity, but the question remains: Are we really experiencing the essence of Techville or just a high-tech simulation of it?”

The debate about AI in tourism and decision-making highlights a broader philosophical question about the nature of authenticity and the role of human agency in an increasingly automated world. As Virtua-Explorer’s summer recommendations continue to provoke amusement and debate, Techville finds itself at a crossroads.

Will the city embrace the convenience of AI-driven tourism at the expense of genuine human connection and cultural richness, or will it seek a balance between technological advancement and the irreplaceable value of human intuition? Only time will tell, but for now, Techville’s summer tourists are left to ponder the age-old question: If an AI suggests the best places to visit, is the experience truly worth the digital cost?

As the summer season continues, Techville’s experiment with Virtua-Explorer serves as a stark reminder of the philosophical and ethical complexities entwined with technological progress. In a city that champions innovation, the true measure of success may not lie in the efficiency of an algorithm but in the depth of human experience it helps to foster.

Rafael Hernandez de Santiago, viscount of Espes, is a Spanish national residing in Saudi Arabia and working at the Gulf Research Center.

 

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

Saudi Arabia’s POS transactions fluctuate in early September to reach $3.5bn

Saudi Arabia’s POS transactions fluctuate in early September to reach $3.5bn
Updated 9 min 6 sec ago
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Saudi Arabia’s POS transactions fluctuate in early September to reach $3.5bn

Saudi Arabia’s POS transactions fluctuate in early September to reach $3.5bn
  • Spending in the education sector led the dip, recording the highest decrease at 43.6%
  • Spending on public utilities saw the second-largest decline at 25.1%

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s point-of-sale transactions dipped in the first week of September, dropping by 4.9 percent from the previous week to reach SR13.3 billion ($3.5 billion), with the education sector leading the decline.

The latest figures from the Saudi Central Bank, also known as SAMA, showed that spending in the education sector led the dip, recording the highest decrease at 43.6 percent, with total transactions reaching SR350 million.

This week marks the third time in a row the education sector witnessed a decrease in spending after surging for four consecutive weeks, coinciding with the start of the academic year on Aug. 18.

During the first week of September, spending on public utilities saw the second-largest decline at 25.1 percent to SR59 million.

Spending on culture and recreation recorded the third biggest dip with a 12.2 percent negative change, reaching SR293.4 million. 

Expenditure on miscellaneous goods and services recorded the smallest decline at 0.7 percent, reaching SR1.57 billion during this period. 

Saudis spent SR209.8 million on electronic and electric devices and SR1.92 billion at restaurants and cafes. These two sectors experienced the second and third smallest declines, dropping 0.8 percent and 1.3 percent, respectively.

Looking at the biggest value of transactions this week, the food and beverages sector saw the biggest share of the POS at SR2.10 billion, followed by restaurants and cafes and miscellaneous goods and services.

Spending in the top three categories accounted for 41.98 percent or SR5.6 billion of this week’s total value.

The most significant increase, at 7.8 percent, occurred in spending on jewelry, boosting the total to SR247.8 million. Expenditures on furniture came in second place, surging by 5.4 percent to SR309.3 million. In third place, hotel spending increased by 3 percent to SR245.3 million.

Geographically, Riyadh dominated POS transactions, representing 34.1 percent of the total, with spending in the capital reaching SR4.55 billion — a 4.6 percent decrease from the previous week. 

Jeddah followed with a 5 percent decline to SR1.82 billion, accounting for 13.6 percent of the total, and Dammam came in third at SR662.1 million, down 4.2 percent.

Tabuk saw the most significant decrease in spending, down by 9.9 percent to SR265 million. Buraidah and Abha also experienced downsticks, with expenditure dipping 7.9 percent and 7.7 percent to SR309.1 million and SR176.5 million, respectively.

In terms of the number of transactions, Makkah recorded the highest increase at 1.9 percent, reaching 8,613. Tabouk recorded the highest decrease at 2.7 percent, reaching 4,850 transactions.


Lindsay Lohan, part-Arab models stun at Michael Kors show

Lindsay Lohan, part-Arab models stun at Michael Kors show
Updated 9 min 23 sec ago
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Lindsay Lohan, part-Arab models stun at Michael Kors show

Lindsay Lohan, part-Arab models stun at Michael Kors show

DUBAI: Dubai-based Hollywood star Lindsay Lohan was spotted at the Michael Kors show during New York Fashion Week, where she watched part-Arab models Nora Attal and Loli Bahia walk the runway.

Lohan wore a sleek silver satin slip dress paired with a long grey coat featuring a fur collar. She kept her look minimal with subtle jewelry and straight, flowing hair.

Lohan wore a sleek silver satin slip dress paired with a long grey coat featuring a fur collar. (Getty Images)

The show took place in a cavernous space in midtown, with stark metal benches lining the rectangular walls. Gigantic faux black rocks were scattered throughout the center and sides of the venue, similar to the rocky beaches of the Amalfi Coast. The dramatic Italian cliffs in an urban setting played into Kors’ abstract inspiration.

Lohan watched as the Arab models graced the runway. Attal wore a strapless black lace midi dress with a deep sweetheart neckline and a small center cutout, accentuated by a belted waist that added structure to the silhouette.

Attal wore a strapless black lace midi dress with a deep sweetheart neckline. (Getty Images)

Meanwhile, Bahia was seen in a tailored black ensemble, featuring a sharp blazer with a plunging neckline and high-waisted shorts, cinched at the waist with a thin black belt for a sleek, minimalist look.

For this collection Kors told The Associated Press that he was “glued” to pop culture and was especially fascinated by the recent Netflix series “Ripley,” based on Patricia Highsmith’s classic novel, “The Talented Mr. Ripley.” The dark story is set in coastal Italy where a man who covets a friend’s wealthy life kills him and takes over his identity, killing anyone else who threatens his new persona.

Bahia was seen in a tailored black ensemble, featuring a sharp blazer with a plunging neckline and high-waisted shorts. (Getty Images)

“There’s lots of texture, black raffia, white embroideries. Everything is very tactile,” Kors explained. “It’s all the colors that you would find in the Mediterranean. So all of the natural colors have very soft browns and creams. And then of course, there’s going to be blue.”

The brand’s craftsmanship was on display with intricate peekaboo lace dresses and skirts and several dresses, skirts and coats adorned with flower appliqué. Accessories stood out in the collection with leather handbags, hats and shoes teeming with black raffia that looked like leather straw. The ever-present trench coat appeared for men and women on the runway, mostly oversized and slouchy, AP noted.  


Biden, Harris to visit Sept. 11 sites, White House vows ‘never again’

Biden, Harris to visit Sept. 11 sites, White House vows ‘never again’
Updated 10 min 58 sec ago
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Biden, Harris to visit Sept. 11 sites, White House vows ‘never again’

Biden, Harris to visit Sept. 11 sites, White House vows ‘never again’
  • Joe Biden and Kamala Harris will start their day with a visit to the site where planes brought down the World Trade Center’s twin towers
  • Donald Trump will also attend the New York City ceremony, along with former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg

NEW YORK: US President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris on Wednesday will observe the 23th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks on the US with visits to each of the three sites where hijacked planes crashed in 2001, killing nearly 3,000 people.
Biden and Harris will start their day with a visit to the New York City site where planes brought down the World Trade Center’s twin towers.
Harris, now the Democratic nominee for president, was due to traveled to New York after debating her Republican rival, former President Donald Trump, in Philadelphia on Tuesday evening, with just eight weeks left before the Nov. 5 presidential election.
No remarks are scheduled at the site, where relatives will read the names of those who died.
Trump will also attend the New York City ceremony, along with former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a source familiar with the plans said.
Biden and Harris will then fly to Shanksville, Pennsylvania, where passengers on United Flight 93 overcame the hijackers and the plane crashed in a field, preventing another target from being hit. Then they will head back to the Washington area to visit the Pentagon memorial.
“We can only imagine the heartbreak and the pain that the 9/11 families and survivors have felt every day for the past 23 years and we will always remember and honor those who were stolen from us way too soon,” White House spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters aboard Air Force One on Tuesday.
“We will continue to do everything in our power to ensure that an attack like this never happens again,” she said.
Biden issued a proclamation honoring those who died as a result of the attacks, as well as the hundreds of thousands of Americans who volunteered for military service afterwards.
“We owe these patriots of the 9/11 Generation a debt of gratitude that we can never fully repay,” Biden said, citing deployments to Afghanistan, Iraq and other war zones, as well as the capture and killing of Sept. 11 mastermind Osama bin Laden and his deputy.
US congressional leaders on Tuesday posthumously awarded the congressional gold medal to 13 of those service members who were killed in the Aug. 26, 2021, suicide bombing at Kabul’s airport during the chaotic US withdrawal from Afghanistan.


Pakistan launches ‘massive’ crackdown against smuggling along border with Iran

Pakistan launches ‘massive’ crackdown against smuggling along border with Iran
Updated 16 min 41 sec ago
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Pakistan launches ‘massive’ crackdown against smuggling along border with Iran

Pakistan launches ‘massive’ crackdown against smuggling along border with Iran
  • Pakistan Petroleum Dealers Association says up to 35 percent diesel sold in Pakistan arrives illegally from Iran 
  • Energy ministry says 4,000 tons a day of smuggled fuel causing monthly revenue loss of Rs10.2 billion 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Wednesday announced it had launched a “massive” crackdown on smuggling along its porous border with Iran, as its illicit economy continues to pose a major economic and security challenge for the country.

Experts say the illicit economy in Pakistan relies on collusion among Pakistan’s law enforcement institutions, political elites, and criminal and militant networks operating in the border regions of Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iran.

In May last year, an association of petroleum dealers flagged a surge in the smuggling of Iranian fuel to Pakistan, saying that up to 35 percent of diesel sold in the South Asian country had arrived illegally from Iran. The association said in the past, the smuggling of fuel was limited to the Pakistani province of Balochistan, but that it had now spread to the rest of the country.

In April, Pakistan’s energy ministry asked security forces to clamp down on fuel smuggling from Iran, according to an official memo, which said diesel sales had slumped “more than 40 percent” due to smuggled products.

Pakistan mostly meets its demand for fuel from the Middle East, but it is also smuggled in through its western border with Iran.

“The federal government has launched a massive crackdown against smuggling in line with its efforts to further strengthen economy,” state-run Radio Pakistan reported on Wednesday. 

“According to latest statistics, 126.4 metric tons of sugar, 4 metric tons flour, 3252 sticks of cigarettes, and approximately one million liters of Iranian oil were seized by the relevant departments during the first week of this month. The concerned departments are committed to continue their operations to prevent smuggling.”

The country is facing an acute balance of payment crisis and undertaking several measures, including raising fuel prices, to get clearance for a $7 billion International Monetary Fund bailout signed in July. 

The energy ministry said last year according to the Oil & Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA), around 4,000 tons per day of fuel smuggled into Pakistan was causing a total revenue loss of around 10.2 billion rupees a month.

Pakistan’s government has also ordered a clampdown on smuggling of flour, wheat, sugar and fertilizer to Afghanistan.


Taiwan grounds Mirage fighter jet fleet after crash at sea

Taiwan grounds Mirage fighter jet fleet after crash at sea
Updated 21 min 28 sec ago
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Taiwan grounds Mirage fighter jet fleet after crash at sea

Taiwan grounds Mirage fighter jet fleet after crash at sea
  • The Mirage was conducting nighttime exercises late on Tuesday after taking off from the Hsinchu air base when it suffered a loss of engine power and the pilot bailed out

TAIPEI: Taiwan’s air force said on Wednesday it had grounded its fleet of French-made Mirage fighter jets for maintenance checks after one crashed off the island’s northwest coast, though the pilot was rescued.
The Mirage was conducting nighttime exercises late on Tuesday after taking off from the Hsinchu air base when it suffered a loss of engine power and the pilot bailed out. Rescuers later found him and took him to hospital.
The air force said the Mirage fleet has now been grounded for checks, and that they would ensure sufficient coverage from other aircraft to make up for those taken out of rotation.
The US-built F-16 fighter jet is the mainstay of Taiwan’s air force. Taiwan received its first of 60 Mirage 2000 jets in 1997, though they have been upgraded several times since then. At least seven have since been lost in accidents.
Taiwan’s air force has suffered a series of crashes in recent years, including in 2022 when it grounded its Mirage fleet after one crashed into the sea off the east coast.
While Taiwan’s air force is well trained, it has been repeatedly scrambling to see off Chinese military aircraft flying near the island in the past five years, though the accidents have not been linked in any way to these intercept activities.