Spotify celebrates Khaleeji music in Saudi-focused campaign ‘Tarab’

Spotify celebrates Khaleeji music in Saudi-focused campaign ‘Tarab’
Over the past five years, streams of Khaleeji tracks from the 1980s and 1990s among Gen Z listeners have grown by 5,500 percent. (Supplied)
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Updated 23 August 2024
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Spotify celebrates Khaleeji music in Saudi-focused campaign ‘Tarab’

Spotify celebrates Khaleeji music in Saudi-focused campaign ‘Tarab’
  • Music has a special place in the hearts of locals, says Spotify executive
  • Most-streamed local genre in the Kingdom in first 6 months of 2024

DUBAI: Spotify’s launch this summer of a new Saudi Arabia-focused campaign “Tarab” aims to celebrate Khaleeji music “which is so intrinsic to the Saudi culture and holds a special place in the hearts of many locals.”

This is according to Rhea Chedid, editorial lead for the Middle East, North Africa and South Asia at Spotify, who spoke to Arab News recently.

“While the word ‘Tarab’ has no direct translation in English, the closest meaning that can be given to the word is its connection to a trance-like state of ecstasy or deep emotional response that listeners have to music,” she said.

The campaign, which was launched in June, is running across various media channels including outdoor, TV and digital platforms. The campaign has also partnered with influencers to further engage audiences.

Spotify’s data shows that songs released decades ago are still popular, not only among older listeners but also young audiences, particularly Gen Zs. Over the past five years, streams of Khaleeji tracks from the 1980s and 1990s among Gen Z listeners have grown by 5,500 percent, Chedid said.

She explained that this trend highlights the increasing interest and appreciation for older songs with 46 percent of all Khaleeji track streams in 2024 coming from Gen Z listeners. Moreover, Khaleeji music was the most streamed local genre in Saudi Arabia in the first six months of this year.

Spotify, therefore, felt that “now was the perfect time to further amplify this growing love for Khaleeji music and the surge in popularity we’re seeing in tracks that evoke feelings of nostalgia,” Chedid said.

Spotify has introduced several playlists including “Khaleeji Hits,” “Tarab Khaleeji” and “Khaleeji Essentials,” which focuses on spotlighting the genre inside and outside the MENA region.

It has also launched decade-specific playlists — “Khaleeji 80s,” “Khaleeji 90s,” “Khaleeji 00s,” and “Khaleeji 10s” — to capture the evolving taste in music and the iconic sounds that have defined each era, Chedid said.

Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 has been pivotal in transforming the entertainment landscape in the Kingdom, “significantly propelling the growth of the music industry,” and leading to an increase in live music events and the growth of streaming, she added.

As such, Spotify is committed to contributing to this growth by investing in “hyperlocal marketing strategies tailored to the Saudi audience.” And launching educational and artist development programs designed to promote local talent, Chedid said.

She said “Tarab” builds on Spotify’s programs “RADAR Arabia” and “EQUAL Arabia,” regional editions of its global music programs, aimed at supporting emerging and female artists.

Earlier this year, for example, Spotify spotlighted Saudi Arabia artist Sultan Al-Murshed as its “RADAR Arabia” artist for May, in New York’s Times Square.

With “Tarab,” Spotify seeks to “highlight and nurture the unique sounds and stories of the vibrant Khaleeji music genre.”

And as a platform, Spotify aims to help “drive a dynamic industry where music not only entertains but also significantly enriches the cultural fabric of Saudi Arabia,” said Chedid.


Israeli army investigates claims of fabricated stories in The Jewish Chronicle

Israeli army investigates claims of fabricated stories in The Jewish Chronicle
Updated 2 min 25 sec ago
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Israeli army investigates claims of fabricated stories in The Jewish Chronicle

Israeli army investigates claims of fabricated stories in The Jewish Chronicle
  • Experts and media organizations debunked stories about Gaza that appeared in the London-based newspaper under the byline Elon Perry
  • Claims about Perry’s reported experience with the Israeli military and as a former professor at Tel Aviv University have also been called into question

DUBAI: The Israel Defense Forces are investigating stories published by The Jewish Chronicle, amid claims that they were not true.

The London-based newspaper published an exclusive story on Sept. 5 that said Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar was planning to flee to Iran through the Philadelphi Corridor, a narrow strip of land along the border between the Gaza Strip and Egypt, along with other leaders of his organization and Israeli hostages.

The claim was said to be based on details provided by “intelligence sources,” and information obtained “during the interrogation of a captured, senior Hamas official” and “documents seized” on Aug. 29.

The story gained traction online but was quickly debunked by several experts, media organizations and other critics.

Israeli broadcaster Channel 12 said that “all of the relevant sources in the security establishment are unaware of the supposed intelligence.”

Israeli news website Ynet published a story in which four sources from the country’s intelligence community and the army’s prisoners and missing persons division were quoted as saying that the newspaper’s claims were “100 percent lies” and a “wild fabrication”.

The story is not the only one published by The Jewish Chronicle that has been called into question. Several other reports carrying the same byline, Elon Perry, are now alleged to have been fabricated.

Perry’s biographical information on the newspaper’s website states he is “a former commando soldier of the elite Golani Brigade of the Israel Defense Forces, which he served in for 28 years” and he has been “a journalist for 25 years covering wars and terrorist attacks.”

The Guardian newspaper found no record of any significant published stories written by Perry as a reporter in English or Hebrew, other than the recent series of articles in The Jewish Chronicle.

On his personal website, Perry said that during his military service he was part of the Israeli army’s mista’arvim units, the members of which go undercover as Palestinians. He also said he participated in Operation Entebbe, the 1976 Israeli military raid in Uganda to rescue the passengers of a plane that had been hijacked by Palestinian and German militants.

Perry is also a published author. Pen and Sword Books, the publisher of his second book, “Children in War,” describes him as having been a political science and history professor at Tel Aviv University between 1998 and 2014

These claims are false, Israeli broadcaster Channel 13 reported on Sept. 9 in its program “Hazinor.” It said it could find no record of Perry working at the university or participating in Operation Entebbe.

During an interview with a Channel 13 reporter, Perry confirmed he had not been a professor at Tel Aviv University or an undercover Israeli army operative.

Other publications and journalists, including Israeli-Palestinian magazine +972 and Simi Spolter, a tech journalist with Israel business newspaper The Marker, also highlighted inconsistencies and outright falsehoods in Perry’s claims.

The Jewish Chronicle published a statement on Thursday in which it said it was “aware of allegations concerning a freelance journalist, which we take very seriously.”

It added: “The Jewish Chronicle is the oldest Jewish newspaper in the world and has always maintained the highest standards of reporting and integrity. An investigation is underway and there will be an update in due course.”


IBM deal with Saudi Arabia “brings a piece of HQ to KSA,” regional VP says

IBM deal with Saudi Arabia “brings a piece of HQ to KSA,” regional VP says
Updated 12 September 2024
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IBM deal with Saudi Arabia “brings a piece of HQ to KSA,” regional VP says

IBM deal with Saudi Arabia “brings a piece of HQ to KSA,” regional VP says
  • SDAIA and IBM announce collaboration of their AI models ALLAM and Watsonx is available on Deem

RIYADH: The latest IBM collaboration with the Saudi Data and AI Authority means a major part of the computing giant’s headquarters has made its way to Saudi Arabia, IBM’s regional vice president said.

“I am happy to share that the majority of the employees in there (software development lab) are actually Saudis that have already filed patents and those patents are already being used, and one of those products is Watsonx,” Ayman Al-Rashed told Arab News at the main hall of the Global AI Summit in Riyadh on Thursday.

AI was expected to contribute $135 billion to the Kingdom's economy by 2030, the equivalent of 12.5 percent of GDP, Al-Rashed said.

“That’s massive, and when you have that much impact, usually innovation is going to follow. So what we think is that you’re going to have a lot of breakthroughs. We believe that joint effort will accelerate the breakthrough.”

On Tuesday, SDAIA and IBM announced that the collaboration of their AI models ALLAM and Watsonx, respectively, was available on Deem, a government cloud-computing platform.

Deem is “software as a service” — such as email, file sharing, video meeting, and data rights management and infrastructure. It also serves as “infrastructure as a service” — such as virtual data center, backup, cloud storage and domain hosting.

Al-Rashed told Arab News that Watsonx, IBM’s commercial generative AI and scientific data platform based on cloud offering a studio, data store and governance toolkit, is being developed in Riyadh.

Allam, the AI generative platform serving Saudi Arabia and Arabic speakers around the world, was included in IBM’s Watsonx data platform at the IBM Think 2024 conference in its pilot phase as one of the best generative models in Arabic in the world.

He said that with this collaboration, IBM “wanted to bring a piece of the headquarters to KSA.”

Al-Rashed highlighted IBM’s plan to announce future projects at their “IBM Think” event next week.


AI can bridge gap between industry and academia, Riyadh summit told

AI can bridge gap between industry and academia, Riyadh summit told
Updated 12 September 2024
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AI can bridge gap between industry and academia, Riyadh summit told

AI can bridge gap between industry and academia, Riyadh summit told

RIYADH: AI could be the key to breaking the long-running rivalry between industry and academia, experts have told the Global AI Summit in Riyadh.

Long viewed as having competing interests, the two sectors could work in harmony, opening major opportunities for both, panelists said on the final day of the summit.

Ahmed Serag, professor and director of AI Innovation Lab at Weill Cornell Medicine in Qatar, said that though academia and industry often operate in parallel, their differing “incentives and priorities” can create challenges for collaboration.

“They both have different incentives and priorities. Academia has been, most of the time, if not all the time, about advancing knowledge — which seems to take long time frames.

“(The outcome) also gets measured in publications and peer recognition. Looking at industry, on the other hand, they tend to build products that will provide return on investment — basically, generating profit,” he said.

Serag attributed the delay in applying academic research to industry’s domination of resources.

This is evident in the AI field, where talent, data and infrastructure are heavily concentrated in the private sector, he said.

However, Chuck Yoo, executive vice president for research affairs at Korea University, said that there is potential to reverse the trend.

“These days with the AI era, I’m seeing a huge change in how academia and industry collaborate,” he said, adding AI’s rapid development is the key to bridging the gap between academia and industry.

Serag highlighted the importance of effective communication in solving the issue.

“One of the solutions to this (communication problem) is, for example, to have programs or fellowships where interns or Ph.D. students could spend some time in the industry,” he said.

This would “expand their perspectives and give them a taste of how their work could apply in the real world,” he added.

A common trap in academia is falling into what academics call an “endless loop of research,” a problem that industry rarely faces due to financial incentives, Serag said.

More collaboration could prevent the issue by giving researchers a clearer picture of targets, he added.

“There have also been very good initiatives like building joint research centers and research labs,” Serag said, highlighting facilities formed between the Saudi Data and Artifical Intelligence Authority, King Abdullah University ofScience and Technology, and King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals.

Establishing shared intellectual property agreements at an early stage is key to bridging the gap, the panelists said.

“This is a fundamental part of why the industry, the company, wants to protect the rights to use this technology, and on the other hand the university wants to publish, to get recognition, which is why we call publications ‘the currency of academia’,” Serag added.

One solution is to “have a buffer where you agree on a patent on this (technology) first, and then for the university just to publish that after,” he said.

Abdulmuhsen Al-Ajaji, vice president of cloud software and services at Ericsson Saudi Arabia, said that more and more academics are taking examples from the industrial world.

“Universities are now launching their own accelerators, their own incubators and VCs (venture capitals), and investing directly in companies and startups to not only be part of the research, but also more toward owning that IP, commercializing that IP and just launching it for the public,” he said.

But industry’s exploitation of academic research is a long-running trend that will prove difficult to break, Serag said.

“The first leap that happened in 2012, where we managed to get most of the advanced algorithms for AI vision based on neural networks, actually started from academia; with the ImageNet competition that was organized by researchers, and then Google took over and scaled it up with their resources, and it is now part of all of the models we use for self-driving cars, medical diagnosing and so on.”


Israel says revoking press credentials of Al Jazeera journalists

Israel says revoking press credentials of Al Jazeera journalists
Updated 12 September 2024
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Israel says revoking press credentials of Al Jazeera journalists

Israel says revoking press credentials of Al Jazeera journalists
  • “The Government Press Office (GPO) is revoking the (press) cards of Al Jazeera journalists working in Israel,” the Israeli government press office said
  • “This is a media outlet that disseminates false content, which includes incitement against Israelis and Jews, and constitutes a threat to (Israeli) soldiers“

JERUSALEM: Israel announced on Thursday it was revoking the press credentials of Al Jazeera journalists working in the country, four months after shutting down the Qatari television network.
“The Government Press Office (GPO) is revoking the (press) cards of Al Jazeera journalists working in Israel,” the Israeli government press office said in a statement.
“This is a media outlet that disseminates false content, which includes incitement against Israelis and Jews, and constitutes a threat to (Israeli) soldiers,” the statement quoted press office director Nitzan Chen as saying.
An Israeli official close to the case told AFP that at the moment, the decision is to be applied to four full-time Al Jazeera journalists with Israeli citizenship.
The remainder of Al Jazeera staff in the country, mainly video producers and photographers who the government considers not to be actively producing content, will retain their Israeli press cards.
The GPO press card is not mandatory for working as a journalist in Israel, but without it, it is virtually impossible to access parliament or government ministries, or gain access to military infrastructure.
When contacted by AFP, Al Jazeera’s bureau chief for the Palestinian territories, Walid Omary, said the network had not been informed of the latest Israeli decision.
“When we receive (the notification officially), we will see,” Omary said.
The Israeli military has repeatedly accused journalists from the Qatari network of being “terrorist agents” in Gaza affiliated with Hamas or its ally, Islamic Jihad.
Al Jazeera denies the Israeli government’s accusations and claims that Israel systematically targets its employees in the Gaza Strip.
At least two of its journalists have been killed since the war in Gaza began on October 7 after Hamas militants attacked southern Israel.
Fourteen Al Jazeera members of staff, all Israeli citizens, currently have Israeli government press cards, Omary said in a text message on a journalists’ WhatsApp group.
The Israeli parliament passed a law in early April allowing the banning of foreign media broadcasts deemed harmful to state security.
Based on this law, the Israeli government approved on May 5 the decision to ban the channel from broadcasting from Israel and close its offices for a renewable 45-day period, which was extended for a fourth time by a Tel Aviv court on Wednesday.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government has had a long-running feud with Al Jazeera that has worsened since the Gaza war began.
“There will be no freedom of speech for the Hamas trumpets in Israel,” Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi said in May.
“Al Jazeera will be closed immediately and the equipment will be confiscated.”
The shutdown did not affect broadcasts from the Israeli-occupied West Bank or the Gaza Strip, from which Al Jazeera still covers Israel’s war with Palestinian militants.
The GPO press card is not mandatory for working as a journalist in Israel, but without it, it is virtually impossible to access the Parliament, enter ministries, or gain access to military infrastructure.


Expert blames US export controls for shortage of chips

Expert blames US export controls for shortage of chips
Updated 12 September 2024
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Expert blames US export controls for shortage of chips

Expert blames US export controls for shortage of chips
  • Saudi-backed data center in Taiwan seen as possible solution

RIYADH: Controls imposed on exports of semiconductors by the Biden administration in the US are leading to chip shortages, according to an expert.

“We actually need very advanced chips for AI (artificial intelligence), however, because of the United States export control, we cannot get them,” Wesley Shu, CEO of Formosa+, told Arab News on the sidelines of the Global AI Summit in Riyadh on Thursday.

One potential solution being explored is the establishment of a Saudi-backed data center in Taiwan.

“It can circumvent the situation of United States export control, because the AI data center will not be owned by Saudi Arabia, but the computing power will be owned by Saudi Arabia,” Shu said.

The Kingdom’s ambitious megaprojects, including The Line in NEOM, will need state-of-the art processing power to function effectively, according to the tech professor-turned-businessman.

Taiwan is home to the world’s leading chipmaker, the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, and currently has 46 percent of the world’s semiconductor foundry capacity.

Having historically enjoyed good relations with Saudi Arabia, Taiwan, Shu said, is well placed to support the Kingdom’s goals.

US companies traditionally provide the world’s most sophisticated semiconductor technology.

However, the Biden government recently tightened restrictions on exports of technology relating to semiconductors and quantum computing, citing national security concerns.

A major global chip shortage during the COVID-19 pandemic also highlighted weaknesses in the supply chain.

With the aim of bolstering national self-sufficiency, Saudi Arabia in June announced the launch of its National Semiconductor Hub program.

The program aims to establish 50 semiconductor design companies in the Kingdom by 2030.

“I think that dependence is not healthy … what we should do is build our own capability,” NSH chairman Naveed Sherwani told Arab News in a recent interview.

But for Shu, it is crucial for the Kingdom to make the most of Taiwanese expertise to build self-sufficiency while simultaneously mitigating the effect of US export controls.

A former professor, Shu founded Formosa+ in 2023 to facilitate the transfer of expertise from Taiwan to Saudi Arabia.

“In Saudi Arabia we are starting from scratch,” he said. “The crown prince, he has ambition. We know that there are some obstacles we need to conquer. However, because this is fresh, and we have an ambitious country, with Taiwan, we can work together.”

Having a reliable supply of technologically advanced semiconductors is essential for achieving some of the grand ambitions of Vision 2030.

A cornerstone of Vision 2030 is the planned megacity of NEOM. Its linear city The Line is designed to use a highly advanced transport system that will reduce commuting time for its residents.

For Shu, this is one area where the Kingdom will need to employ highly-advanced semiconductor technology.

“We’ll talk about The Line. We need to have some kind of dashboard, or some kind of control center to control everything in The Line,” he said.  

“This is a 3D city, right? So, we have a very, very huge task about traffic control, about flow control, about the customer. We need very advanced chips for AI.”