Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 is progressing with the launch of a new data center project by the Saudi Data and Artificial Intelligence Authority (SDAIA). This initiative aims to modernize the Kingdom's technological infrastructure to meet the demands of its growing digital economy. The data center will support advancements in AI, data analytics, and cloud computing within Saudi Arabia. Why it matters: The project signals Saudi Arabia's commitment to becoming a regional leader in AI and technology, attracting investment and fostering innovation.
This paper explores the use of AI and social media analytics to detect sustainability trends in Saudi Arabia's evolving market, in line with Vision 2030. The study processes millions of social media posts, news articles, and blogs to understand sustainability trends across various sectors. The AI-driven methodology offers sector-specific and cross-sector insights, providing decision-makers with a snapshot of market shifts, and can be adapted to other regions.
This paper explores how AI and social media analytics can identify and track trends in Saudi Arabia across sectors such as construction, food and beverage, tourism, technology, and entertainment. The study analyzed millions of social media posts each month, classifying discussions and calculating scores to track trends. The AI-driven methodology was able to predict the emergence and growth of trends by utilizing social media data.
G42 and Cerebras, in partnership with MBZUAI and C-DAC, will deploy an 8 exaflop AI supercomputer in India. The system will operate under India's governance frameworks, with all data remaining within national jurisdiction to meet sovereign security and compliance requirements. The supercomputer will be accessible to Indian researchers, startups, and government entities under the India AI Mission.
A new dataset called the Saudi Privacy Policy Dataset is introduced, which contains Arabic privacy policies from various sectors in Saudi Arabia. The dataset is annotated based on the 10 principles of the Personal Data Protection Law (PDPL) and includes 1,000 websites, 4,638 lines of text, and 775,370 tokens. The dataset aims to facilitate research and development in privacy policy analysis, NLP, and machine learning applications related to data protection.