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UAE led global hiring surge in 2025, reveals RemotePass report - Gulf Today

UAE AI Jobs ·

The UAE led global hiring growth in 2023, according to a report by RemotePass. The report analyzed hiring trends across various countries, highlighting the UAE's significant increase in attracting international talent. This growth reflects the UAE's efforts to diversify its economy and become a hub for innovation. Why it matters: This underscores the UAE's increasing attractiveness as a destination for skilled workers and its growing role in the global talent market.

Towards Practical Remote Photoplethysmography Detector

MBZUAI ·

Pong C Yuen from Hong Kong Baptist University will present a talk on remote photoplethysmography (rPPG) detection. The talk will review the development of rPPG detection, share recent research, and discuss future directions. rPPG is a technology for non-contact computer vision and healthcare applications like heart rate estimation. Why it matters: Advancements in rPPG could enable new remote patient monitoring and diagnostic tools in the region, reducing the need for physical contact.

Opossum Attack

TII ·

Researchers at TII, in cooperation with University Paderborn and Ruhr University Bochum, have discovered a vulnerability called the Opossum Attack in Transport Layer Security (TLS) impacting protocols like HTTP(S), FTP(S), POP3(S), and SMTP(S). The vulnerability exposes a risk of desynchronization between client and server communications, potentially leading to exploits like session fixation and content confusion. Scans revealed over 2.9 million potentially affected servers, including over 1.4 million IMAP servers and 1.1 million POP3 servers. Why it matters: This discovery highlights the importance of ongoing cybersecurity research in the UAE and internationally to identify and address vulnerabilities in fundamental internet protocols, especially as it led to immediate action by Apache and Cyrus IMAPd.

New security system to revolutionize communications privacy

KAUST ·

Researchers from KAUST, University of St. Andrews, and the Center for Unconventional Processes of Sciences have developed an uncrackable security system using optical chips. The system uses silicon chips with complex structures that are irreversibly changed to send information, achieving "perfect secrecy" through a one-time key. This method leverages classical physics and the second law of thermodynamics to ensure that keys are never stored, communicated, or recreated, making interception impossible. Why it matters: This breakthrough has the potential to revolutionize communications privacy globally, offering an unbreakable method for securing confidential data on public channels.

Space Quantum Communications

TII ·

Communications Physics journal has a focus collection on space quantum communications. The collection covers supporting technologies, new quantum protocols, inter-satellite QKD, constellations of satellites, and quantum inspired technologies and protocols for space based communication. Contributions are welcome from October 20, 2020 to April 30, 2021, and accepted papers are published on a rolling basis. Why it matters: Space-based quantum communication is a critical area for developing secure, global quantum networks, and this collection could highlight relevant research for the GCC region as it invests in advanced technologies.

Universal Adversarial Examples in Remote Sensing: Methodology and Benchmark

arXiv ·

This paper introduces a novel black-box adversarial attack method, Mixup-Attack, to generate universal adversarial examples for remote sensing data. The method identifies common vulnerabilities in neural networks by attacking features in the shallow layer of a surrogate model. The authors also present UAE-RS, the first dataset of black-box adversarial samples in remote sensing, to benchmark the robustness of deep learning models against adversarial attacks.

ILION: Deterministic Pre-Execution Safety Gates for Agentic AI Systems

arXiv ·

The paper introduces ILION, a deterministic execution gate designed to ensure the safety of autonomous AI agents by classifying proposed actions as either BLOCK or ALLOW. ILION uses a five-component cascade architecture that operates without statistical training, API dependencies, or labeled data. Evaluation against existing text-safety infrastructures demonstrates ILION's superior performance in preventing unauthorized actions, achieving an F1 score of 0.8515 with sub-millisecond latency.

The AI will see you now

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI is developing AI algorithms to intelligently process data from wearables and home sensors for remote patient monitoring. The algorithms aim to analyze multiple strands of health data to provide a more comprehensive view of a patient's health, distinguishing between genuine emergencies and benign situations. MBZUAI's provost, Professor Fakhri Karray, believes this approach could handle 20-25% of diagnoses virtually, reducing the burden on healthcare systems. Why it matters: This research could significantly improve healthcare efficiency and accessibility in the UAE and beyond by enabling more effective remote patient monitoring and reducing unnecessary hospital visits.