KAUST held an Engineering Forum event on January 23. The event recognized members of the Technical Committee for their support in completing KAUST standards. No further details about the content of the forum are provided. Why it matters: Such events likely contribute to the development of engineering expertise and standards within Saudi Arabia.
KAUST's Coastal and Marine Resources (CMR) Core Lab has been accredited by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) to ISO/IEC 17025. The accreditation confirms the lab's competence in performing calibrations with global quality standards. KAUST is the first university in the Kingdom and the GCC region to receive such recognition for oceanographic instrument calibration. Why it matters: This certification enhances the reliability of research data and positions KAUST as a leader in marine research infrastructure within the region.
Technology Innovation Institute (TII) has become a full member of the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI). ETSI is a non-profit organization that develops ICT standards with over 900 member organizations from 66 countries. This membership allows TII researchers to participate in the development and testing of global ICT standards. Why it matters: This move enables TII to contribute to shaping global ICT standards and enhance its competitiveness through the adoption of the latest technologies.
The provided content mentions KAUST (King Abdullah University of Science and Technology) and its association with King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud. It also includes a copyright notice. Why it matters: This is a routine update reflecting KAUST's branding and legal information.
KAUST will issue blockchain-anchored digital diplomas to all graduating students using the Blockcerts open standard. This makes KAUST one of the first universities worldwide to adopt this technology. The digital diplomas, issued through the Learning Machine Issuing System, offer secure and lifetime verification. Why it matters: This move enhances KAUST's position as a technology leader and aligns with Saudi Vision 2030's digital transformation goals.
The paper introduces SalamahBench, a new benchmark for evaluating the safety of Arabic Language Models (ALMs). The benchmark comprises 8,170 prompts across 12 categories aligned with the MLCommons Safety Hazard Taxonomy. Five state-of-the-art ALMs, including Fanar 1 and 2, ALLaM 2, Falcon H1R, and Jais 2, were evaluated using the benchmark. Why it matters: The benchmark enables standardized, category-aware safety evaluation, highlighting the necessity of specialized safeguard mechanisms for robust harm mitigation in ALMs.
The paper introduces ADAB (Arabic Politeness Dataset), a new annotated Arabic dataset for politeness detection collected from online platforms. The dataset covers Modern Standard Arabic and multiple dialects (Gulf, Egyptian, Levantine, and Maghrebi). It contains 10,000 samples across 16 politeness categories and achieves substantial inter-annotator agreement (kappa = 0.703). Why it matters: This dataset addresses the under-explored area of Arabic-language resources for politeness detection, which is crucial for culturally-aware NLP systems.
TII researchers contributed to the advancement of six digital signature schemes to Round 2 of the NIST Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC) Standardization process. These schemes were selected from an initial pool of 40 candidates. TII researchers have contributed updates to these schemes, focusing on design refinements that reduced signature sizes while maintaining security. Why it matters: This contribution highlights the UAE's growing role in cutting-edge research areas like post-quantum cryptography, which is crucial for future digital security.