The open-source revolution in Saudi Arabia

The open-source revolution in Saudi Arabia

The open-source revolution in Saudi Arabia
AI and open source coexist but also thrive together. (AFP illustration image)
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As I address audiences worldwide, few topics ignite my passion quite like Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030, a sweeping initiative to redefine the Kingdom’s economic, social and cultural landscape. 

Launched in 2016, this ambitious government program seeks to diversify an oil-dependent economy, empower its people and position Saudi Arabia as a global leader in innovation. At the heart of this transformation lies artificial intelligence.

Yet, as Saudi organizations ramp up their AI efforts, shifting from cautious pilots to bold, value-driven deployments, another dynamic player is emerging: open-source technology.

I am firmly convinced that open source will not only amplify AI’s role, but also democratize it, making it a cornerstone of the Kingdom’s future. Let us dive into how this synergy is poised to reshape Saudi Arabia over the next decade.

Vision 2030 is nothing short of a national reinvention. With goals to slash oil reliance, boost private-sector growth and enhance quality of life, the Kingdom is laying the groundwork for a knowledge-based economy.

Projects like NEOM embody this vision, blending cutting-edge technology with sustainable living. Meanwhile, investments in healthcare, education and renewable energy signal a commitment to societal progress.

AI is the linchpin here, enabling everything from predictive maintenance in energy grids to personalized learning platforms for students. PwC estimates AI could contribute $135 billion to the Kingdom’s gross domestic product by 2030.

But achieving this is not just about ambition but execution. That is where open-source technology steps in, offering a path to scale AI efficiently and inclusively.

AI’s fingerprints are already all over Vision 2030. In NEOM, for example, AI will manage everything from traffic flow to water conservation, creating a city that learns and adapts.

Healthcare is seeing a revolution, too, with AI-driven diagnostics cutting wait times and improving outcomes, critical for a population of about 35 million.

In education, tools like adaptive learning platforms are equipping Saudi youth with skills for a digital economy, fulfilling Vision 2030’s promise of a capable workforce.

These examples underscore AI’s versatility as an engine of progress. But as Saudi organizations move beyond experimentation, the challenge is clear: How do you scale AI to capture value at a national level?

Proprietary solutions from global tech giants offer power, but they come with steep costs and limited flexibility. Enter open source, a model I believe will make AI not just viable, but also mainstream.

Open-source technology, software with freely accessible code, has been a quiet disruptor in the global tech scene. As McKinsey’s “Open Source in the Age of AI” report notes, the technology is gaining momentum for its ability to accelerate innovation and cut costs.

In Saudi Arabia, where organizations already blend proprietary and open-source tools, it will be a gamechanger for three reasons: cost savings, transparency and community engagement.

First, economics. Proprietary AI platforms often carry price tags that can stifle smaller players. Open-source alternatives such as DeepSeek-V3 or Llama 4 deliver comparable power for free.

For a Kingdom aiming to spawn more than 300 AI startups by 2030 (per the National Strategy for Data and AI), this affordability is transformative. It levels the playing field, letting entrepreneurs and SMEs compete alongside larger competitors.

AI is indeed the engine of Vision 2030, and open source is the fuel making it roar.

Edgar Perez

Second, understanding. Open source offers a window into the “black box” of AI models. Developers can tweak algorithms to suit local needs, say, refining natural language processing for Arabic or tailoring predictive models for desert agriculture.

This is not just technical, but is also cultural. Saudi Arabia’s unique context demands solutions that proprietary vendors might overlook, and open source hands the reins to local innovators.

Third, the ecosystem. Open source thrives on collaboration, drawing talent from a global pool. Saudi Arabia’s developer community, bolstered by entities like the Saudi Data and Artificial Intelligence Authority, is ripe to tap into this.

Picture a coder in Riyadh enhancing an open-source tool to optimize solar farms, then sharing it worldwide. That is the kind of ripple effect Vision 2030 needs.

The Kingdom is already laying the tracks. Its digital infrastructure, including high-speed 5G, and sprawling data centers, sets the stage for AI at scale. But adoption trends tell the real story.

“Much of KAUST’s AI research is open source, with tools and models made available to the public.” Bernard Ghanem, a professor of electrical and computer engineering and director of KAUST’s Center of Excellence on Generative AI, said of the institution’s cutting-edge research.

The government’s push to train 20,000 AI experts by 2030 means a generation fluent in the newest tools is on the horizon. Over the next several years, I foresee a sharp uptick in open-source use as organizations chase cost efficiencies and customization.

This is not just a domestic play. Saudi Arabia wants to export tech, not just import it. Open-source platforms can help build exportable solutions. A Saudi startup could develop an AI tool for smart irrigation, refine it on open source, and sell it to drought-prone regions globally.

That is Vision 2030 in action: Economic diversification with a global footprint.

Adopting open source is not without hurdles. It demands skilled workers, something Saudi Arabia is addressing through education reform and robust governance to patch security risks.

The Kingdom’s proactive steps, like the establishment of the International Center for AI Research and Ethics in 2023, show it is ahead of the curve.

The payoff, though, is immense. Open source can democratize AI, ensuring its benefits, jobs, innovation and sustainability reach beyond Riyadh and Jeddah to rural provinces. It is a tool for inclusivity, aligning with Vision 2030’s social goals.

AI and open source coexist but also thrive together. Picture NEOM’s skyline humming with AI optimized by local coders on open platforms.

Imagine rural clinics using free AI tools to diagnose patients, or startups in Dammam outpacing global rivals with lean, open source-driven tech. This is the Kingdom’s future: bold, innovative and open to all.

AI is indeed the engine of Vision 2030, and open source is the fuel making it roar. Over the next several years, as adoption soars, Saudi Arabia will not just follow the AI revolution; it will lead it.

Edgar Perez is a global keynote speaker and director of AI Workshop Riyadh

 

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

Conversations under the tree: AEON Collective’s library

Conversations under the tree: AEON Collective’s library
Updated 4 min 5 sec ago
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Conversations under the tree: AEON Collective’s library

Conversations under the tree: AEON Collective’s library
  • Community space encourages discussions on environment
  • Riyadh venture part of wider network with sites around world  

RIYADH: A Saudi nonprofit organization has created a “tree library” in Riyadh, which aims to educate the public while providing a community space for environmental discussions.

AEON Collective’s initiative is raising awareness of environmental topics through organized discussions and offering opportunities for knowledge exchange.

Princess Mashael Al-Shalan, co-founder of AEON Collective, told Arab News: “We have a firm belief that if we are trying to tackle a lot of these issues we’re talking about in our day-to-day operations — climate change, energy security, biodiversity loss, land degradation — as we heard in Saudi last year, you need to have a way of talking truly about the complexity of these issues.”

The tree library was developed during the COVID-19 lockdowns, when in-person meetings were restricted.

Princess Al-Shalan added: “We needed to find some way to make it a bit safer for people to congregate again in person, to have some of these difficult conversations and do them in a way that was consistent, of delivering on actionable dialogs, not necessarily just conversation for its (own) sake.”

The tree library is not only an area for dialogue, but also a garden where people can enjoy conversation while surrounded by nature.

Co-founder Princess Noura bint Turki compared it to a majlis, or traditional gathering.

She added: “They’re just respectful interactions and exchanges of ideas which then, even if you have a problem, you end up solving this problem or finding solutions. That is a win-win for everyone.”

The tree library is now growing and has become a haven for all types of environmental health and well-being activities.

Princess Noura explained that health and wellness were essential to creating a healthy community.

She said: “We provide them with the space, they have these conversations together, they work out or they do some healing practices and exercises, but at the same time they reflect on the space where they feel connected to nature and they start thinking about sustainability issues.

“They can have conversations around sustainability, around challenges that we’re facing, and come up with solutions. That way you get people from various backgrounds, various interests, to talk about subjects, to speak to them at the individual level. That’s how you create a community.”

AEON Collective has created a number of tree libraries around the world, including in Italy, Kuwait, Jamaica, Liberia, and the US.

Princess Noura described how these interconnected libraries were a representation of the underground mycelium networks that trees use to communicate.

She said: “(This) romantic paradigm is something that we’re trying to replicate in the physical and digital realm with these locations of the tree library, so that the notion of a system coming to the aid of its weakest constituents in a specific way is how we’re trying to address it.”

Although interconnected, each tree library is designed to serve its own local community.

Princess Al-Shalan said: “The priorities of each of those different jurisdictions are most definitely different from those in Riyadh.

“So while, for example, Failaka Island used to be the food basket of Kuwait prior to the First Gulf War, after it a lot of the land there was no longer productive.

“The return of those lands to something that’s a bit more productive as a vehicle for food security for Kuwait is immensely important.”

The co-founders of AEON Collective speak of how collaborative discussions often lead to stronger advocacy efforts and policy changes, with open communication empowering people to take action and promote a sustainable future for the planet.

Princess Noura said: “The whole idea is you want to inspire a new generation of support, and the way you inspire a new generation is by showing them through action.

“If we can work with people from our generation or our younger generation to showcase the positive impacts that can happen through an individual and at a community level, when it comes to environmental conservation, human well-being, then you are charting a way for the new generations and the upcoming generations to really have urgency moving forward.

“We hope that everyone feels that this is a space for them, where they can come and learn and contribute and also educate others, because that’s how we learn from each other and create stronger communities.”


Palestinians create role for a vice president and possible successor to PA leader Abbas

Palestinians create role for a vice president and possible successor to PA leader Abbas
Updated 1 min 30 sec ago
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Palestinians create role for a vice president and possible successor to PA leader Abbas

Palestinians create role for a vice president and possible successor to PA leader Abbas
  • The Central Council voted to create the role of vice chairman of the PLO executive committee
  • Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is to choose his vice president from among the other 15 members of the committee

RAMALLAH, West Bank: The Palestine Liberation Organization on Thursday announced the creation of a vice presidency under 89-year-old leader Mahmoud Abbas, who has not specified a successor.
The PLO Central Council’s decision came as Abbas seeks greater relevance and a role in postwar planning for the Gaza Strip after having been largely sidelined by the ongoing Israel-Hamas war.
After a two-day meeting, the council voted to create the role of vice chairman of the PLO Executive Committee. This position would also be referred to as the vice president of the State of Palestine, which the Palestinians hope will one day receive full international recognition.
The expectation is that whoever holds that role would be the front-runner to succeed Abbas — though it’s unclear when or exactly how it would be filled. Abbas is to choose his vice president from among the other 15 members of the PLO’s executive committee.
The PLO is the internationally recognized representative of the Palestinian people and oversees the Western-backed Palestinian Authority, which exercises limited autonomy in less than half of the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Abbas has led both entities for two decades.
Abbas is still seen internationally as the leader of the Palestinians and a partner in any effort to revive the peace process, which ground to a halt when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu returned to office in 2009.
But the political veteran has clung to power since his mandate expired in 2009 and has not named a successor. Polls in recent years have shown plummeting support for him and his Fatah party.
Western and Arab donor countries have demanded reforms in the Palestinian Authority for it to play a role in postwar Gaza. The authority is deeply unpopular and faces long-standing allegations of corruption and poor governance. Appointing an heir apparent could be aimed at appeasing his critics.
Hamas, which won the last national elections in 2006, is not in the PLO. Hamas seized control of Gaza from Abbas’ forces in 2007, and reconciliation attempts between the rivals have repeatedly failed.
Hamas touched off the war in Gaza when its militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking 251 people hostage. Israel responded with an air and ground campaign that has killed over 51,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children.


PSL X: Babar’s 50 helps Peshawar Zalmi cruise to 7-wicket win over Lahore Qalandars

PSL X: Babar’s 50 helps Peshawar Zalmi cruise to 7-wicket win over Lahore Qalandars
Updated 17 min 2 sec ago
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PSL X: Babar’s 50 helps Peshawar Zalmi cruise to 7-wicket win over Lahore Qalandars

PSL X: Babar’s 50 helps Peshawar Zalmi cruise to 7-wicket win over Lahore Qalandars
  • Babar Azam scores unbeaten 56 runs from 42 balls while Hussain Talat smashes 51 runs
  • With two wins under their belt, Zalmi next face Quetta Gladiators on Sunday, April 27

ISLAMABAD: Spurred on by a stellar half-century by skipper Babar Azam, Peshawar Zalmi beat Lahore Qalandars by seven wickets to register their second victory of the HBL Pakistan Super League (PSL) X edition in Lahore on Thursday. 
Zalmi were set a modest total of 130 runs after Azam’s side bowled out the Qalandars for a modest 129 runs in 19.2 overs. Alzarri Joseph was the pick of the Zalmi bowlers with 3/15 figures while Luke Wood and Hussain Talat returned figures of 2/25 and 2/18, respectively.
The “Yellow Storm” ran into difficult earlier on during their chase, losing opener Saim Ayub for just 2 runs while star batter Tom Kohler-Cadmore fell for a duck. Azam kept his cool, scoring 56 runs from 42 balls and building partnerships with Mohammad Haris (20 off 16) and Hussain Talat (51 off 37) to see his team to the end.
“Not an ideal start for our home leg,” the Qalandars wrote on social media platform X. “Overwhelmed with the support of our home crowd, we will come back stronger!“


Qalandars skipper Shaheen Shah Afridi found his form with the ball, clocking in speeds of over 140 kilometers per hour frequently. The left-arm pacer was able to return figures of 2/22 from his four overs while speedster Haris Rauf finished with figures of 1/39 from 3.4 overs. 
Zalmi now have two wins from five matches in the HBL PSL 10 edition so far, beating the Multan Sultans by 120 runs earlier in the tournament to register the largest win in PSL history. They are now placed at number four on the PSL points table, tied with four points with Lahore Qalandars. 
Azam’s side will next take on Quetta Gladiators in the tournament on Apr. 27.


Sindh CM, Islamic Development Bank discuss housing, women empowerment projects

Sindh CM, Islamic Development Bank discuss housing, women empowerment projects
Updated 22 min 48 sec ago
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Sindh CM, Islamic Development Bank discuss housing, women empowerment projects

Sindh CM, Islamic Development Bank discuss housing, women empowerment projects
  • IsDB is financing $200 million for reconstruction of houses for those affected by catastrophic 2022 floods
  • Bank agrees to provide more support for water, sanitation, and hygiene projects in Sindh, says state media

ISLAMABAD: The chief minister of Pakistan’s southern Sindh province discussed housing for flood affectees and women empowerment projects with a high-level delegation of the Islamic Development Bank (IsDB), state-run media reported on Thursday.
The IsDB is financing $200 million for the reconstruction of houses for those affected by the catastrophic 2022 floods. Torrential rains and melting glaciers triggered flash floods across the country that killed over 1,700 people and caused damages worth $33 billion, according to Pakistan’s estimates.
Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah met an IsDB delegation led by its Regional Director, Dr. Walid Abdelwahab, to discuss the Sindh Flood Emergency Housing Reconstruction Project (SFEHRP) and the Sindh Integrated Health and Women Empowerment Project. Both projects involve collaboration with the World Bank, the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) said.
“The chief minister welcomed Dr. Abdelwahab and expressed gratitude for the IsDB’s support in rebuilding homes for the flood-affected population,” APP reported.
Shah said the Sindh government, in partnership with international collaborators and NGOs, is actively implementing Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) projects in various districts to improve public health, particularly in flood-affected and underserved communities.
“In response to the chief minister’s request, the IsDB agreed to provide additional support for the WASH project,” the report said.
Shah stressed that the SFEHRP and WASH projects have been designed to enable owner-driven, multi-hazard-resilient reconstruction of core housing units following the 2022 floods.
The Sindh Integrated Health and Women Empowerment Project is a $280 million initiative that includes financing of $50 million from the IsDB, $30 million from the Sindh government, and $200 million from foreign fund assistance (FFA).
Shah explained that the project aims to enhance the utilization and quality of reproductive, maternal, newborn, child, adolescent, and nutrition (RMNCAH+N) services for poor and vulnerable populations, particularly adolescents and women, in targeted areas of the province.
“The process to hire a third-party firm to oversee the skill development of 6,000 eligible women has begun in consultation with the IsDB,” the APP said.
As part of the program, 124 government dispensaries will be rehabilitated and upgraded, with diagnostic and preliminary design reports already completed, the state-run media said.


Tunisia mass conspiracy trial ‘marred by violations’: UN rights chief

Tunisia mass conspiracy trial ‘marred by violations’: UN rights chief
Updated 7 min 4 sec ago
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Tunisia mass conspiracy trial ‘marred by violations’: UN rights chief

Tunisia mass conspiracy trial ‘marred by violations’: UN rights chief
  • “The process was marred by violations of fair trial and due process rights, raising serious concerns about political motivations,” Turk said
  • Turk demanded all defendants be guaranteed their full rights

GENEVA: The United Nations human rights chief on Thursday condemned the conviction of around 40 Tunisian opposition figures, saying their right to a fair trial was violated.
“The process was marred by violations of fair trial and due process rights, raising serious concerns about political motivations,” the UN’s High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk said in a statement.
A Tunisian court on Saturday handed down sentences of between 13 and 66 years to defendants accused of “conspiracy against state security” and “belonging to a terrorist group.”
Among those sentenced were vocal critics of President Kais Saied, well-known opposition figures, lawyers and businesspeople, some of them already behind bars, while others have been living in exile.
Lawyers representing the accused and their relatives have denounced the trial as “fabricated” and “unfounded,” and pledged to appeal the rulings.
Turk on Thursday urged “Tunisia to refrain from using broad national security and counterterrorism legislation to silence dissent and curb civic space.”
The arrest of Ahmed Souab, 70, a defense lawyer in the trial charged with terrorism-related offenses over criticism he made of the court, raises concerns for lawyers’ ability to safely represent clients, Turk said.
“Charges must be dropped where there is no sufficient evidence of illegal acts committed,” he said.
Turk demanded all defendants be guaranteed their full rights to due process and a fair trial during the appeal process, while calling for an end to wider political persecution.
Since Saied launched a power grab in the summer of 2021 and assumed total control, rights advocates and opposition figures have decried a rollback of freedoms in the North African country where the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings began.