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Dubai announces $1M global AI film award with Google

Dubai announces $1M global AI film award with Google
Held under the theme “Content for Good,” the 1 Billion Followers Summit brings together top content creators, leading tech firms, industry experts, and entrepreneurs to foster global networking. (Supplied)
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Updated 13 min 6 sec ago

Dubai announces $1M global AI film award with Google

Dubai announces $1M global AI film award with Google
  • Contest aims to highlight the potential of AI in filmmaking, with creativity, realism, and storytelling among the core judging criteria
  • Entries will be evaluated on the storytelling quality, creative use of AI, technical execution, and the film’s ability to deliver a humanitarian message

DUBAI: Dubai has announced a $1 million award for short films generated entirely by artificial intelligence in collaboration with Google’s Gemini as part of the 1 Billion Followers Summit.

The winning short film will take home the grand prize, while the top 10 competing films will be screened during the fourth edition of the summit, set to take place in Dubai from Jan. 9 to 11, 2026.

In a statement on Wednesday, the UAE Media Government Office, which organizes the event, said the contest aims to highlight the potential of AI in filmmaking, with creativity, realism, and storytelling among the core judging criteria.

Submitted entries must be fully generated using AI tools, and will be evaluated on the quality of storytelling, creative use of AI, technical execution, and the film’s ability to deliver a humanitarian message.

Further details about the competition will be announced next month, the office added.

“The Summit aims to support and encourage the production of purposeful films using diverse AI tools, raise awareness of the humanitarian messages such films should convey, and enhance creative capabilities, aesthetic vision, and advanced skills in integrating AI into film production,” the office said in a statement.

Organizers added that competition will focus on short films, given their powerful ability to deliver impactful messages to audiences.

UAE Minister of Cabinet Affairs Mohammad Al-Gergawi said the summit is part of the country’s efforts to help drive the “content economy.”

He added: “The content economy is an economic power with limitless horizons. Today, the UAE is not only keeping pace with its developments but is also leading and charting new directions within that economy.”

As part of this, the UAE also allocated $13.6 million to fund creative projects by content creators. It will provide grants for projects with global cultural and economic impact and back joint ventures to establish companies led by content creators or creative tech developers. 

An additional $13.6 million has been dedicated to help startups and content creators pitch their ideas to top investors and companies, who will sponsor and invest in the most promising proposals.

Held under the theme “Content for Good,” the summit brings together top content creators, leading tech firms, industry experts, and entrepreneurs to foster global networking and empower creators with a supportive environment to scale and thrive internationally. The upcoming edition will feature 400 speakers with a combined following of over 3 billion followers.


US diplomat apologizes for using the word ‘animalistic’ in reference to Lebanese reporters

US diplomat apologizes for using the word ‘animalistic’ in reference to Lebanese reporters
Updated 55 min ago

US diplomat apologizes for using the word ‘animalistic’ in reference to Lebanese reporters

US diplomat apologizes for using the word ‘animalistic’ in reference to Lebanese reporters
  • Barrack said he did not intend to use the word “in a derogatory manner” but that his comments had been “inappropriate”
  • At the start of a press conference at the presidential palace, journalists shouted at Barrack to move to the podium

BEIRUT: A US diplomat apologized Thursday for using the word “animalistic” while calling for a gaggle of reporters to quiet down during a press conference in Lebanon earlier this week.

Tom Barrack, who is the US ambassador to Turkiye and envoy to Syria and has also been on a temporary assignment in Lebanon, said he didn’t intend to use the word “in a derogatory manner” but that his comments had been “inappropriate.”

Barrack visited Beirut along with a delegation of US officials on Tuesday to discuss efforts by the Lebanese government to disarm the Hezbollah militant group and implementation of the ceasefire agreement that ended the latest war between Israel and the Hezbollah in November.

At the start of a press conference at the presidential palace, journalists shouted at Barrack to move to the podium after he started speaking from another spot in the room. After taking the podium Barrack told the crowd of journalists to “act civilized, act kind, act tolerant.” He threatened to end the conference early otherwise.

“The moment that this starts becoming chaotic, like animalistic, we’re gone,” said Barrack.

The comment sparked an outcry, with the Lebanese press syndicate calling for an apology and calling for a boycott of Barrack’s visits if none was issued. The Presidential Palace also issued a statement expressing regret for the comments made by “one of our guests” and thanking journalists for their “hard work.”

In an interview with Mario Nawfal, a media personality on the X platform, an excerpt of which was published Thursday, Barrack said, “Animalistic was a word that I didn’t use in a derogatory manner, I was just saying ‘can we calm down, can we find some tolerance and kindness, let’s be civilized.’ But it was inappropriate to do when the media was just doing their job.”

He added, “I should have been more generous with my time and more tolerant myself.”

Barrack’s visit came after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israeli forces could begin withdrawing from territory they hold in southern Lebanon after the Lebanese government’s decided to disarm Hezbollah. When, how and in what order the Hezbollah disarmament in Israeli withdrawal would take place remain in dispute.

The Israeli army on Thursday launched airstrikes in southern Lebanon that it said were targeting “terrorist infrastructure and a rocket platform” belonging to Hezbollah.


French sports journalist ‘isolated’ in Algeria prison

French sports journalist ‘isolated’ in Algeria prison
Updated 28 August 2025

French sports journalist ‘isolated’ in Algeria prison

French sports journalist ‘isolated’ in Algeria prison
  • Christophe Gleizes, who is being held in the city of Tizi Ouzou, is being detained against the background of escalating political tensions between Paris and its former north African colony
  • Gleizes, who specializes in African football and contributes to the top selling So Foot magazine, was convicted in Algeria of “glorifying terrorism,” a charge his parents said was “totally absurd”

PARIS: A prominent French sports journalist sentenced to seven years in prison in Algeria at the end of June is in “fighting mood” but feels “isolated,” his parents told AFP after visiting their son earlier this month.
Christophe Gleizes, who is being held in the city of Tizi Ouzou, is being detained against the background of escalating political tensions between Paris and its former north African colony.
“Even if his morale is high, even if he is in fighting mood, he feels completely cut off from the world, isolated,” his mother, Sylvie Godard, told AFP in an interview at the Paris offices of media rights campaigners Reporters Without Borders (RSF).
Along with his stepfather, Francis, she is calling for the case of her son, the only French journalist currently detained abroad, not to be used to “settle political scores” between France and Algeria.
Gleizes, who specializes in African football and contributes to the top-selling So Foot magazine, was convicted in Algeria of “glorifying terrorism,” a charge his parents said was “totally absurd.”
An appeal has been filed and is expected to be heard in the autumn.
Algeria has also jailed French-Algerian writer Boualem Sansal, sentenced to five years for damaging national unity.
As well as these two cases, there have been tit-for-tat expulsions of consular staff.
President Emmanuel Macron angered Algiers in July 2024 when he backed Moroccan sovereignty over the disputed Western Sahara, where Algeria supports the pro-independence Polisario Front.
Francis Godard described his stepson as a “kind of collateral victim of the bad relations between France and Algeria at the moment.”
“We don’t want Christophe’s case to be used to resolve political issues with which Christophe has nothing to do,” said Sylvie Godard.


UN urges respect for journalists after US envoy’s remarks in Lebanon

UN urges respect for journalists after US envoy’s remarks in Lebanon
Updated 27 August 2025

UN urges respect for journalists after US envoy’s remarks in Lebanon

UN urges respect for journalists after US envoy’s remarks in Lebanon

DUBAI: The UN spokesperson on Wednesday called for journalists to be respected a day after controversy erupted in Lebanon over a US diplomat’s remarks.

US Special Envoy Tom Barrack, in a press conference on Tuesday at Baabda Palace south of Beirut, described Lebanese journalists’ behavior as “animalistic.”

He said: “The moment this starts becoming chaotic, like animalistic, we’re gone.”

Responding to the controversy, UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said: “I treat all the journalists I deal with, with the utmost respect, and everyone should.”

At the palace press conference, Barrack called on the gathering journalists to “act civilized, act kind, act tolerant, because this is the problem with what’s happening in the region.”

He asked them if they thought it was “economically beneficial” for him and deputy envoy Morgan Ortagus to be there “putting up with this insanity.”

His comments sparked outrage, with journalists and media unions describing them as “humiliating” and “racist.”

Lebanon’s presidency issued a statement that said it “deeply regrets the remark made inadvertently from its podium by one of its guests,” without naming Barrack.

The Syndicate of Lebanese Press Editors demanded an apology from the US envoy, calling his remarks “absolutely unacceptable and highly reprehensible.” It also said it would urge media outlets to boycott his remaining visits to Lebanon if an apology was not issued.

On Wednesday, Barrack canceled a planned visit to the southern town of Khiam and the city of Tyre, according to Lebanon’s National News Agency.


US far-right candidate sparks outrage after burning Quran, urging ‘Stop Islam’ in inflammatory ad campaign

US far-right candidate sparks outrage after burning Quran, urging ‘Stop Islam’ in inflammatory ad campaign
Updated 27 August 2025

US far-right candidate sparks outrage after burning Quran, urging ‘Stop Islam’ in inflammatory ad campaign

US far-right candidate sparks outrage after burning Quran, urging ‘Stop Islam’ in inflammatory ad campaign
  • Self-styled MAGA influencer Valentina Gomez releases campaign video in which she sets fire to the Quran with a flamethrower
  • Critics denounce the act as ‘incitement’ and ‘cheap publicity’

LONDON: A far-right Republican congressional candidate in Texas has caused widespread outrage after releasing a campaign video in which she set fire to the Quran and vowed to “stop Islam once and for all.”

Valentina Gomez, a self-styled MAGA influencer running for Texas’s 31st District seat in 2026, appears in the video warning: “Your daughters will be raped, and your sons beheaded, unless we stop Islam once and for all.”

Wearing camouflage pants and a campaign T-shirt emblazoned with the silhouette of a rifle, she uses a flamethrower to burn a copy of Islam’s holy book.

“America is a Christian nation, so those terrorist Muslims can f*** off to any of the 57 Muslim nations. There is only one true God, and that is the God of Israel,” she proclaims, with a song by rapper Kanye West playing in the background.

The video concludes with Gomez saying she is “powered by Jesus Christ,” alongside a campaign logo featuring a bullet as the “i” in “Valentina.”

According to several reports, Gomez has a history of orchestrating violent stunts and using divisive rhetoric aimed at Muslims, Black people, and immigrants to gain attention for her political career, which has so far featured several failed campaigns.

In a previous video, she staged a mock execution of immigrant dummies and called for the “public execution” of undocumented immigrants accused of violent crimes.

Her latest ad — which has since been removed by X for breaching its policy on hateful conduct — was widely condemned by advocacy groups and social media users, who described it as “incitement” and “cheap publicity.”

“This isn’t politics. It’s incitement,” wrote podcaster Brian Allen on X. “When the mosques start burning, remember: this was the match and the Texas GOP handed her the lighter.”

Another user said the MAGA influencer “pathetically disrespects Islam over and over again as a cheap publicity stunt for clout.”

Her Quran-burning ad was also denounced on Tuesday by the Anti-Defamation League, which said the campaign “is fueled by hate and anti-Muslim bigotry. Burning a sacred religious text like the Quran can incite violence and put people in danger. This needs to be condemned by all good people of conscience.”

Gomez is herself an immigrant, having been born in Colombia. Her previous provocations, including disrupting a civic event at the Texas Capitol, were similarly condemned.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro weighed in on social media, saying: “She is not just an American fascist. She is Colombian. And being a migrant, what she wants is to unleash hatred against migrants. Most Americans are killed by Americans.”


7 arrested after pro-Palestinian activists occupy Microsoft president’s office

7 arrested after pro-Palestinian activists occupy Microsoft president’s office
Updated 28 August 2025

7 arrested after pro-Palestinian activists occupy Microsoft president’s office

7 arrested after pro-Palestinian activists occupy Microsoft president’s office
  • Simultaneously, police dispersed a one-hour rally held outside the building by around 30 demonstrators
  • Microsoft President Brad Smith said the company welcomes discussions, not vandalism and violence

WASHINGTON: Redmond police arrested seven protesters on Tuesday after a sit-in at the office of Microsoft President Brad Smith in Washington.

The demonstration was part of an escalating campaign by the group “No Azure for Apartheid” — which includes current and former Microsoft employees — over what it describes as the company’s complicity in alleged Israeli war crimes through its Azure cloud services.

During the sit-in, which included demands that the tech giant sever ties with the Israeli military, demonstrators entered Building 34 and occupied Smith’s office.

They hung a notice that read “The People’s Court Summons Bradford Lee Smith on Charges of Crimes Against Humanity” and chanted slogans such as “Brad Smith, you can’t hide, you’re supporting genocide!” and “Free Palestine.” They also hung a banner by the office window that said “Mai Ubeid Building,” in honor of a Palestinian software engineer killed in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza.

On Tuesday, Microsoft’s Smith confirmed two of the protesters were current employees who would face disciplinary action. No further details were disclosed as internal investigations are ongoing.

Abdo Mohamed, a “No Azure for Apartheid” organizer and former tech worker fired by Microsoft, told Arab News three of the detainees were former company employees.

A statement from Redmond police said seven individuals were arrested on charges of trespassing, resisting arrest and obstruction after they refused to leave the premises. Investigations are ongoing.

 

 

Simultaneously, police dispersed a one-hour rally held outside the building by around 30 demonstrators, including Microsoft employees and local community members.

Smith said the company was committed to listening to employees’ concerns and upholding the right to freedom of expression “that everyone in this country enjoys, as long as they do it lawfully.”

He said protesters “stormed the building, occupied an office, locked people out of the office, planted listening devices even in crude form and the form of cell phones, hidden under couches and behind books” and refused to leave when asked.

“That’s not okay,” he added, reaffirming Microsoft’s commitment to maintaining workplace safety and security while keeping communication channels with employees open. He said the company would be updating its security protocols to prevent similar breaches in the future.

The sit-ins come less than a week after 18 protesters were arrested for pouring red paint over a Microsoft sign and blocking a pedestrian bridge at the company’s East Campus in Redmond. The protests followed an investigation by The Guardian, in collaboration with +972 Magazine and Local Call, which revealed the Israeli military was using Microsoft’s Azure cloud services to store recordings of up to “a million calls an hour” made by Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza.

Microsoft launched an internal investigation into the allegations and pledged to make the findings public. The company said it primarily worked with the Israeli government to defend its cyberspace against external threats but acknowledged it had no visibility into how its services are used once deployed on customer-owned servers and devices.

“There are many things that we cannot do to change the world, but we will do what we can and what we should,” Smith told reporters. “That starts with ensuring that our human rights principles and contractual terms of service are upheld everywhere by all of our customers around the world.”

According to a Bloomberg report published on Tuesday, the growing protests prompted Microsoft to ask the FBI for help in tracking and stopping pro-Palestinian protests from disrupting major events. The move followed a high-profile incident during Microsoft’s 50th anniversary celebrations in April, when two employees interrupted a panel discussion featuring CEO Satya Nadella, former CEO Steve Ballmer and co-founder Bill Gates. It was reported their employment was later terminated.

Smith said the company did not retaliate against employees who raised concerns or submitted petitions through official internal channels.

“People can go protest in public spaces, whether it’s at the Redmond Transit Center or in a kayak on a public lake outside my house,” Smith said, referring to Sunday’s demonstrations in Lake Washington near his residence and that of Nadella.

“We don’t retaliate for that, but if people engage in vandalism, violate repeatedly our email policies, storm buildings and occupy offices; if they create threats to others, that’s different.”