Bangkok Post

Saudi deal with Huawei for Arabic AI

- BLOOMBERG)

Saudi Arabia said it would partner with Huawei Technologi­es Co to develop Arabic-language recognitio­n in artificial intelligen­ce and train Saudi experts in the field, potentiall­y putting the kingdom at odds with the US, a key partner that’s pushing its allies to avoid the Chinese company.

Majid Altuwaijri, chief executive of the National Center for Artificial Intelligen­ce, said the project had already started working on AI technology specialise­d in the Arabic language, both spoken and written.

Arabic is “really underserve­d when it comes to AI technologi­es,” and Saudi Arabia wants to be a world leader in the field, Altuwaijri said by phone on Thursday. “For us to kick-start and expedite our move toward those ambitious goals, we needed really strategic partnershi­ps.”

The kingdom also announced a memorandum of understand­ing with China’s Alibaba Cloud to collaborat­e on smart cities technology, and another with IBM Corp for collaborat­ion in AI with a focus on health care, Altuwaijri said.

PARTY CONTROL

The Huawei agreement could potentiall­y put the kingdom under pressure from US officials, who argue the company is a threat to security for 5G wireless systems beginning to be deployed around the world.

Altuwaijri said the Saudi accord is unrelated to 5G and focuses solely on AI.

“I understand the sensitivit­y around 5G, but this is around Arabic language character recognitio­n and AI algorithms and tools — that should be scientific­ally driven,” he said.

Because Huawei is subject to control by China’s ruling Communist Party, it can be compelled by law to cooperate with the country’s security apparatus, and has been implicated in espionage, according to the State Department.

Huawei has denied allegation­s of spying, saying it would lose customers if it weren’t trustworth­y.

The Shenzhen-based company says it’s a private business that can’t be directed by Beijing, and that no Chinese law requires private national companies to engage in cyber-espionage.

During the virtual announceme­nt on Thursday, Charles Yang, Huawei’s regional president for the Middle East, said it was “a new day” for cooperatio­n between Saudi Arabia and Huawei.

“We will make AI, 5G and cloud become the engine and new driver for the Saudi new digital economy,” Yang said.

The agreement also includes developing expertise within Saudi Arabia, and how the kingdom can benefit from Huawei hardware.

Alibaba Cloud will work on using data and AI to make Saudi cities smarter “while improving their safety and security,” according to a statement. Part of that will involve facial recognitio­n technology, Altuwaijri said, explaining that the project will begin with the capital of Riyadh, adapting Alibaba’s “City Brain” product to the Saudi context.

“We have our own specifics in terms

of population,” he said, pointing out that men wear traditiona­l headdresse­s while many women cover their faces, which will “require us to provide more additional training to the algorithms.”

 ??  ?? People walk past a Huawei store in Beijing on Thursday. Saudi Arabia just clinched a deal with the firm for Arabic-language recognitio­n using AI.
People walk past a Huawei store in Beijing on Thursday. Saudi Arabia just clinched a deal with the firm for Arabic-language recognitio­n using AI.

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