logo
UAE Releases Falcon Arabic AI Model To Outcompete Mideast Rivals

UAE Releases Falcon Arabic AI Model To Outcompete Mideast Rivals

Bloomberg21-05-2025

A research arm of the Abu Dhabi government has released a powerful new Arabic-language artificial intelligence model in a bid to preserve its technological lead over rivals in the Middle East.
The new system, called Falcon Arabic, was trained on a dataset spanning Modern Standard Arabic and regional dialects. The Technology Innovation Institute (TII), the Abu Dhabi group behind Falcon, claims the new offering matches the performance of models up to 10 times its size. TII also launched Falcon H1, a small model that it said outperforms similarly sized options from Meta Platforms Inc. and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

M&A News: OpenAI Acqui-Hires Crossing Minds amid Meta Poaching Spree
M&A News: OpenAI Acqui-Hires Crossing Minds amid Meta Poaching Spree

Business Insider

time2 hours ago

  • Business Insider

M&A News: OpenAI Acqui-Hires Crossing Minds amid Meta Poaching Spree

Microsoft-backed OpenAI (MSFT) has hired the entire team from Crossing Minds, which is a startup that has raised $13.5 million in funding (according to TechCrunch) to build AI recommendation tools for online shopping platforms. Crossing Minds announced the news on its website by stating that it was excited to join OpenAI and support its mission to make artificial general intelligence helpful for everyone. The team said it's eager to learn, contribute, and help shape the future of AI together with OpenAI. Confident Investing Starts Here: It is worth noting that this move is considered an 'acqui-hire.' This means that OpenAI mainly acquired the startup in order to bring in its talented team. The timing is notable, as OpenAI has recently seen some of its researchers leave for rival companies, especially Meta Platforms (META), which is aggressively pushing to become the leader in the AI market. Indeed, Meta has hired several researchers from OpenAI to work on its 'superintelligence' projects. According to The Wall Street Journal, Meta brought in Lucas Beyer, Alexander Kolesnikov, and Xiaohua Zhai, who helped start OpenAI's Zurich office last year. In a separate report, TechCrunch also revealed that Meta hired OpenAI researcher Trapit Bansal to focus on building better reasoning models. These moves highlight the increasing competition among tech giants to secure top AI talent. Is MSFT Stock a Buy? Turning to Wall Street, analysts have a Strong Buy consensus rating on MSFT stock based on 30 Buys and five Holds assigned in the last three months. Furthermore, the average MSFT price target of $521.41 per share implies 5.3% upside potential.

Meta Faces Billion-Dollar Threat: EU Warns of Daily Fines Starting June 2025
Meta Faces Billion-Dollar Threat: EU Warns of Daily Fines Starting June 2025

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Meta Faces Billion-Dollar Threat: EU Warns of Daily Fines Starting June 2025

Meta (NASDAQ:META) just got another regulatory migraine from Brussels. On Friday, the European Commission made it loud and clear: if Meta's latest tweaks to its pay-or-consent model don't pass muster under the Digital Markets Act (DMA), the company could be staring down daily fines of up to 5% of global revenuestarting June 27, 2025. This comes on the heels of a 200 million ($234 million) penalty in April, after regulators ruled that Meta's original model, which launched in November 2023, breached the EU's new gatekeeper law. While Meta did update the model to reduce personal data usage for ad targeting post-November 2024, the Commission says those adjustments might still fall short. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 6 Warning Sign with META. At the core of the standoff is Meta's two-option system for Facebook and Instagram users: either pay for an ad-free experience, or use the service for free and consent to being tracked for personalized ads. Meta says this model is both common and compliant. The Commission isn't convinced. A spokesperson said the current form of the model only reflects limited changes and hasn't yet met the compliance yardstick defined in its prior decision. In other words, regulators aren't buying ityet. The message? Fix it, or pay up. The EU isn't bluffing either. These potential daily fines would escalate pressure on Meta at a time when tech giants are already under fire across multiple jurisdictions. Meta, unsurprisingly, is pushing back. Hard. The company claims it's being singled out. A user choice between a subscription or a free, ad-supported service is standard across Europeexcept when it's Meta offering it, a spokesperson said. The company insists its model goes beyond what's required. The Commission quickly shot down the discrimination charge, reiterating that the DMA applies to any large digital player operating in the EUregardless of origin. Bottom line: Meta's showdown with Brussels isn't cooling off. Investors should watch this one closelybecause the cost of staying non-compliant could soon show up in Meta's margins. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Meta Faces Billion-Dollar Threat: EU Warns of Daily Fines Starting June 2025
Meta Faces Billion-Dollar Threat: EU Warns of Daily Fines Starting June 2025

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Meta Faces Billion-Dollar Threat: EU Warns of Daily Fines Starting June 2025

Meta (NASDAQ:META) just got another regulatory migraine from Brussels. On Friday, the European Commission made it loud and clear: if Meta's latest tweaks to its pay-or-consent model don't pass muster under the Digital Markets Act (DMA), the company could be staring down daily fines of up to 5% of global revenuestarting June 27, 2025. This comes on the heels of a 200 million ($234 million) penalty in April, after regulators ruled that Meta's original model, which launched in November 2023, breached the EU's new gatekeeper law. While Meta did update the model to reduce personal data usage for ad targeting post-November 2024, the Commission says those adjustments might still fall short. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 6 Warning Sign with META. At the core of the standoff is Meta's two-option system for Facebook and Instagram users: either pay for an ad-free experience, or use the service for free and consent to being tracked for personalized ads. Meta says this model is both common and compliant. The Commission isn't convinced. A spokesperson said the current form of the model only reflects limited changes and hasn't yet met the compliance yardstick defined in its prior decision. In other words, regulators aren't buying ityet. The message? Fix it, or pay up. The EU isn't bluffing either. These potential daily fines would escalate pressure on Meta at a time when tech giants are already under fire across multiple jurisdictions. Meta, unsurprisingly, is pushing back. Hard. The company claims it's being singled out. A user choice between a subscription or a free, ad-supported service is standard across Europeexcept when it's Meta offering it, a spokesperson said. The company insists its model goes beyond what's required. The Commission quickly shot down the discrimination charge, reiterating that the DMA applies to any large digital player operating in the EUregardless of origin. Bottom line: Meta's showdown with Brussels isn't cooling off. Investors should watch this one closelybecause the cost of staying non-compliant could soon show up in Meta's margins. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Sign in to access your portfolio

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store