
Culture Summit Abu Dhabi 2025 opens with call to place humanity at the heart of AI
Culture's importance in an AI-driven society was a key theme on the opening day of this year's Culture Summit Abu Dhabi. Running at Manarat Al Saadiyat until Tuesday, the seventh year of the event brings together thought leaders from government, technology, the arts, heritage, film and music for discussions on the future of their sectors. Under the theme Culture for Humanity and Beyond, Mohamed Khalifa Al Mubarak, chairman of the Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi (DCT Abu Dhabi), set the tone by highlighting the expected benefits and challenges facing the global creative industries in the wake of the AI revolution. 'Together we can ensure that AI enhances creativity and empowers humanity, not displaces it," he said as part of his opening remarks. "Our collective ambition is simple – to chart a path towards a more sustainable and human-centred global society, with culture as its compass." AI ethicist Mo Gawdat expanded on that point with a stark yet hopeful address on the future of AI in modern societies. The former Google X executive said technology has already achieved autonomy in decision-making. "There is a very big difference between the way we coded computers when I was a young man, where I solved the problem in my head and then told the computer, through data, what to do," he said. "The computers, being so fast and scalable, appeared intelligent, but the one that had the intelligence was the developer. That ended basically at the turn of the 21st century. From the early 2000s onwards, we started to let computers make their own decisions. As they did that, they became autonomous and I think that's a very interesting keyword." Gawdat described the situation as a pivotal moment for human civilisation – a fork in the road when it comes to deciding how to harness AI for society's future. He advocates a human-centred approach to the technology, akin to raising 'a child with special powers'. "We have a responsibility and a duty – every single one of us. That duty is to raise AI. I call it raising Superman. Think of the analogy: Superman is this super alien with superpowers who comes to Earth. He can stop speeding bullets, fly, carry anything, break anything – but he's adopted by parents who teach him to protect and serve, so he becomes Superman. If that same alien had been adopted by parents who told him to steal, kill and lock the enemy away, he would have become a supervillain," he said. "That's why we don't make decisions based on our intelligence – and neither does AI, by the way. We make decisions based on our morality, as informed by our intelligence.' AI's disruption and promise are also forcing artists, curators and programmers to re-evaluate how to use the technology in their respective practices. In a session moderated by The National's Editor-in-chief Mina Al-Oraibi, the creative director behind Broadway blockbuster Hamilton, David Korins, described AI's arrival into the arts and cultural space as part of an old story. "Museums used to be filled with didactic panels all night. Then in the 1920s and 1930s, when televisions were invented and monetised, screens started showing up to make those panels more dynamic," he said. "Then came projections, then generated projections and now we are walking through immersive worlds. Technology adds layers to storytelling but it should never take over the story itself." Korins urged contemporaries to "lean in" to the opportunities AI affords rather than remain suspicious. "Disruption has caused an extraordinary amount of raw, authentic growth," he said. "Some of the greatest pieces of literature and music have been created in the shadow of, or directly because of, disruption. Fear, on the other hand, narrows people's vision. It makes people not feel heard, not feel seen." Jewellery designer Lama Hourani is circumspect about how AI could transform her craft – choosing to use the technology for efficiency rather than creativity. "AI today isn't my best friend. I use it occasionally to save time,' she said. 'But I know I need to open my mind – not only for myself, but for my children, who will grow up with a massive technological landscape around them. I need to constantly find a common ground and a common language with future generations."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Etihad
2 hours ago
- Al Etihad
Meta creating new AI lab to pursue ‘superintelligence'
10 June 2025 23:12 SAN FRANCISCO (THE NEW YORK TIMES NEW SERVICE)Meta is preparing to unveil a new artificial intelligence research lab dedicated to pursuing "superintelligence,' a hypothetical AI system that exceeds the powers of the human brain, as the tech giant jockeys to stay competitive in the technology has tapped Alexandr Wang, 28, the founder and CEO of AI startup Scale AI, to join the new lab, sources said, and has been in talks to invest billions of dollars in his company as part of a deal that would also bring other Scale AI employees to the has reportedly offered seven- to nine-figure compensation packages to dozens of researchers from leading AI companies such as OpenAI and Google, with some agreeing to join, sources new lab is part of a larger reorganisation of Meta's AI Zuckerberg, Meta's CEO, has invested billions of dollars into turning his company, which owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, into an AI OpenAI released the ChatGPT chatbot in 2022, the tech industry has raced to build increasingly powerful AI. Zuckerberg has pushed his company to incorporate AI across its products, including in its smart glasses and a recently released app, Meta in the race is crucial for Meta, Google, Amazon and Microsoft, with the technology likely to be the future for the industry. The giants have pumped money into startups and their own AI has invested more than $13 billion in OpenAI, while Amazon has plowed $8 billion into AI startup behemoths have also spent billions to hire employees from high-profile startups and license their technology. Last year, Google agreed to pay $3 billion to license technology and hire technologists and executives from a startup that builds chatbots for personal February, Zuckerberg, 41, called AI "potentially one of the most important innovations in history.' He added, "This year is going to set the course for the future.'Meta and Scale AI declined to comment. Bloomberg earlier reported that Wang was joining the new Meta is regarded by leading researchers to be a futuristic goal of AI Google and others have said their immediate aim is to build "artificial general intelligence,' or AGI, shorthand for a machine that can do anything the human brain can do, which is an ambition with no clear path to success. Superintelligence, if it can be developed, would go beyond AGI in its has invested in AI for more than a decade. Zuckerberg created the company's first dedicated AI lab in 2013, after losing out to Google in trying to acquire a seminal startup called DeepMind. DeepMind is now the core of Google's AI then, Meta's research efforts have been overseen by its chief AI scientist, Yann LeCun, who is also a New York University professor. LeCun is a pioneer of neural networks, the technology that drives ChatGPT and similar ChatGPT caused an explosion of interest in AI, Meta deployed additional resources to pursue the technology. One of Meta's strategies for gaining ground in AI has been to "open source' its software, essentially giving away its AI code freely so that developers and others adopt its tools. The company released an open-source AI model, Llama, and its chatbot product, Meta AI was incorporated across Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, as well as in its Ray-Ban smart glasses. In May, Zuckerberg said more than 1 billion people used Meta AI every month.


Al Etihad
2 hours ago
- Al Etihad
France's Mistral unveils its first 'reasoning' AI model
10 June 2025 23:31 PARIS (AFP)French artificial intelligence startup Mistral on Tuesday announced a so-called "reasoning" model it said was capable of working through complex problems, following in the footsteps of top US immediately on the company's platforms as well as the AI platform Hugging Face, the Magistral "is designed to think things through -- in ways familiar to us," Mistral said in a blog AI was designed for "general purpose use requiring longer thought processing and better accuracy" than its previous generations of large language models (LLMs), the company other "reasoning" models, Magistral displays a so-called "chain of thought" that purports to show how the system is approaching a problem given to it in natural means users in fields like law, finance, healthcare and government would receive "traceable reasoning that meets compliance requirements" as "every conclusion can be traced back through its logical steps", Mistral company's claim gestures towards the challenge of so-called "interpretability" -- working out how AI systems arrive at a given they are "trained" on gigantic corpuses of data rather than directly programmed by humans, much behaviour by AI systems remains impenetrable even to their also vaunted improved performance in software coding and creative writing by "reasoning" models include OpenAI's o3, some versions of Google's Gemini and Anthropic's Claude, or Chinese challenger DeepSeek's idea that AIs can "reason" was called into question this week by Apple -- the tech giant that has struggled to match achievements by leaders in the field. Several Apple researchers published a paper called "The Illusion of Thinking" that claimed to find "fundamental limitations in current models" which "fail to develop generalizable reasoning capabilities beyond certain complexity thresholds".


Khaleej Times
4 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
ADGM FSRA implements amendments to its digital asset regulatory framework
The Financial Services Authority (FSRA) of Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM) today announced the implementation of amendments to its regulatory framework for digital assets, with immediate effect. The implementation of these amendments follows extensive industry engagement and feedback received on Consultation Paper No. 11 of 2024. The focus of the implemented amendments is on revisions to the process whereby Virtual Assets (VAs) are accepted for use as Accepted Virtual Assets (AVAs) in ADGM, alongside appropriate capital requirements and fees for Authorised Persons conducting Regulated Activities in relation to VAs (VA Firms). The amendments also introduce a specific product intervention power in relation to VAs as well as enshrining rules that confirm the existing approach to the prohibition of using privacy tokens and algorithmic stablecoins within ADGM. Finally, the amendments expand the scope of investments in which Venture Capital Funds may invest. The FSRA has updated the Guidance – Regulation of Virtual Asset Activities in ADGM to reflect the implemented measures and to provide further guidance to VA Firms in relation to applying the AVA assessment criteria. Emmanuel Givanakis, Chief Executive Officer of ADGM's FSRA said: 'The implementation of these changes marks a significant milestone in the evolution of the FSRA's framework for digital asset regulation. Through extensive consultation with industry stakeholders, we have further enhanced our framework to provide the regulatory certainty that industry participants need, while addressing the evolving risks of the digital asset ecosystem. We believe this further positions ADGM as a premier jurisdiction for digital asset-related activities and shows our commitment to fostering responsible innovation in financial services." The FSRA acknowledges the constructive and well received feedback received in response to the Consultation Paper, including in relation to the discussion points raised, and for the amended legislation see here.