
Nour Naim
Articles
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Mar 20, 2024 |
arabcenterdc.org | Nour Naim
Palestinians’ experience with displacement, asylum, and dispossession since the Nakba in 1948 sparked what can be described as an educational revolution, leading them to become one of the world’s most skilled and educated societies. At the same time, the education sector in Palestine generally, and in Gaza in particular, has suffered from continuous targeting by the Israeli occupation. Israel’s ongoing genocidal war in Gaza has had massive human and infrastructure costs.
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Jul 28, 2023 |
genderit.org | Nour Naim |Rawand Issa
Artificial intelligence (AI) technologies and tools are being adopted at an unprecedented pace throughout all sectors. But in the absence of ethical codes and regulatory frameworks that can guide the development and use of these technologies, this development comes with ethical, legal, and human rights concerns for users, especially vulnerable groups of society who face different types of biases based on gender, age, ethnic origin, religion, and political and sexual orientation.
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Jul 28, 2023 |
genderit.org | Afef Abrougui |Nour Naim |Raya Sharbain |Yara El Murr
This edition of GenderIT came together at a time of daily breaking news around artificial intelligence (AI) and the serious risks of bias, misalignment, governance challenges, job loss, and human extinction. We are not the first generation to panic about the social implications and governance of new tech.
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Apr 12, 2023 |
politicstoday.org | Nour Naim |Dilara Aslan Özer |Talha Kose |Dilek Kütük
The Chinese approach to AIArtificial intelligence is a broad field that has multiple sectors and it is hard to make a statement about one country dominating it. For example, China has excelled in facial recognition technology more than other countries, using it as a form of control and local surveillance. The ethics question here is whether China amassing big data to feed AI algorithms comes at the cost of the privacy of Chinese citizens.
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Apr 10, 2023 |
politicstoday.org | Usman Masood |Dilek Kütük |Cengiz Algan |Nour Naim
The establishment—both local and global—had had enough. A vote of no confidence was called, and the PTI’s coalition partners spontaneously pulled back their support en bloc, amidst cries of foul play from Khan. The two major rival parties—the PMLN and the PPP—which had been each other’s fierce opponents for the last three decades, united under the banner of the new Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM), attracting small parties that had deserted Khan in favor of the new coalition.
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