Snap’s annual summit features brand activations, photo-ops and new announcements

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Updated 20 April 2023
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Snap’s annual summit features brand activations, photo-ops and new announcements

  • Partnerships with brands like Nike, Coca-Cola were on display for guests to try out the company’s new AR experiences

SANTA MONICA: Snap announced a host of new features revealing the company’s increased focus on artificial intelligence, augmented reality and creators at the fifth annual Snap Partner Summit held on Wednesday in Santa Monica, Los Angeles.

The company launched new story formats, more monetization options for creators, enhancements to its shopping tools, and updates to its My AI chatbot.

There are over 300,000 lens creators around the world that have published more than 3 million lenses resulting in over 5 trillion views, Sophia Dominguez, director of the AR Platform Partnerships & Ecosystem at Snap, told Arab News.

She added: “Two out of three Snapchatters consume AR lenses every single day, so that’s really amazing and in the MENA, 85 percent of people use lenses every single day.”

Due to the popularity of Snapchat in the Middle East, Snap is launching its Creator Studio in Riyadh later this year. The first Snap Creator Studio was launched in Paris, France, making Riyadh the second.

“Both of those studios are to help bring people together and educate them,” Dominguez said.

The Paris studio is more focused on AR, while the one in Riyadh will concentrate on creators. The latter will help creators learn and understand how to create engaging stories, succeed in the revenue share program and grow their subscribers, among other things, she said.

“Just the amount of sheer talent that has been coming out of the region has been incredible, so I’m really excited about the growth of the ecosystem there,” Dominguez added.

As competition grows from the likes of TikTok, Snap is looking for ways to incentivize creators to use Snapchat more.

The company has announced updates to its revenue-sharing program. Now, creators who have at least 50,000 followers and 25 million monthly Snap views are eligible to enroll in the program, as long as they post at least 10 stories per month.

Several creators took to the stage during the day to share their experiences using Snapchat.

Creators JoJo Siwa and David Dobrik both said that the platform allows them to be genuine and authentic, which makes it easier to share content on Snapchat compared to other platforms that require more planning and editing before posting.

Shopping is clearly a big focus for Snap with several AR-powered shopping activations drawing crowds throughout the day.

The company has already partnered with several brands and these partnerships were evident through a virtual try-on booth (and free sneakers) for Nike; a gesture-based vending machine for Coca-Cola; and a clothing try-on mirror for Dior.

Samsung, the NFL, and Microsoft are some of the other brands that will be integrating Snap’s AR tech into their products and services. Its AR Enterprise Services offering Shopping Suite brings together different shopping features, including enterprise management and hands-on integration services.

This includes AR Mirrors, which one could demo at the event, that allow consumers to see themselves try on different products in real time in a retail space.

Early users include eyewear company Goodr, which found that its customers were 81 percent more likely to add products to their cart after using AR Try-On, said Jill Popelka, head of ARES.

AI was a hot topic at the summit, with Snap’s My AI chatbot taking center stage. The ChatGPT-powered chatbot has been receiving nearly 2 million chat messages per day, which is expected to increase as it is now available globally.

With further enhancements underway, My AI will be able to snap back users soon. For example, if a user sends a picture of tomatoes, it will reply with suggestions for tomato-based recipes.

In a blog post published earlier this month, Snap said that it had learned about “some of the potential for misuse” of My AI mainly because users “trick the chatbot into providing responses that do not conform to our guidelines.”

Snap CEO Evan Spiegel said at the summit that 99.5 percent of responses from My AI were in line with the community guidelines, with work underway to address the remaining 0.5 percent. It was, however, unclear when that work would be complete.

The summit closed with a chat between Spiegel and journalist Kara Swisher. When Swisher asked about the potential TikTok ban in the US, Spiegel joked: “We’d love that.”

On a more serious note, he acknowledged that a ban could set a dangerous precedent for tech companies, saying: “It is important for us to be thoughtful and really develop a regulatory framework to deal with security concerns, especially around technology.”

When asked about competitors like Instagram and TikTok, he said: “Snapchat, at its core, is a messaging application, but Snap, as a company, is a technology company.”

He added: “Over the years Snapchat has really evolved. It did start out just as an app for sending photos back and forth and now it’s so much more. And I think that’s why we think of ourselves more broadly as a technology company.”

FAST FACTS

Saudi Arabia

• Snapchat reaches more than 90 percent of 13 to 34-year-olds.
• Snapchat has a monthly reach of 20 million.
• Snapchatters opened the app over 45 times every day in 2022.
• By 2025, almost all the Gen Z and millennial population in KSA are anticipated to be frequent AR users.

MENA

• Over 85 percent of daily users interact with lenses every day.
• Snapchat reaches 1 in 3 of 18 to 34-year-olds in the UAE.
• Interacting with products that have AR experiences leads to a 94 percent higher conversion rate in the UAE and KSA.
• An average of 80 percent of consumers in both the KSA and the UAE expect and desire to use AR as a practical “tool” in their everyday lives.

Global

• There are over 750 million monthly active users.
• Snapchat sees over 6 billion AR Lens plays every day on average.
• Over 300,000 AR creators and developers have built more than 3 million AR lenses.
• 250 million people already engage with AR on Snapchat every day.
• By 2025, over 75 percent of all smartphone users will use AR daily.


Tunisia remands journalists arrested over critical comments

Updated 15 May 2024
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Tunisia remands journalists arrested over critical comments

  • Broadcaster Borhen Bssais and political commentator Mourad Zeghidi were arrested Saturday under a decree criminalizing ‘spreading false information’ among other charges, spokesman Mohamed Zitouna said

TUNIS: A Tunisian court on Wednesday ordered two journalists to be held in remand until the completion of investigations into critical comments, a court spokesman said.

Broadcaster Borhen Bssais and political commentator Mourad Zeghidi were arrested Saturday under a decree criminalizing “spreading false information” among other charges, spokesman Mohamed Zitouna said.

Zeghidi is being investigated over social media statements last February and a post in support of Mohamed Boughalleb, another journalist and critic of President Kais Saied who has been detained separately.

Bssais was arrested on accusations of “having harmed President Kais Saied through radio broadcasts and statements” online between 2019 and 2022, according to his lawyer Nizar Ayed.

Their trial is set to begin on May 22, according to their lawyers.

Both media figures are prosecuted under a law ratified by Saied in September 2022.

The law punishes people with up to five years in prison for the use of social media to “produce, spread (or) disseminate ... false news” and “slander others, tarnish their reputation, financially or morally harm them.”

Journalists and opposition figures have said it has been used to stifle dissent.

Since the decree came into force, more than 60 journalists, lawyers and opposition figures have been prosecuted under it, according to the National Union of Tunisian Journalists.

The same night Bssais and Zeghidi were taken into police custody, masked police raided the Tunisian bar association and arrested lawyer Sonia Dahmani, also on the same law.

On Monday, another lawyer was forcibly arrested at the association’s headquarters.

The president of the bar, Hatem Meziou, on Tuesday called for an end to “the abuse of power” and “violence” targeting the lawyers.

The European Union also expressed concern over a string of arrests of civil society figures in Tunisia — the latest sign of a tightening clampdown on freedoms under Saied.

Nongovernmental organizations have decried a rollback of freedoms in Tunisia since Saied began ruling by decree after a sweeping power grab in 2021.


‘Blockout’ trend targets celebrities over Gaza silence

Updated 15 May 2024
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‘Blockout’ trend targets celebrities over Gaza silence

  • Selena Gomez, Zendaya and Kim Kardashian are among the celebrities who have lost hundreds of thousands of followers
  • Boycott campaign gained traction following Met Gala event last week in New York

LONDON: A new trend threatening to boycott celebrities over their refusal to speak out about the Gaza conflict is gaining momentum on social media.

Known as “Blockout 2024,” the movement has surged in popularity following the Met Gala last week.

As part of a solidarity campaign, social media users are calling for the blocking of accounts of celebrities who have remained silent on the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

High-profile figures such as Taylor Swift, Justin Bieber, and Drake are among the hundreds of celebrities facing this “digital guillotine.”

A full list is circulating on social media, leading to a significant loss of followers on Instagram and other platforms.

Actress and singer Selena Gomez reportedly lost 1 million followers on Instagram and 100,000 on X, according to US-based social media analytics site Sonic Blue.

Fellow actress and singer Zendaya, reality TV star Kim Kardashian, and her sister Kylie Jenner have also seen hundreds of thousands of followers drop.

Pro-Palestinian activists have been pressuring celebrities for months to show more support for Gaza civilians. This growing discontent reached a tipping point last week when the Met Gala’s glitz and glamour coincided with Israel’s announcement of a military offensive in Rafah.

@ladyfromtheoutside #greenscreen #greenscreenvideo #digitine #digitalguillotine #haleyybaylee ♬ original sound - Meagan

The movement was sparked by a TikTok video from influencer Haley Kalil at the Met Gala on May 7, where she lip-synced to the phrase “Let them eat cake.”

This phrase, attributed to Queen Marie Antoinette, drew parallels to the French Revolution, symbolizing indifference to the suffering of the impoverished.

“It’s time for the people to conduct what I want to call a ‘digital guillotine.’ A ‘digitine,’ if you will,” said TikTok creator @ladyfromtheoutside, who kicked off the movement with her viral video.

“It’s time to block all the celebrities, influencers and wealthy socialites who are not using their resources to help those in dire need. We gave them their platforms. It’s time to take it back, take our views away, our likes, our comments, our money.”

According to Gaza authorities, at least 35,000 people, mostly women and children, have been killed in the Palestinian territory during the seven-month war, which has been widely condemned as failing to comply with international humanitarian law.


BBC investigation leads to arrest of one of world’s most notorious people smugglers

Updated 14 May 2024
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BBC investigation leads to arrest of one of world’s most notorious people smugglers

  • Barzan Majeed, nicknamed ‘Scorpion,’ is caught in Iraqi Kurdistan days after release of BBC podcast series by journalists who tracked him down and interviewed him
  • Senior local official confirms officials used information from the broadcaster’s investigation to help find fugitive believed to have helped smuggle thousands of people to UK

DUBAI: Kurdish security forces arrested Barzan Majeed, described as one of the world’s most notorious people smugglers, in Iraqi Kurdistan on Sunday morning.

Nicknamed “Scorpion,” the fugitive is believed to have been involved in smuggling an estimated 10,000 people across the English Channel to the UK. He was arrested days after the release of a BBC podcast series in which investigative journalists tracked him down to the city of Sulaymaniyah in Iraq and interviewed him there.

During the interview, Majeed said he had lost count of the number of people he helped to smuggle, adding: “Maybe a thousand, maybe 10,000. I don’t know, I didn’t count.”

He admitted that between 2016 and 2019 he was one of two people who helped run a people-smuggling operation in Belgium and France but denied he was the mastermind of the operation.

“A couple of people, when they get arrested, they say, ‘We’re working for him’ — they want to get less (of a) sentence,” he said.

Originally from Iraq, Majeed moved to the city of Nottingham, in England, in 2013 but was deported two years later. He had been on the run since failing to appear at a court in Belgium for a sentencing hearing in November 2022.

The UK’s National Crime Agency issued a warrant for his arrest that same year. The agency, which confirmed his arrest, said: “We are grateful to the BBC for highlighting his case and remain determined to do all we can to disrupt and dismantle the criminal networks involved in smuggling people to the UK, wherever they operate.”

A senior member of the Kurdistan Regional Government confirmed its officials had used information from the BBC investigation to locate and arrest Majeed.

Each year, thousands of people flee Iraq, including its Kurdistan Region, in the hope of finding a better life in the UK or other parts of Europe. In many cases, they pay people smugglers to transport them, but the routes and methods used by the smugglers are often dangerous and the migrants face harsh weather and potentially deadly travel conditions.

Germany deported 222 Iraqi citizens in the first three months of this year as part of an alleged agreement between Berlin and Baghdad to deport migrants who do not qualify to remain in Germany, media organization Rudaw, which is based in Iraqi Kurdistan, reported this week.


Saudi radio station MBC FM marks 30 years of broadcasting with special events

Updated 13 May 2024
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Saudi radio station MBC FM marks 30 years of broadcasting with special events

  • Bosses say the celebrations honor the pioneering station’s enduring contributions to the media landscape in the Kingdom
  • ‘MBC FM has captured the ears and hearts of millions of Saudis over 3 decades’ and ‘continues to lead the radio airwaves with the love and loyalty of listeners,’ says group’s chairperson

LONDON: As pioneering Saudi radio station MBC FM celebrates three decades of broadcasting in the Kingdom, it is marking the milestone with a series of events and initiatives at the MBC Group headquarters in Riyadh under the theme “30 and Still Going Strong.”

The celebrations, which began on May 12, honor the station’s enduring contributions to Saudi Arabia’s media landscape, bosses said. They include competitions, entertainment events and exclusive interviews with renowned artists and stars from across the Gulf region and the wider Arab world.

“Just as MBC FM has captured the ears and hearts of millions of Saudis over three decades, being the first commercial FM radio station in the Kingdom, the radio and music sector at MBC Group today continues to lead the radio airwaves with the love and loyalty of listeners,” said Walid Al-Ibrahim, the chairperson of MBC Group.

In addition to providing entertainment for listeners, the station has served as a launchpad for emerging talent, he added, as he highlighted its influence on local culture.

Ziad Hamza, general manager of the radio and music Sector at MBC Group, said the station remains committed to its ongoing evolution while also honoring its strong history and legacy. In particular he highlighted investments in infrastructure, diversity of content and audience engagement as the station adapted to changing tastes and preferences among listeners.

“We have worked on developing the infrastructure and creating a comprehensive modern environment for the radio sector … by investing in Saudi youth talents, including radio presenters, producers, programmers and technicians,” said Hamza.

“We have also launched the MoodMBC application, which includes MBC FM, Panorama FM and MBC Podcast, in addition to enhanced options for direct communication, as well as rich and diverse content catering to poetry lovers, music session enthusiasts, and current affairs followers.

“Our goal has always been to strike a balance between the tastes of listeners and the needs of advertisers, facilitating our clients’ access to various target audience segments around the clock.”


Gulf news agencies discuss fake news, joint media strategy

Updated 13 May 2024
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Gulf news agencies discuss fake news, joint media strategy

  • Meeting discussed plans for a collaborative media strategy for 2023-30

RIYADH: The threat of fake news and a program for personnel exchanges were among the topics discussed at the 23rd meeting of the heads of the news agencies of Gulf Cooperation Council countries on Monday.

The talks, held virtually, were chaired by Ahmed bin Saeed Al-Rumaihi, director-general of the Qatar News Agency, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

The meeting also discussed the decisions made during the 26th gathering of GCC Ministers of Media, most notably the plans for a collaborative media strategy for 2023-30.

The delegates stressed the need for more training courses and workshops and looked into a report about misleading and false news reports. The meeting also outlined plans for an upcoming photography exhibition.

The attendees approved a program for exchange visits between editors, photographers and technicians across the region, and expressed their support for the Bahrain News Agency’s coverage of the 33rd Arab Summit on Thursday.