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QF fillip for Arabic online content

Published: 18 Dec 2012 - 05:54 am | Last Updated: 05 Feb 2022 - 09:56 pm

Doha: Qatar Computing Research Institute (QCRI), a member of Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development, and Taghreedat, a regional Arabic e-content community building initiative based in Qatar, held an Arabic YouTube Tweetup over the weekend.

According to experts at Google, Arabic is one of the fastest growing languages on the worldwide web. Over the past two years, social networking sites including Twitter, YouTube and Facebook have experienced a massive increase in Arabic language usage. Yet, although there are close to 350 million Arabic language speakers in the Arab world alone, the amount of online content in Arabic hovers at only 3 percent of the total.  

The Arabic YouTube Tweetup was held to introduce new programmes and tools that will help close this gap in content. The event featured social networking and digital content giants YouTube, Google and Twitter, who talked about their initiatives in promoting and supporting Arabic language online.

The tweetup, scheduled as part of Google’s month-long Arabic Web Days project, gathered over 400 content creators from around the region looking to contribute to the acceleration of digital content in Arabic, with a focus on developing video content for YouTube. Representatives from YouTube and video content entrepreneurs from across the region shared their insight and experiences of how to create viral Arabic videos on the YouTube platform.

Dr Ahmed Elmagarmid, Executive Director of QCRI, outlined the Arabic language initiatives underway at the Institute.  

“This is our culture, our language. As a community, we are in the best position to create and make significant contributions to enrich the content and to drive the renaissance of the Arabic language.”

Speaking about Ethraa, QCRI’s initiative to enrich and increase Arabic digital content, Majd Abbar, Director of Arabic Content Initiatives at QCRI, explained the reasons behind the effort. 

“Arabic was once the language of science, literature and knowledge. Ethraa is focused on ensuring that the Arabic language is restored to its natural position as a language of science and research, which supports Qatar’s transformation to a knowledge-based economy.”

Ensuring the ease of use as an instantaneous communication platform, and that the content is meaningful and interesting to the rest of the world, is also what drives the efforts at Twitter, Inc. 

With 17 million tweets in Arabic every day, Kaveh Gharib, Localisation Project Manager at Twitter Inc, stated that alongside the opportunities for content growth come challenges, such as how to separate the signal from the noise.

Dr Fayeq Oweis, Arabic Localisation Manager at Google Inc, talked about numerous initiatives underway at Google in support of creating Arabic digital content, including local Arabic dialect voice recognition on Android phones, and tools that are available to write in Arabic without falling back on Arabizi. (Arabizi is an alphabet based on Latin script commonly used to communicate short digital messages in Arabic when the Arabic alphabet is not available due to technical reasons).  The YouTube platform is also fully Arabicised. The Peninsula