I grandi attori del mondo tech avranno sempre più potere. Il loro impatto sociale e politico sarà difficilmente controllabile.
I grandi attori del mondo tech avranno sempre più potere. Il loro impatto sociale e politico sarà difficilmente controllabile.
Tech giants will gain more and more power. Their social and political impact will be difficult to predict and control.
Con un mercato automobilistico sempre più votato all'elettrico anche la mobilità urbana cambia. Ma la transizione non è indolore.
Il 14 luglio la Commissione europea ha adottato il pacchetto climatico[1] “Fit for 55”, che propone le proposte legislative per raggiungere entro il 2030 gli obbiettivi del Green Deal. In particolare, la riduzione delle emissioni di gas a effetto serra del 55% rispetto ai livelli del 1990, con l’obbiettivo di arrivare alla “carbon neutrality” per il 2050.
Two years after their outbreak, the 2019 Hong Kong protests call for enquiry into a new season for social movements behaviour. In addition to being one of the largest and longest sustained episodes of protests challenging authoritarian rule in the 21st century, the movement may set an interesting precedent for anti-authoritarian movements elsewhere, as it appealed to the potential of digitally enabled communication to nurture a sense of community based on collective, horizontal, and participatory decision-making.
The development of emerging technologies, the increasing centrality of data to nation-state power, and the possibility of concentration of social, economic, and political influence by a few elite platforms are pushing dramatic shifts in the way the technologies and data use are envisioned and governed. Data and technology are now increasingly being configured around national politics, laws, and interests and are at the heart of geopolitical and diplomatic negotiations.
The Covid-19 pandemic will have many losers, but digital platforms will come out of the crisis even stronger. Physical activities like working in an office can be disease vectors, which is why they won’t rebound as quickly as trade, and their currently digitalised nature may not vanish in the medium term. Work on digital labour platforms provides workers with the opportunity to work from anywhere, at any time and take up whatever jobs suits them.
US infrastructure agencies have kept the country’s trains running, water flowing, and government buildings functioning during the coronavirus crisis. Now that operations are stabilizing, they can reconsider their capital-expenditure plans. What that entails will vary dramatically depending on whether the federal government provides substantial infrastructure funding as part of an economic-stimulus package. If it does, agencies will need to determine how best to spend their share.
Since Myanmar’s military staged a coup on 1 February, Burmese civil society became synonymous with political opposition. Activists from different working sectors are engaging in a coordinated civil disobedience movement ravaging throughout the entire country, while leaders of local organizations are jointly calling on the international community to intervene. The root problem, however, remains reconciling ethnic clashes and interests in Myanmar’s fragmented political context.
New digital monies issued by the private sector and novel payment systems are rapidly spreading worldwide as technological change and financial innovation are ripe. The Covid-19 pandemic exposed their convenience amid social distancing policies and a mighty expansion of e-commerce. Benign neglect is no longer a (reasonable) option for central bankers. Denial was due, perhaps, when Bitcoin mining began in January 2009. Strong criticism had a reason when Bitcoin was proposed later as a superior alternative monetary regime to sovereign fiat currencies.