tv Business - News Deutsche Welle December 11, 2018 6:02am-6:15am CET
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shift living in the digital world. today give a flying displacement. three d. holograms of actors and setting the stage in a tiny box but first computer six barcelona now has a brothel with female androids a spanish engineer is working on programming his models to express emotions how will these new robotic sex workers affect human interaction get sexy. i want sex. talk to me. sex workers with feelings centers on toes an engineer from barcelona is working on sex robots that
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can simulate human emotions so i have an architecture of emotion that was like. i have a brain i have the architecture of a brain that gun express emotions in a given a way that i thought and then he thought do i have a humanoid system i followed a humanoid system in the state of the industry and they said ok no we need computers that are available. ready to assemble and any technology that i can use to put all these together. sex robots have sensors that responds to speech and touch the data use computers in an artificial brain which then signals the robot to take on various emotional states friendly romantic sexy. a robot from some tools workshop costs about six thousand euros. and there are bitter. and allow men up to forty percent of men in europe could picture having sex with a six robed. all women not so much but there's potential for that so and so.
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barcelona sex industry has recognized that potential here the first brothel offering sex robots was opened in two thousand and seventeen for one hundred euros in our men can live out their sexual fantasies with the dolls. but how will sex with robots change our love life robo psychologist martina moderate thinks these new sex companions pose a threat to real relationships but also. ninety five percent of the sex robots currently on the market comply with absolutely stereotypical feminine cliches. so completely stereotypical passive women. on the one hand that strengthens the objectification of what is human of the human body often the female body it's all those on the other hand these robots bring very antiquated very gender stereotypical relationship dynamics back into the bedroom. and then show off to
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a lot of. buzz sex robots can also be useful the foundation for responsible robotics think it can be used therapeutically for sexual healing. professor thomas special on all things humans can be brought up real feelings for sex robots. to desist from. i strongly suspect that we will be quick to build a personal relationship with these devices. i'm pretty sure that onus of such appliances won't take to name that dulls position and get into it sometimes doesn't want this relationship to be one sided that's why he tries to construct his dollars to be as human like and emotional as possible. and that leads to the question what makes us human in the first place. sense of the
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self who. why do i think i am myself while it's making me decide that this is me this is one of the other things that i was always interested me and that made me think of an architecture for a brain digitization hundred bottlenecks are invading our love life visionary or problematic these new sexual companions are going to take some getting used to. says no to humanoid sex slaves. and no networkers digital innovators committed to special projects today we need game designer to look around. when he was a teen i was forced to flee from syria he came to austria without his family one way for him to forget the war was to play computer games. i was just like. trying to escape that as much as i can with playing video games when there's
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a lot for city on when it's war in syria and you're eighteen more than eighteen years old then you must join the military if you're going to join the military it's either to kill someone or get killed. he wanted to share his gaming passion and tell others about his fate so with the help of developers that specialize in social issues he created path out here players assume a role and learn about day to day life in a war zone and what being a refugee is like throughout the game the real abdulla caramba appears in pepper's grave situations with silly cliches. come on i mean we don't have gallows in this region not in my hometown or every hometown in syria. he wants to show what it's like to be a refugee and he seems to have accomplished that path out has even led to a nomination for the scholarship program in the prize. to work as
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a game designer in syria that's intriguing. it's a long way to do it. will get there. and now standing center stage latest technology makes it possible to create virtual movies that show actors from all sides but it poses entirely new challenges for technicians and creatives alike the first studio has now opened near berlin. viewers i do-i with the actors it's all possible thanks to virtual reality technology but filming as complex the character must be recreated with a three d. holographic image after all you never know which angle viewers will be watching from recordings are made in so-called value metric video studios like value can at the bubbles bag film park near berlin on the divine and would confirm the actors come in and off filmed and each detail is automatically recorded without any
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further steps needed every wrinkle in my movements in my expressions in my gestures it captures my every movement if you see them going off with good moment of conception and this volumetric studio was four meters high and equipped with thirty do i take cameras making it able to film actors from all angles simultaneously then special software creates a three d. holograms of the characters they can be inserted into any scene. terabytes them and that means we're recording an extremely large and complex data set because if you were to copy that onto ordinary c.d.'s it would take about three thousand altogether i told. movie makers like canadians define rich we are now exploring the new possibilities of this technology offers but it's not enough to know how to use it producers need to create a new method of storytelling. and i do you do with the world when people can watch three sixty degree but just like in real life we need to keep the attention center
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so the film maker is not moving to camera because. you have the camera you watching whatever you want to watch but then those sound special sound so we can directing and you did and if you were and depending on the way you be you might see or not see something so you have ways to add two and three and that narrative depending on the behavior of the person in the content with a three hundred sixty degree panorama viewers can discover new worlds and take on unusual perspectives such as that of a toy robot seeing the world through his eyes shows those things in a totally new light. you can explore together new forms of storytelling so that's where you know i don't see. it we put it see many of you guys or we put it off but similar thing cinema has its own language and its own reason to be and i think in many vo we have to explore what it
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could be we still don't know what it could be three d. holograms of actors could become a valuable tool but picture quality is not danced enough to produce full length feature films yes there's been some need to physically i'm sure it'll make rapid advances and that other production science will spring up around the world right now there's only a handful of these kinds of studios and about the more there are the more standards and quality will improve and then it will make a breakthrough in the market. with system market were flawed. initial projects have already been completed using these new three d. recordings and by twenty nineteen volumetric studios are expected to be firmly established in the movie industry. shift says often you horizons. and no short and sweet shifts a snapshot learning german with you whether at home on your computer or out and
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about with your smartphone or latest beginners. called. this online language course teaches german grammar vocabulary and more in two hundred twenty films. it shows what it's like to arrive in germany and the language it also shows every day challenges. the short films are accompanied by some fourteen thousand language exercises. the internationally acclaimed learning tool academy make learning languages fun. and that was our snapshot. and as always to round off shift x. it to our internet find of the week today and our clocks. in this video clip
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the star is always in the center right in the center in a perfect square box just like the title of the film. photographer enderby meyers lives in new york and loves creating interesting arrangements some are confusing. others are harmoniously colorful some are full of surprises. or just cute. his movies offer a stage for his favorite objects from daily life. i. swear practical and artistic i. and next week just a few euros could get you huge returns at least that's what sports betting providers claim but players risk not being able to kick the habit compulsive gambling next week unshift.
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take it personally are you ready with all the wonderful people and stories that make the game so special. for all true fans. legs more than football online. and gemini with. at any time puzzling any place using names in the m.l.s. you have an abundance of caution so missing along to see is the combo from super fun seats. for. interactive exercises. everything is online most vile and interactive german to flavor with d.w.
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. natural riches. precious resources. and a rewarding investment the family has been called ethiopia's great goal to the country has an abundant supply of leases it to international giants. the government is after high export revenues of the corporation profit margin. but not everyone benefits from go. business. exploration environmental destruction starvation. the price of government going to corporate. the selling out of a country dead donkeys fear no hyenas. starts december twenty ninth
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on d w the. summer of one nine hundred ninety four to two militiamen and soldiers responsible for the genocide of eight hundred thousand tutsi in rwanda flee with their families one and a half million rwandan hutu civilians and aren't militia across the border into neighboring congo so i hear. this massive influx would destabilize the region for a long time to come. the congo would become the stage for twenty years of war between armed militias. the populations were the first victims of these atrocities
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systematic massacres and mass rapes. at the hospital in ponzi a gynecologist dr denis mukwege gave treats the tens of thousands of women one of the victims of the sexual violence committed with extreme cruelty. itar loosely denounces these crimes and has become the spokes person of the women suffering. so he won't help me. if there weren't enough i've been in terrible pain since the operations on my womb. have. been sold or city. they are excluded by their community might have family there for. the husband mad laughter it's worth it to him and they are handicapped and all alone sadly abandoned by everyone is a little too long. to. call
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to is so interesting when they get here they have such a terrible sadness so a smile is the sign that they're coming back to life soon it's a huge boost to carry on our watch to do paul says do a deal see into your office alter what. he says they need well. i was working in the fields when the hutu rebels arrived they stepped me in the genitals my internal organs were badly damaged so i ended up in the operating room and the doctor started to treat me top in-joke but. given that the only. ravaged by these never ending wars eastern congo was destabilized and saw the spread of uncontrollable armed groups in the search for land and precious wars the hutu and tutsi militias the traditional congolese warriors and the regular army
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sotero among the populations of these rich provinces of eastern congo. having oil. that they are practically but. it. was. half. that. i broke out that's what we think we should as you know we're transferring files to ponzi hospital to dr mccuaig and. now you know i don't know where his work starts with our action but it will. be crowded but we have to get off. of what has traumatized us they would turn up
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and say open the door well now you're there in your house ready for you and they brandish their weapons they terrorize you look what happened what i usually tell you to lie down and they rape you in front of your children not your husband an hour one then they force your husband to rape you and front of your children and what you did in bed now while you was in bed as i have and sometimes they order the children of the sons present in the house to rape their mother in front of the other child ambled was the idea that the son refuses he's killed on the spot i'm sure there are also women who have had wooden sticks or bayonets stuck up there hi diana. bowron i might others who are taken into the bush to become sexual slaves because i have a couple. i was working in the operating room. i did one operation after another endlessly and in the end i realized that i was
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operating on some women for the second or third time. question for. shook it to the biggest shock came when for the first time i operated on a child born at the hospital as a result of rape. who had herself been raped at the age of eight. here in the middle of it to be retold. that when i came to realize that i'm beginning to treat children born of rape. and that i don't want to find myself treating the grandchildren. is to remove. that this was something had to be done. i had to speak out to the world i had to go beyond that beyond the hospital to meet people and tell them in all simplicity have the courage to stop this evil. a little. harsh.
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discipline. can honestly speak of rape as a tactic of war a weapon of mass destruction which is the latest vile shameful and mcabee invention of mankind to destroy and kill others. who did the facts are not motivated by sensual desire but rather the wish to destroy a family community a whole people. physically and psychologically. it don't thank you and because you have the actual question this was the time when kofi annan was secretary general of the un because i found myself in the auditorium of the united nations security what struck me was that i could see all the places i was names of states where representative should sit. but
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where it said democratic republic of the congo. the chairs were empty leashes it is . dr mccoy gabe or witness several times of the united nations podium despite the death threats he received in two thousand and twelve on his return from new york armed men were waiting for him at his home. bill comes out of a sinful about when i arrived here. five men immediately entered the vehicle. for them but. one got his gun to my neck and made me get out. in the time it took for him to fire at me. for joseph appeared from out back and started to shout that killing my father. of the man turned. and fired and joseph it.
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was if it was if it shows it fell there. and i felt that but i couldn't say what happened next he said to pursue me or. perhaps they thought i was dead too. there was blood everywhere to some but she was very scared and decided to go into exile in europe with my family. i mean all. in europe because i wondered what part of my career would now tank i learned that the congolese women in kiev are had mobilized to ask me to return from similar b.z. . to.
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contrary to all the rules of security confronting the danger dr mcqueen he decided to return to the government. supported by the women of cuba he returned more determined than ever and radicalized his struggle. was that it. was. all some little old no together we say no to sexual violence no to the rebellion no to those who wish to become ministers and generals by killing their fellow countrymen you are but your so we the population must say no. this is. the message
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this. this call to the police who she says go out of egyptian policeman makes it possible for me to get very risky places does it not seem was otherwise i would be a prisoner at the hospital and that's a life i couldn't bath for long. distance but it. was. because i did look for when i arrived here the first time i want struck me was the women who came in on stretchers. even most of them whenever death.
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i came from behind plateaus and surrounding villages. of your law. i would stay here and let me ask for two weeks at a stretch i would leave twice a month to see my family how long have you spent separated from your family like this. fifteen years since it hasn't been easy. i would climb the hills to go here you seem to know if you did thirty k. on foot absolutely he said it was very tough. offered to the queen in fact the first massacre was here at the hospital. of the turtle the war practically started here. for the good of it but welcome all since you said that you have very little it was twenty years ago at the start of the war
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there had been congolese rebels and rwandan soldiers invaded the hospital and slaughtered the patients in their best the. sea of terrified the survivors dug a common grain of salt here where we stand to bury the corpses. disappear only could if someone can kill a patient in his bed. and is not prosecuted for such a crime. i think it conveys everything we're going through now. the police are it's no suck up to the answers regarding the events of nine hundred ninety six i have never had an explanation for why patients were killed in their pants so i was their doctor i was responsible for those patients the soldier that i had promised to protect them unfortunately i had left them to help another sick person and it all happened when i was away should i find it impossible to fully
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forget this when i returned there it's as if the story of events unfolds again in my mind. the moment she said the person. in. another remarkable man we honor today is dr dennis mccuaig he and his staff not only provide medical treatment to try to repair broken bottles. but rehabilitation and reintegration to try to repair broken hearts and spirits. through. the day we need to establish
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visit the sick talk to them sit by that balance. so it was as we visited a sick child one day that i took my decision and said. that you are good at what you do but i feel it is not enough. when i am sick you give me medicine. but you gave none to this child what can be done to be. done for he replied that he couldn't give medicine because he was not a doctor. so i had found my path i said to him you be the pastor pray for the sick . i want to take kant of the medical side. it was a good move to bridge good to. my men to. my mother was a huge help she forged my candidate to see. she's
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a strong woman for me it was very important to my parents that i be able to get an education and carry that torch on once. it paid you. to live. when he started his studies i prayed to god for him to become a doctor to treat people when i saw a doctor in a white coat so i felt i was seeing an angel. suffer and. i love my mom so.
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both hello girls. similar to that please tell me your name is where you are from why you are here and what you know to get here not look to live near you. noted i came here because i was rejected was an outcast. she knew what will suit me to speak a little more openly i feel that you are full of emotion to speak out about how you feel but a little secret is a joke. well some of us when you've been sexually abused you have no more self-esteem. but there are many of us here so the kids also sort of look up when you leave here do we want you to have a swing in your step you know what that means. it means that you are beautiful delicate they wanted to destroy you but when you leave here they'll see that us stronger than them but we deserve to look at. them and want to know
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when i told my mother that i had been raped she got angry and threw me out. then i was thrown out of school. i had a baby who is now two years old. don't cry sister it will be alright. who are so. simple even if others hate you we love you so this is the big nose i let it go you know i'll go over. when you work there is hurt deep inside the jew do not accept you want if you stay here we will give you back your humanity what you did not get through out this heart that is
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blocking you so you can start a new life. and. live there. when being. ill but not when i was in the hospital and we were taught how to weave baskets so make carpets but little by little i saved money that he picked up on oak at the door and it was a big help to me again thank you i managed to save three hundred dollars. i showed it to dr mccuaig at the end i said to him i now have a small sum of money i'd like to have a little plot of land. and he said really i said yes really. and so the doctor gave me a little extra money. because now i have to put in doors you take the house and you plaster the walls and perhaps get electricity put in and were given me so i feel
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good like in dr mccoy his office will be like in the city of joy or it's really nice. that's my project. with me. today my father is dr mccoy. because he's the one who repaired my life for myself and i guess he saved my life and made me the way i am today. even in my opinion but i saw that i was a human being like any other. and that despite these problems it wasn't the end of the world. until momma jump on is a fun thing as long as you're alive you can still do lots of things here on earth was a key lucky louis and i feel. i'm good. at
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the end of two thousand and thirteen the biggest to see militias supported by rwanda was defeated by a military operation led by the congolese armed forces and the un peacekeepers it was pushed back towards rwanda and uganda. but other armed groups continue to roam the countryside. moreover the culture of impunity over these past twenty years has deconstructed the whole society of cuba and led to the trivializing sion of rape beyond the conflict. here we can see a wound resulting from the right. there is a ten in the rector vaginal septum. the rock was moved to version one. there's no separation between the anus and the vagina you know that we can't even
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get in that. but how will we reconstruct that. to look if i can reconstruct it but the challenge is to make the vagina permeable. you've never seen this before so it's not an isolated case there are four other little girls waiting for the same type of operation to do this you know in fact this is the thirteenth case throughout this work there have been three deaths including a child of nine months and of a two year old and a four year old. wars of course. if what i think is that the man must face the consequences of bad actions they won't be executed but. problem solved. so that we're saying that because you're angry. no no i think that this little girl with this fibrosis
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at the age of twenty she won't be able to have sex life has been ruined. this issue you're right. we don't know how many little girls there's mammal destroys the core. professional nothing will change if people don't mobilize. i think all men should mobilize for this little girl it's the only thing we can do . well if we all agree. on this one it's completely insane.
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yeah a little they feel much today we can speak of a massacre it is no longer rape it is the massacre of our children. how it's the men of cover don't mobilize to combat these rapes dearly beloved men you will feel the solidarity of women. out what the day they refused to let you into their bed you will feel the anger of the women of khartoum oh. no no. thank you i. know you know but i do for many years a mother's have been raped our sisters have been raped but where were we the man. it'd be when it happened where we know that
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until weeks ago i even operated on a baby have two months but most of these little girls will never become women but. start. with what each one of us has the responsibility to protect the community. who are now what well that is. i honestly believe that if we men of cafu most stand together and say from now on this won't happen again it will stop that we will continue to denounce and i'm sure it will stop. i think. i. was.
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closer to me when i was a doctor and every fortnight i travel this road to visit my family. i would often stand here for thirty minutes. i would look at the horizon and simply admire the beauty of nature. sit down this place where three countries meet. rwanda burundi and the congo. i felt it was such a waste as it is clear that these populations need leaders who understand that the only solution is to tolerate one another and live together. i think it's a place where people could finally recreate themselves in nature when these mountains and hills that is so beautiful. i think similar. to so we can see through z.z.
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river. and further off the plains of the rosy trade. blended out was. this little way ever be able to live in peace in this vast rich vast this magnificent land and. her. the fast pace of life in the digital shift as the lowdown on the web showing new developments and providing useful information the witness finds and interviews with makers and users. shifts next d.w.
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. we make up of what we watch as of office that under the age of five we ought to seventy seven percent of. them want to shape the continent's future to. be part of it and join african youngsters as they share their stories their dreams and their challenges. the seventy seven percent. platform for africa charge. the. shift of living in the digital age this time romanian sex cams and award winning language learning out and a whirlwind trip through japan but first. virtual police work in the netherlands
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police inspectors don't necessarily have to be at a crime scene to see it they can investigate virtually a special unit is on assignment with three d. scanners and three hundred sixty degree camera. pinpointing evidence that a staged murder scene the dutch police are using three d. scan as an undocumented reality to solve crime. thanks to interactive three d. models like this officers can investigate even when that far away no matter how long ago the crime was committed. the system is being tested on the training grounds of the police academy an apple dawn the dutch are currently world leaders in virtual investigation. an officer prepares the room for the three d. scan she places small white bulls as markers for the recording equipment is expensive this is gonna cost one hundred thousand euros to maverick and afterwards
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the program recognizes the balls and uses them to put a picture together that's a great advantage over ordinary photography where you have loose images here you get an overall impression preview of the end. to visit a crime scene in virtual reality they need a special in a set up too small boxes are positioned. infrared any delays and delays as cover an area of four by four meters movements can be tracked in that space with the help of a uncles and a backpack laptop is a bit difficult because if your home is on your toes or to a cable and if you use this backpack on your record you can walk or for. the soonest they put on the open ended reality goggles and the backpack the granny office becomes a crime scene this is where it happened. and it's too soon to say whether this technology helps solve more cases. but so far the feedback has been positive the
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modern technology not only accurately displays reality it's also in harnesses it here you can see things the naked eye wouldn't. the angle of the bullet is fisher so just you know refco we don't know trajectory there's a certain uncertainty in the trajectory. and so we did not as a line but as an area of possibilities in principle it's a lot like computer games so it's no surprise that video game developers thought up the ai system. another digital tools they use looks more like panoramic photography at first it's not as elaborate as they are but can also help document every detail of the crime scene the detective takes a three hundred sixty degree picture of the entire a real. the images can then be processed on site with special software instead of one dimensional photos the
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program produces a full all round. it's another less expensive way of putting yourself at the scene of a crime. i'm looking at the crime scene now i can look at what we've established to get a good impression of exactly how the scene works. it's like i'm right there i saw that's the advantage for colleagues who are working on a case but one of the scene themselves and want to see what happened. in the netherlands these pioneering methods have already been applied in real cases . who are more for the whole i think it's great that we're making an important contribution to finding the truth and giving the victim's relatives answers about what happened in the yard of this special unit of the dutch police is tracking down crime in reality and fiction. shift says digital detectives.
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are now networkers passionate digital creators and their project this week on christmas. young from berlin is chaos computer club once better safeguards for smartphone use as order me passwords are increasingly being workplace by biometric data now an iris scan or fingerprints can only locus smart phone the i.t. expert says that leaves you vulnerable to hackers. there can be a risk of strangers on locking my phone and accessing my data from cliff and then shows us how easy it is to outsmart an iris scan a few photographs his eye with an infrared camera and prints the image on the special paper the contact lens creates the necessary three d. effect he holds the new image up to the scanner and just like that he said.
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you might be in a cafe or on a train you know one takes a split second. if you keep filming a person's face long enough that you'll eventually get a decent image of the iris you can use later when it's in your state who might be stored on phones and encryption but uses have no control over what happens to it. wants to expose security flaws and the wrong people not to let that sensitive data all fall into the hands of strangers. next up romania's webcam workers use eastern european country as a world market leader in the sex chat industry some two hundred thousand romanians work as webcam models most customers come from western europe and the us. go guys. oh. scott and arielle are in shock trims in romania waiting to attract the next wealthy customer a soon as one of them switches to the private chat option that charged up to seven
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euros a minute. you have to make your customers forget what they actually wanted so they stay on the site longer if they want to see your bottom you show it to them but at the same time you engage them in conversation. because before so we can see like it does seem like he's the many dance. i flirt because that brings in the most money. i talk a lot with my customers it's like on a first date. mania has become a global market leader in the sex game industry more than five thousand studios have popped up in the past five years some two hundred thousand remain ians are set to work in the business the market it's growing every year we ten fifteen percent of members we have a very good internet connection second of all we have very smart and girls and they speak or very good english and then because we have beautiful woman story here this
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is the secret. that we'll start her shift in the studio's own beauty salon she's dropped her medical studies. in romania a young doctor earns about five hundred euros a month. as a web cam model a real can make more than twenty five thousand euros in a good month but the job has its dark sides this form a webcam model is ashamed of her past ok to my fair constantly masturbating in front of the camera just mining but you do it for the money so you masturbate you earn your first thousand euros which is a lot in romania so you keep on doing it but else is there to do slave away in a supermarket for two hundred euros. so far the government has ignored the sex industry prostitution on the other hand is funding rumania the webcam models working in the legal gray area. many studios pose.
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on the competition is getting tough and that's why newcomers like school get listens in english and camera work by. being more playful with a. day. school test against the studio more than a third of his income but he still ends ten times what he did as a fitness instructor he doesn't tell his family whether money is from. book or thought about telling my parents the truth but i don't dare to not yet met first it was hard for me to strip naked because i didn't know how to keep my customers interested after that. but now i care. but. hundreds of thousands of young remain ians want to escape poverty. sex chance off a quick money. but it comes at a cost. shifting as stop digital exploitation.
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our download tip of the week the shift after shock. learning languages with word games that's the concept behind the app drops for the two point six million apps offered on google play store it was deemed best android app of twenty eight. drops uses short five minute exercises and virtual rewards. the games are fun and concentrate on vocabulary by combining pictures with words to help you remember the . complicated grammar rules aren't covered the playful focus on vocabulary training distinguishes this out from other language learning tools. right now there's a selection of over thirty languages but only getting starters free the premium account costs nine euro is ninety nine cents a month by the way drops is also available for i phones. do you know
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about an interesting up down right to shift at dot com we'll test your best tips on the show. and that was the app shot. as always we leave shift through the exit our on line find of the week this time our trip through japan lots of people always in a hurry urban life in japan is hyper modern and i for active. time and space passage breakneck speed here but the eastern asian island nation is full of contrasts. and it is time lapse video cattle and filmmaker policy i like to has also captured more reflective moments. finding tranquility in motion while garcia night is two weeks journey through japan is a trip that links contrasts with the utmost harmony.
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place and next week looking for a partner who shares your political views new online dating sites have been specializing in just that whether you're a trump fan or democrat supporter it seems there's something for everyone politically compatible dating next week and shift. blame god play. drummer in a black forest ass tried out fast life safe with a lesson enslaved touching him for body. dobby blues for shall come to pass judgement jetstar points out i'm bragging rights
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we'll soon find me taken go just. take off in thirty minutes on d w. every journey begins with the first step and every language with the first word published in the book. is in germany to learn german why not learn with him simple online on your mobile and free to set d w z learning course nico speak german made him seem. a muse and. just gets the once a. call to take us out to his concert side by. people who
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put big dreams on the big screen. in the movie magazine on t.w. . her first day of school in the jungle. first camillus of the. band doris crane the moment arrives. join the ring it ain't on her journey back to freedom. in our interactive documentary. tour of the ring to tame returns home on t w dot com good times. feel feel feel
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. britain's parliament will not vote on prime minister teresa mayes breaks a deal on tuesday may admitted lawmakers would reject the deal by a significant margin she said she needed more time for urgent talks with e.u. leaders european present on hold talks because called for a meeting to discuss break that on thursday but he said the bloc will not read
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negotiate the terms of the deal. french president manuel my car has reached out to protesters who reject his reform plan so you propose raising france's minimum wage by one hundred euros a month and scrapping a solidarity tax for bill pensioners and excepted partial blame for the protesters anger of also warned the violence would not be tolerated and often most of. the recipients of this year's nobel peace prize have called on world leaders to take action against sexual violence as a weapon of war crime to leave dr dennis macwhich and iraqi activist not be a mirage we're accepting the prize of a ceremony in last little. about one hundred fifty countries have adopted a landmark pact on migration as a united nations conference in america the proposed agreement aims to tackle challenges arising from the mass movement of people but the pact is come under heavy criticism with several countries including the u.s. pulling out of the process.
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tonight two of europe's most powerful leaders engulfed in crisis the vision of europe's future under fire across france anger at him money well the president of reform who's now cursed as president of the rich and british prime minister to resign may for more than two years she has sworn breaks it means breaks it but today in parliament it became painfully clear there is no consensus on what brics that should be no agreement that it should be at all i'm bored golf in berlin this is the day. just this one to the brics it was. the government
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has lost control of invents and is in complete disarray because there will be no enduring and successful corrected without some compromise on both sides ok if the prime minister cannot be clear that she can and will to renegotiate the deal then she must make way. i don't even know if the children from the parents i took up the responsibility of being prime minister of this great country life know that my duty is to all of the results of that space. and coming up later on not so young in a grand crisis french president emmanuel mccrone breaks his silence on the yellow vest protests that have many in his country seeing red and maybe i have given you the impression that i did not care that i had there's no action priorities he said and i think i must have hurt some of you by what i said.
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we begin the day inside the british parliament where theresa may today wielded her prime ministerial powers and put the brakes on bright said her breasts that parliament was scheduled to vote tomorrow on may's plan for withdrawing the u.k. from the european union but opposition is huge a rejection would have been certain so may decided to defer she says she'll attend an e.q. summit later this week but e.u. leaders are already saying the brights it deal will not be renegotiated and theresa may she knows that today she told the scores of shelving wall makers some of them calling for her to resign that while they are quick to condemn her brights plan they remain reluctant to present one of their own many of the most controversial aspects that they stealing kluge in the past are all simply inescapable facts of having a negotiated brix it those members who continue to disagree need to shoulder the
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responsibility of advocating an alternative solution that competed if it. so if you want a second referendum to overturn the results of the first be honest this respected fighting in the country again. if you want to remain positive the single market and the customs union be open that this would require free movement routes across the economy and ongoing financial contributions none of which are in my view compatible with the results but the referendum. i want to leave without it you be out front that in the short term this would call significant economic damage to parts of our country who can least afford to pay the bill. we heard to resume a mention that word back stall and we heard that word a lot today it has become the brights bone of contention in may's deal that well it
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just seems to defy solution what is the backstop why is it so controversial here's a primer on the one issue that could for ever be a blockade. the united kingdom wants to leave the e.u. on the twenty ninth of march two thousand and nineteen a transition phase will be in effect until the end of two thousand and twenty during which the u.k. will stay in the e.u. single market and customs union follow e.u. regulations pay thiis but will no longer vote during that transition phase future relations between the k. and the e.u. will be defined if an agreement cannot be reached by the end of two thousand and twenty the transition phase may be extended by two years if there is no agreement at the end of the transition phase and imagine see regulation the so-called backstop will prevent the installment of a hard border between the republic of ireland and e.u. member and northern ireland which is part of the u.k. many fear the civil conflict called the troubles would be reignited by customs and
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border control posts the deal would ensure that more than three million e.u. citizens in the u.k. and one million britons in the e.u. could carry on with their lives as before following the transition face. and joining me here in the studio is john worth he is a political blogger who blogs a lot about breaks and he's a regular commentator on breaks if you're on the day it's good to see you again john. this irish border dilemma i mean it's not going away and it seems to be just as installed to day as it was two years ago and it seems there is no common ground to be found in which to listen to what the leader of labor in the opposition leader jeremy korb what he had to say today to resubmit bringing back the same botched deal either next week or in january and can she be clear on the timing will not change its fundamental flaws and deeply held objections right across this house
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which go far wider than the banks don't allow. mr speaker this is a bad deal for britain a bad deal for our economy and a bad deal for our democracy our country deserves better than this. german corben there why goes to reason may think that that should be successful at this summit that she can try to get a better deal or do you think she thinks that it will think she still believes that somehow i don't think if she were to be really rationally thinking about that there's anything that brussels could offer that it's safe to resign now what can brussels really give her a summit this week that would appease that level of opposition that you know what we saw today and calm and so i think it's essentially pointless what she's trying to do is to go and try and get some negotiation from a guess make concessions from brussels brussels also sees the parliamentary dynamics whatever they would give what terms is all they that that would prove that and so i think it's it's
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a hopeless strategy she has been warning of this domino effect too she said if there is a a second bridge that referendum in the result is the opposite of the first and there will be calls for a third referendum do you think that would happen. those people who are solidly in favor of brakes it may ultimately demand that the problem ultimately however is british politics is blocked just now it has no solution to the northern line border issue it doesn't know what future relationship it wants for the european union there is no consensus about the way forward and ultimately what you've got to do first and foremost is remove that block britain is going to leave the european union without a deal on twenty ninth of march twenty nine hundred unless there is some agreement to unbolt the situation how do you do that yet polman to vote to block a situation looks unlikely or potentially you hold a referendum on the argument for a referendum is essentially to say calm and content decision as give that back to
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the people not snugness some members of parliament today john worth stay right there will be back with you in just a moment to rescind bay's decision to postpone parliament's vote on her brakes a plan well it drew the ire of scottish lawmakers scotland's first minister nicholas sturgeon and she was scathing in her criticism of tweeting this as she tweeted so it is confirmed pathetic cowardice it is from the prime minister yet again the interest of the tory party are a higher priority for her than anything else this can't go on and she went on to throw her scottish national party's weight behind tossing theresa may out of office german corben if labor lodges a motion of no confidence in this incompetent government tomorrow the s.m.p. will support it. and in the e.u.
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the european union there was exasperated at britain's decision. at the european parliament breaks a coordinator he tweeted the following i can't follow anymore after two years of negotiations the tory government wants to delay the vote just keep in mind that we will never let the irish down this delay will further aggravate the uncertainty for people and businesses it's time that they make up their mind hashed. brags that. all right john so you see right there i mean the the european union i mean they must be scratching their heads and wondering well what does britain want from us it is impossible to know. theresa may says she wants some changes to the backstop but what changes to this movement by stop can the european union office essentially british parliamentarians a saying britain wants the power to unilaterally be able to change that relationship at the northern border but why would the republic of ireland why would
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the e.u. possibly trust the u.k. in this situation and ultimately as well as the relations between the northern irish policies particularly the d u p this supports reason government and mase government itself already horribly bad and so ultimately i can't see anything that's going to come of this summit later this week other than some nice words that the european union hopes that the vice stop will never need to be used is this a case of the reason may doing everything it anything's is to save her political i mean that looks absolutely will be the case and do you believe that's the case but i can't see any other reason or any of the logic for what she's been doing this week other than that because she clearly doesn't have a plan this is hopeless as i see it going to brussels to try to extract some more concessions she's also repeatedly refused to say when will the house of commons get to vote she was also multiple times today and she said well we will have a day a vote at some point in the future and we are hundred and nine days to bracks today
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it's twenty ninth of march of next year there are millions of people's lives depending upon this their investment decisions depending on the rules about how planes fly how goods will be shipped how medicines can be moved and we do not know how that is going to work it's a de vry lakesha of duty yeah well today the european court of justice threw another element into the mix it delivered a ruling let me see if i can do that teleprompter there we go on article fifty which lays down the guidelines for leaving the european you. now you're being where justin says that britain has the power without any go ahead from brussels to reverse the entire brics a process optically fifty t.e.u. must be interpreted as meaning that where a member status notify their council in accordance with article v. some tension to withdraw from the european union that article allows that in the state for the slowness of ritual agreement concluded between that member state and
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the european union has not entered into force to revoke that notification unilaterally. so john what about this does this really make a difference i mean the timing on this is certainly you know ironic when you have what happened in parliament and you've got europe saying well you can come back and join us it's quite extraordinary it's taken so long for us to get to this stage of understanding is what britain should have done is right at the beginning when accounts with a lot of the notification could be revoked unilaterally they didn't decide to do that so it's a pity it's taken until today to work this out this judgment ultimately could be significant but not just yet it britain gets to january or february and there is no brakes that deal insight if one is starting to panic and starting to get worried britain could essentially say hold on a minute we want to stop the whole lot may is not ready to do that just now but maybe a month or two months from now when the clock is really counting down to that about
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twenty ninth of may exit date this judgment may well come to britain's rest i mean you've got what basically the highest court in the e.u. telling britain basically you know if you want to you can forget about the whole thing in we'll just out like it never happened does that strengthen the chances then for a second referendum i'm not sure because it kind of strengthens the radicals on both science essentially that the brakes it is say ah but it's so easy to turn bricks it round we need to stand together to make sure we see this through and strengthens the remain as hand because and to reason may's line no deal is better than a bad deal now actually there is a way of stopping their deal it's essentially saying we stop the whole lot so it essentially paddlings remaining people to vote down any deal it to reason they would put forward so ultimately i think it's kind of a school drawer if you like in terms of the significance of this this judgement today it strengthens the radicals on both sides and it's going to be interesting to
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see to later this week just the reaction that theories of a gives when she goes to the e.u. some nigerians think what's going to happen they know it's going to be very friendly and their reaction towards her i think all right john which is always good to have you on the show good to have your insights we appreciate it. well a million british citizens are estimated to be living in the other twenty seven nations that make up the european union let's hear about the concerns they have over the u.k. leaving the e.u. . more than if only he could he said for a cure and want to get his learning french is now a matter of urgency with direction looming the young consultant is worried she will soon become less competitive in the job market and learning french will definitely help me with future prospects i think just by just having english is not enough any more suspicious the u.k.'s leading. the english importance might. the british national moved to brussels in two thousand and fifteen and was impressed by the
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city's international atmosphere. support yes ok. but now on the eve of the crucial breakfast vote british ex-pats living in the e.u. face an uncertain future. he said that should be an option it's an opportunity that soffits in the house that i'm all for example and i once it's amazed that after march twenty ninth saying is it still possible when i do the piece but it's not just the paperwork direction poses a question of identity on the cards you fail very european style but also being his people when people ask me why i farm and i say all of the u.k. and then the next question will be something about. always as they all. do you still feel you have to go out there coming out of europe saying how to stop it because many of the britons in brussels work for european institutions. brigs that
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is obviously something that we talk about a lot this specially with my other british friends the ones that work inside the institutions and outside the institutions it affects us all it's a bit of a worry is that johnson is one of one point three million british ex-pats in the e.u. many say they're being used. as a bargaining chip in the negotiations we don't have a voice it means we're forgotten about and we don't feel like the british government really says about our situation despite the frustration here and what can stream ains hopeful. can continue to do. to rise up in my job. that sort of position where i might be able to apply for jobs the citizenship and nationality that would be great. to unsettle that. maybe have kids i'll say for now i don't see myself. i said i hope i have to go back for want kins and more than a million other britons the european continent is the place they call home.
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now these were the streets of paris on saturday the protesters wired in the french capital for a fourth straight week in some of the worst violence that the city have seen since the dyke hundred sixty s. young rest first erupted over what he planned fuel tax increase and then spiraled into a national protest against the government the yellow vest protesters as they're known got the attention of the president and they hit the french economy where it says. and while paris was full of tear gas and water cannon everyone was asking where is mr mccollum the french president has drawn criticism for staying out of sight and for staying silent about the violence today he finally spoke to the nation he made
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his opinion you are with the republican allows the opinions to be expressed ago and decided that not everybody needs to share them about if we don't have to have discord like that off violence when violence arrives. ceases you know that i would leave you to say that but in the beginning i understand that people are angry and book we don't know and absolutes there and many among us is that i mean i'm not are you to mention citizens can share that and in the appointed by the court not my dignity we are not going to bang on about it but to business as usual on the other side getting on it because in the past we have had too many crisis like this and sums on them on the story we have come to a historic point. for our country. and through dialogue rice backed
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and engagement comment meant with on that we are going we're going to make sure i manage or we are working on it and i am going to speak to you malek care about this you people only fight as for you. and all if we only fight for friends i could be. all right i'm sure the big table now by the bow he is the berlin correspondent for really you front into what's in the it's good to have you back on the show let me just ask you as a citizen of friends do you believe your president when he says he feels the pain of the people. i'm not sure but. it was of course go to show these and these address more empathy than he did during eighteen months we remember some of the. some of his sentences about french people being too
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lazy or whatever and of course he's style contributed to create a gap between him and the citizens always also between him and his former voters and two to two rainfalls these this image of somebody being quite arrogant why do you think he was he was so reluctant to speak out about the protests have been really he hasn't been seen in public in over a week how do you explain that. i mean of course you mean the difficulties that he disappeared with a fairly well you know they were saying you know i'm missing. yeah i think it is trying to do was to to wait till the. children and the last saturday to see if. there will be would have been as much violence as the last when it was not because there where. more than one hundred
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thirty thousand people taking part to these protests throughout france but the violence is when it as important a day where one week ago and he also used these week without any public appearances. to meet quite a lot of people. in pele's but also on the phone and to to find to find solutions because it was under pressure for sure and he has had to react. he did tonight we heard. take partial responsibility for the rest take a listen forty many years. to twelve enough from one occurrence of territory to suffer but even that just about how licks are just us are being preachy they have the impression of not playing they heard through not being able
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to follow changes in our society in the last year and a half we have probably not been able to react to it as we should have and i assume my own responsibility and that's. do you think. there is trying to show that he is trying to show more. for the people do you think that the public was was too quick in its judgment mean we've seen a one hundred eighty degree turn you know the president of reform and now he's the president of the rich i mean has the public maybe been. too harsh on him or too quick to judge. maybe yes maybe not what is sure is that the first meters he took in the spring of two thousand and seventeen where or where measures in favor of rich rich person in favor of the enterprise which was
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a typical. off for politics and he wanted to create. a better atmosphere for investments in france etc but of course these politics can last quite a long time to two and the. days that the situation and through to improve the economic situation and what what was missing was also a response for the difficulties of a lot of french people especially in the territories as he said into the village emails about yeah exactly people would vote. house fifty kilometers may be from the next town where they live and now the costs to go there every day are too big there is no a little hospital the school the post of is closed and they have the impression nobody listen to them they are lost they are the losers of the.
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situation and what about the concessions that mckown has offered does he have the money to increase the minimum wage by what is it a hundred euros. is the money there. the money is needed is not there but budget will of course mean that frons has to increase is deficit and will probably next year or not be able to respect the three percent crit teria which is the russian ruling within the members of the euro zone's run normally the normal in next year or we should have had a deficit of two point eight percent and probably it will be maybe it will be three point half percent which is not maybe a catastrophe. maybe it was necessary to respond to these to
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these huge protests if he had knew that would knows if he if you would have been able to. to to lead the country for first several months of course the problem is it's a turn. after the politics in made during eighteen months now is more is it's a new chapter with the social political but also tried to underline that some big refer he wants to make about an employment about pensions that east still wants to do them so it's a very brittle. he's walking a tightrope right now. as always good to have you on the show we appreciate your insights. well the day is nearly done the conversation continues online you find us on twitter either at u.w. news you can write directly to me if you use the hash tag the date and remember whatever happens between now and then tomorrow is another day we'll see you then
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finally taken dollars. pick up next w. . they want silent in syria. and they won't be silent in exile. seven people who fly to europe from the brutal persecution in their homeland are filing criminal charges against the country's senior officials. testifying against assad and seeking justice for syria. in forty five minutes long. a continent is reinventing itself. as africa's tech scene discovers it's true
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when things go dark and the smoke rises in the area it can only mean a clash of nearby cities where neighbors turn to bitter rivals because it's dubie time shelter versus dortmund. so gobby come from england and i know a dog is only about every sense i mean to counts. well words are harsh and the pitch is flooded with emotion because that's what a dobie means even if it's twelve place hosting first. most executives should be a no two she and i would in all be zero when no one cares about the bottom especially match. because they're facing relegation candidates nuremburg. i want footballing fairytale is pushed to the background with freiburg hoping to cut down on overpowered leipsic. you know it's double
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time even for the first time. to stand there be. it does is to. kick off knows it too but will have to wait for that as much they fourteen won't start here but in other stadiums around the league. season starts has been hard to swallow for their fans but having won their last two matches they appear to be gradually emerging from their crisis by and were hoping for their first home win in nearly three months against neighboring nuremberg time for coach nico co batch to decide to keep making changes or use a formula that he knows works decided to stop all the rotation and send out the same starting eleven that won him braman last week. surely sure it's
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uncomfortable for anyone who's left out but that's business and everyone needs to understand that you don't wish to. continue a team might be just walk by in need but how long will the stars put up with sitting on the bench. well they'll have to wait a while because the starters started out strong. ten minutes in code that seem to have made the right choice. you're sure commish took the corner kick. and robot live and he was a ready made dad to flick it in one nail for the hosts for the first half hour by end dominated while nuremberg could only sit deep. and watch so it was no wonder when levon dubs he was again on the board in the twenty seventh minutes. the polish striker has had a relatively slow season starts but maybe having a regular squad he can rely on has helped him find his rhythm. in moments.
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whenever the team has a good rhythm it becomes automatic speed of those and you can sometimes even play passes with your eyes closed. but even within the skewed view that owned by an attacking flair i was clearly back on display. at half time payback just stuck to his guns making no substitution changes make sense as the central defenders were winning seventy percent of their challenges and doing a fine job keeping their own half clear and once the pitch was cleared nicklaus you learn skewering boateng even had time to get forward into the attack. so had kovacs found the recipe for success to bring back the buy in ways of old. speaking of old by an it was the old time favorite from korea barry who tucked away the three nil to see all the way.
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schooling his first goal since last march is sure to give him an extra boost of confidence. whereas tentative nearing back the weakest away team in the league the two leading candidates they came out all struck and didn't even death to attack even manuel neuer was getting bored at the other end with nothing to do. the visitors first and only real chance came from sebastian cag and that was it. nonetheless sitting deep helped near him back keep the chaps at bank and they could be happy with conceding only sri goals. his plan to. stick with his winning lineup seemed to pay off in the end even if it was only against known back. by and will face better opponents in their upcoming matches but at least their complaints something that they haven't done in one thousand weeks. is a clean sheet that's important for our offense and it makes me happy well the coach
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was happy with the fans too and the buy in bonuses for now but for how long will the plan continue to work and how long until those i'm happy about starting on the bench start to get restless. for now the compacts. what's the matter detecting is chasing close behind first place dormant not good enough or glad but. risen to the very very happy to be in second place but we're not just dortmund chasers we want to play our game have a strong season and play attractively and i think we've accomplished a lot of that things from the food. here glad back her on a roll rafael made it one nil against rick got and helped usher in this seventh straight victory. lap backus film a chase thanks to florian oil's increasing their advantage while up on the members
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of our own go round the fray here. frank returns to the site of their greatest success in three decades they won the german cup in beilin lympics stadium last season. and now they're back as one of the best teams in the leak. but that didn't show against tatar. frankfurt coach already has sent out all the big guns but their famous attacking trio just couldn't connect u.k. which folds heads. just like auntie rabbit. and sebastiani the three of them have scored twenty four of frankfurt's thirteen goals. balin were happy to celebrate the league's second best attack misfiring.
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that marco grew into his first bundesliga goal really gave them something to cheer about. and now frankfurt a trending downwards with their second loss in iraq. it was a bit some match for this match made big church school the first own goal of his career and what some call it was one of the nicest own goals of the year. to how to distinguish across the force one felt like two hundred kilometers an hour i was following the attacker and marking well i thought i could clear it but i slipped a bit. not even three minutes later he was in a similar spot in the pool and again it retains his own mess down your contract was awarded the goal was to chuck cheech marin unsavable. i got i know if i got
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straining but there's no point complaining it happens you move on exactly don't despair push on top of mind kept going i managed to put the ball into somebody else's mess it was the shot belford in the first half. and in the seventy first minute a hundred things level it to true andre kratom it's not just his six goal in six games. it's. on. i think we're a bit obligated to entertain and when we can do that in addition to getting the results we need i'm happy with it we're happy about it. i'm i'm frank experience of time and speaking of which let's head to fraud. good. night in the black forest with christmas just around the corner. little freiburg show and toppled the giants from like say taking down the red bulls
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flagship team. good for straight to the big clubs. and drawing by us but how. visiting likes it started the weekend in said place and with the league's best defense but they couldn't keep up with christiane good to speedy counter down the way i know mangini is pissed and he flew straight the middle of. the i think go home after just twelve minutes pages instead of the season with freiburg dominating their opponents in a way few could have predicted. they were coming together and. we were talking well present in here and on the ground and playing football we had some lucky moments such true but
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we were always present. seiberg the energetic example set by coach could stand on the sidelines he's the model motivator when it comes to bringing the best out of the little guys. playing but might not have like six switches but they always make clever use of their opportunities like when like six day you implement kano's foul in the box lead to a penalty for the hosts. to frame by. snatched up in the offseason for five million euros stepped up and shot by that sunil was the gemini under twenty one players tools of the season for the proof of freiburg split the st h.s. picking up use national team as a lead sheet played its a fan and praised strategy. i was like i'm for intelligent tackling strong women follow through on the name and then always good playing for
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the looks or reasons we were to question the logic today. like six zero to attack but most of their fifteen shots remakes teams just fine but we're compact in defense and ready afforded leipzig truly threatening chances. do you really believe that included like six have now lost four straight away matches in which they finally found the back of the net one. what does coach brad frank nick think of this round it's because of trouble before it was an all round weak showing from us prostrating because we really wanted to pick up points today and we just couldn't do it as of the initial. front but made up for minimal possession with deadly precision the game decided came in the fifty second because of the speed of light for us after just two points since so much is private and some relief and three to five points just in time for the holidays time
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to get the christmas party stasis. but the spirit of the game gives us reason to celebrate and we earned it but we can't overdo it. because the christmas party like you can do some good food and head back home. freiburg celebrated their home whenever the season again slight sage and climbed to eleventh place. coach team. and fans kicked off the christmas party at the stadium. did you know the kickoff is now on you tube with the world of football. it was north of mexico. we travel the world can ring a few how high tensions are running i'm going to say you know the stars never people of course i discuss football crews here in. the morning during the day and
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it's going to go on. as a football kickoff on you tube. it's a new. brinkman country and coast it shows and especially lucky hands against dissent off because it was all about playing the wild cards. martin hannett came off the bench and changed the game in the seventy first minute. he said not here on the field than fighting the pine. kind as it's going after nobody likes to sit on the bench including me i'm really happy that i came in and got to take part in the victory. type simply by time content. and the second wild card came in not long after eighteen year old youngster josh sargent celebrated his one does he get premier by not showing his first gold only two minutes after stepping onto the
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page. but the stop says can score to kevin miller but opened the scoring from the top of the box. and yet desoto scored this well with joe de luca back here putting away a penalty. the wild called save the subs to find a match when the strength of brain would have ended for me was. live accusing have been inconsistent for weeks last season's dominance has become a rarity and things were close this time around against out spoke to me it didn't have to be but later cusins attack had frozen over they looked absolutely harmless . oh. well the bunkering out book didn't make it easy.
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as players we have a duty as individuals and as a team where missions in are where we want to be right now and that's why we have to work hard every week. it was definitely hard work but look it's a lottery are broke the deadlock believe accused in the seventy fifth minute. and helped deliver a hard won victory. not everyone jumped for joy someone will home win over how to book would usually be a given. and it went on their way to their first away win in a long time ago smites put a controversial penalty call settled at his range feet matej touchup the theatrical fooling around of his folks just before the final whistle. and won the cold. in the end and i'll be honest with a period really really furious that a penalty like that go in the way of victory he was
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a clear dive and i don't understand why the ref didn't watch the reviews because it doesn't have to be told. and said daniel brzezinski equalised the hosts leak case notes minutes and victim i'm a true fan of the cage and thank lighten the fighter especially because he's signed head long legs to hendrick guidance and the goal. of the fountain penalty ended one zero down i believe more. goal celebrations for thanks indicted to catch a plane. now for the moment you've all been waiting for. the so-called rudolph it's the dubby in germany in one corner we have shell in the traditional royal blue. and in the other corner we have dortmund black and yellow.
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match day fourteen saw the ninety third meeting between the two sides they didn't have to travel far to make it happen only twenty five kilometers lie between them despite that short distance the club's a worlds apart. for the supporters the clubs are closer to religions than teams that unites and divides them up once. nothing matters more here than there darby. and it can't be an old rematch for the coaches either canada. this is and this to be in everyone's told me it's an important game and a special derby and we're not far away from one another twenty minutes or so by bus but that's part of it that's normal for a derby it's a clear rivalry i know when to. other what we need to work magic just a puff out their chests and pump up our confidence it's a derby and we want to give all we have and show ourselves well.
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thankfully things were a tad more emotional on the pitch than at the press conferences before shelter stumbled into the w twelve place truly struggling meanwhile don't wonder outperformed even the rosiest expectations and a running away with belief the difference between the teams was immediately apparent but what can explain the gulf between them. i think michael royce is the big. dortmund when he's on form they're on another level basing on a stove. top one captain marco royce twenty nine years old two hundred forty seven league matches one hundred make goals sixty nine assists he's already scored nine and assisted seven this season yet woods is clearly dalton's difference maker and his coach lucien farber saw his boys all over the pitch early in his first ever really dubey none more so than royce he threw his arm up seven minutes in and then
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launched the bullsh traits to thomas delaney the danish international heading home his first goal in a duel in jersey one nil i was first of all it was a good good very very good ball from marco and i talked to pocket before and said please give me a little screen block the guy from the try to get in there. he did a very good job. we should have that is like second i second assistant something it was roy's is eighth assist which puts him on top of the league catastrophe for shell and a perfect start for the black and yellow was. of course roy's isn't solely responsible for dalton's unbeaten run in the league his team is strong on the pull and just as good at winning it back. i they're also incredibly quick in moving the ball forward. but it's often roy's he finds himself in the
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middle of things setting the scene. like when he connected with the league's top striker. jocasta twenty five years old nine matches for dove and ten goals prise the dubby he was scoring every twenty eight minutes shelters whole team only tallied every eighty three minutes. shot because dominica to disco carney lacks a fine. squad a true team that was all too apparent in the derby which wasn't the most beautiful much. but the emotions were there. and shelter at least held them own verbal. but that was about it and show. what incidents go say before this match . which was the once difference maker but what happens when he makes the womankind of different species to have a look at a fifty eight minute one off the video review which is filed it's
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a penalty. shell couldn't care that it was a questionable coach daniel caligiuri finishing the school by one of the top of the bus at that so the usual heated states and of course don't mince key man was sick of it by a bit was nothing like watching adult neighbors fighting over a choice have. shot the undefeated in the last five ws and won the last one in april two nil but that's just history now with gold and miles ahead of their rivals . the second home was on eventful until the seventy first minutes when jayden sencha took over. have died shaken sencha eighteen is young five goals eight assists.
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the youngster from england played two up with what's likely his most important goal in black and yellow a job a goal to be inscribed in memory especially because it was the winner i have. i'm really happy for him i'm especially proud of his strong mind set to play so well after such a tough week for them and when he scored you saw how important it was for him you know what's going on talk is innocent nothing think by. i my grandmother passed away so that goes for her unplugged because one pope would seem to get three point. good ones first off the women since twenty fifteen the table toppers remain undefeated and now a whopping twenty two points above if it's a right. ok state fourteen wasn't a goal first but three matches ended decisively for the hunting's the three male
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and only one team one away from home that was dortmund did that big big win i shall cut. but what actually makes that when it's such a big deal. what does success mean to you personally to the supporters of both a dog and i think it means. a hell of a deal. that's that's what i've heard so far you know. this week people come up to us and to me personally and said like. we don't care about the big just when they're the dobie and then it's all good but but you know. we try to do good in both competitions but the dobie commission that leak. it. well done film and television bragging rights and stable southwest's
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that has still following seconds by an announcer well frank that's unlike say fifty eased off the gas pedal. in the bottom half of the table shocker for both trading places otherwise nothing changes last week not much left to talk about other than this moment that meant so much to davi hero jason sanchez. you are. so doggy i'm from england and i know what obviously about sixty to sixty. six dollars.
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testifying against assad seeking justice for syria. and fifteen minutes on the t.w. . like we were. when we were out he presented americans at some point in our lives really experience hardship listen up. double. binds so this is the view from my seat in the horn section. sarah willis knows her stuff. is. going to be the most incredible. musicians and conductors. and she shows just how diverse classical music can be.
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sarah's music contemporary classical. d.w. . bursts. home to of species. a home worth saving. those are big changes and most start with small steps global ideas tell stories of creative people and innovative projects around the world. news that. lawyers do strange solutions and the forestation. interactive content teaching the next generation of fundamental touches. using all channels available to inspire people to take action and more determined to build something here for the next generation globally as the environment series of global three thousand on t.w. and online. frankfurt
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. international gateway to the best connections self road and trail. located in the heart a few connected to the home with. experience outstanding shopping and dining offers and try alice services. biala guest at frankfurt am. managed by from. britain's parliament will not vote on prime minister teresa mayes breaks a deal on tuesday may admitted lawmakers would reject the deal by a significant margin she said she needed more time for urgent talks with e.u. leaders european president donald tusk has called for a meeting to discuss break that on thursday but he said the bloc will not read
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negotiate the terms of the deal. french president manuel my car has reached out to protesters who reject his reform plan c. they proposed raising france's minimum wage by a hundred euros a month and scrapping a solidarity tax for pensioners and excepted partial blame for the protesters anger at all but also warned the violence would not be tolerated and often one of. the recipients of this year's nobel peace prize have called on world leaders to. so you can action against sexual violence as a weapon of war congolese dr denis mukwege an iraqi activist now the emira were accepting the prize at the ceremony in a slow. about one hundred fifty countries have adopted a landmark pact on migration at the united nations conference in america the proposed agreement aims to tackle challenges arising from the mass movement of people but the pact has come under heavy criticism with several countries including the u.s. pulling out of the process. shift
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living in the digital world. today give a flying displacement. three d. holograms of actors and setting the stage in a tiny box but first. computer six barcelona now has a brothel with female androids a spanish engineer is working on programming his models to express emotions how will these new robotic sex workers affect human interaction. get sexy. i want sex. talk to me. sex workers with feelings centuries antos an engineer from barcelona is working on sex robots that
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can simulate human emotions so i have a lot of the texture of emotion that was like. i have a brain i have the architecture of a brain that gun express emotions in a given way that i thought and then he thought well i have a humanoid i followed a humanoid system in the sex industry and they said ok no we need computers that are available. ready to assemble and then the technology that i can use. together. his sex robots have sensors that respond to speech and touch the data use computers in an artificial brain which then signals the robot to take on various emotional states friendly romantic sexy. a robot from santos workshop costs about six thousand euros. and there are bidders this footage quotes and then up to forty percent of men in europe could picture having sex with a sex robot six
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a women not so much but there's potential for that so and so. barcelona sex industry has recognised that potential here the first brought from offering sex robots was opened in two thousand and seventeen for one hundred euros an hour in men can live out their sexual fantasies with adults but how will sex with robots change our love life robo psychologist martina moderate thinks these new sex companions pose a threat to real relationships imo so i want to say that ninety five percent of the sex robots currently on the market comply with absolutely stereotypical feminine cliches. so completely stereotypical passive women. on the one hand that strengthens the objectification of what is human of the human body often the female body. all this on the other hand these robots bring very antiquated very gender stereotypical relationship dynamics back into the
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bedroom. and then she left him a lot. but sex robots can also be useful the foundation for responsible robotics think they can be used therapeutically for sexual healing. professor thomas special on all things humans can develop real feelings for sex robots. which is if not for me. i strongly suspect that we will be quick to build a personal relationship with these devices. i'm pretty sure that owners of such appliances won't take long to name their dolls position and. sometimes doesn't want this relationship to be one sided that's why he tries to construct his dolls to produce human like and emotional as possible. but. and that leads to the question what makes us human in the first place. the sense of
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the self who. why do i think i am myself what making me decide that these is me this is one of the of the things that i was always interested me and that made me think of an architecture for a brain. disease. are invading our love life visionary or problematic these new sexual companions are going to take some getting used to. ship says no to humanoid sex slaves. and no networkers digital innovators committed to special projects today we need game designer to look around. when he was a teen i was forced to flee from syria he came to austria without his family one way for him to forget the war was to play computer games. i was just like. trying to escape that as much as i can with playing video games when there is
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a lot for city on when it's war in syria and you're eighteen more than eighteen years old then you must join the military if you're going to join the military it's either to kill someone or get killed. he wanted to share his gaming passion and tell others about his fate so with the help of developers that specialize in social issues he created path out here players assume a doulos role and learn about day to day life in a war zone and what being a refugee is like throughout the game the real abdulla caramba appears in pepper's grave situations with silly cliches. come on i mean you don't have gallows in the streets not in my hometown every home town in syria. he wants to show what it's like to be a refugee and he seems to have accomplished that path out has even led to a nomination for the scholarship program indie prize. to work as
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a game designer in syria. it's a long way to do it. we'll get there. and now standing center stage latest technology makes it possible to create virtual movies that show actors from all sides but it poses entirely new challenges for technicians and creatives alike the first studio has now opened near berlin. viewers i do-i with the actors it's all possible thanks to virtual reality technology but filming is complex the characters' must be recreated with a three d. holographic image after all you never know which angle viewers will be watching from recordings are made in so called value metric video studios like value can at the bubbles back film park near berlin in the design of it confirmed the actors come in and off filmed and each detail is automatically recorded without any
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further steps needed every wrinkle in my movements in my expressions in my gestures it captures my every movement if you. want it this volumetric studio was four meters high and equipped with thirty do i take cameras making it able to film actors from all angles simultaneously then special software creates a three d. holograms of the characters that can be inserted into any scene. terabytes of men and that means we're recording an extremely large and complex data set because if you were to copy that on to ordinary c.d.'s it would take about three thousand altogether i told. movie makers like canadians define rich we are now exploring the new possibilities this technology offers but it's not enough to know how to use it producers need to create a new method of storytelling. i do you deal with the world when people can watch three sixty degree but just like in real life we need to keep the attention center
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so the film maker is not moving the camera because. you have the camera you watching whatever you want to watch but then there is sound special sound so we can add directing and you did and if you were and depending on the way you be you might see or not see something so you have ways two and two and three and that the narrative depending on the behavior of the person in the content with a three hundred sixty degree panorama viewers can discover new worlds and take on unusual perspectives such as that of a toy robot seeing the world through his eyes shows those things in a totally new light. and they can explore together new forms of storytelling so that's where you know i don't see. we put seen many vi's a reproduction of what cinema cinema as its only language and its only reason to be
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and i think in many video we have to explore what it could be we still don't know what it could be three d. holograms of actors could become a valuable tool but picture quality is not balanced enough to produce full length feature films yet. there's been some use to physicians i'm sure it'll make rapid advances and that other production science will spring up around the world right now there's only a handful of these kinds of studios. from the bottom all the random all standards and quality will improve and then it will make a breakthrough in the market. with. initial projects have already been completed using these new three d. recordings and by twenty nineteen volumetric studios are expected to be firmly established in the movie industry. shift says often you horizons. and no short and sweet to shift snapshots learning german with you whether at home on your computer or out
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and about with your smartphone just beginner's courses called. this online language course teaches german grammar vocabulary and more in two hundred twenty eight short films. as inputs you get as it shows what it's like to arrive in germany and learn the language it also shows every day challenges. the short films are accompanied by some fourteen thousand language exercises. the internationally acclaimed learning tools by use academy make learning languages fun. find out more at dot com slash learn german. and that was our snapshot. and as always to round off shift exit to our internet find of the week today and our box. in this video video clip the
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start is always in the center right in the center in a perfect square or box just like the title of the film. photographer enderby meyers lives in new york and loves creating interesting arrangements some are confusing. others are harmoniously colorful some are full of surprises. or just cute. his movies offer a stage for his favorite objects from daily life. where practical and artistic i. and next week just a few euros could get you huge returns at least that's what sports betting providers claim but players risk not being able to kick the habit compulsive gambling next week on shift.
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blame everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression of. the right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference. and to seek receive and influence information and ideas through immediate oakland douglas' of fun to use linux the seventieth anniversary of the un declaration of human rights article nineteen fall on g.w. . and then sit there and you. think. you know this is you five minutes four minutes. as an hour and a beauty. he has it all. he fits in the
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pantheon of the great tennis certainly he's one for the ages of. the buck. skull turner for the ages starts december twenty second t.w. . with him had to be done because of his well i and spike if i had known the boat would be that small i never would have gone on. i would not have put myself and my parents in without danger of god it's a theme that they're going to give us leave with. that one little bit that you them i have serious problems on a personal level and i was unable to live there with my time going to. i want to know their story and for my greatest fair fight against my will
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information for margaret's. president thanks for giving us the opportunity this is your first limited romance watching an interview with bashar al assad in which the syrian president is confronted with photos of people tortured to death or pass sad rejects the claim that they were killed by his own security forces you can bet you thought you just spoke by god i just figured you was i was there and my friend died in front of my eyes because of torture. until this very moment there's people who are dying because of torture if we are getting the civilians who are we defending syria because support for assad dismisses criticism as efforts to demonize his regime and surely you'd rather have been tortured everyone i met in the present in tortured.
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to lie it's a big lie in it's it is a way of defense but the government against the people you know the execution is part of the sudan government voice if you want to do with they can make it legally but this view here for decades they don't need anything secret. execution according to the law also the trial is illegal and a lot of the lawyers and defend the prisoners. the old hold the great big one or two minutes to see if this. execution the people we saw. one.
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november the fourth twenty sixteen syrian human rights lawyer and while boney launches an appeal on facebook. we are looking for people who were abducted taken to intelligence service jails two one five two two seven and two three five and tortured them we want to press charges in germany and send a clear message to the torture is in syria there is no impunity. one hundred people responded that same day offering to testify as witnesses. khalid around once was in germany when he saw the appeal he had heard good things about the syrian human rights lawyer albon he was known for his courage in defending countless political detainees at trials in syria. as or never
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less. i was surprised actually. here i had an opportunity to bring criminal charges. despite not being german. yeah exactly and chance for me so as i said it was an opportunity. and as soon as i saw the appeal. i talked to and were right away. in twenty fifteen khalid and his wife beer were able to escape and come to germany where they were recognized dance political refugees they had taken part in the mass protests against our society in twenty eleven it's peaceful activists plus they were on the syrian intelligence agencies wanted list at the end of twenty eleven they had been arrested by military intelligence in damascus and taken to the notorious branch to one find they are now to give evidence to the german attorney
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general all the karpin strip in this present they were like totally like ruin the quiet for a week or whatever it is because it's not something that they are used to you know there was a shock to get into the room and they just tell you and they never told you to take off your clothes it was like a surprise thing you know take off your pants and took off her dress and to come to your cup to link up and in every step they will ask you to do it again you know and you will be are you serious are going to be like totally naked you would never know it was stripped they stripped me when i went. totally naked and he did sexually harass they they thought they might do in whatever he tried to do something khaled does not want to talk about the man a torture only about how he was forced to watch the torture isn't work happening at
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the four told by four and then he says by saying they were tortured. was torture in itself and. the in the these that by i had to go down on my knees and watch. they have my of my own with that they held my head up by my hair to force me to watch. long chain they had a long chain with a hook on the airline and the hawk and on the end beat the two prisoners on the back with the hood. on and with the help of open on the fly fish it is hell i can see the exposed flesh on and. kind of the and for me personally for me there's that image was the worst thing i experienced. on the show. there is now widespread evidence of syrian intelligence running a network of detention facilities called branches all across damascus branch to one
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five was the destination for many of the demonstrators arrested during protests like khaled and appear the interrogation and torture rooms are said to be located in the six and seven stories. branch two for eight is linked to executions conducted without trial. branch two to seven has seen thousands of cases of arbitrary detention as usual in underground cells two to seven is the branch with the highest number of deaths the syrian air forces intelligence when is considered the most brutal agency one of its torture divisions is located in measure a at a military airport inmates here dying from torture starvation and the general conditions of detention. berlin summer twenty seventeen. a confidential meeting at the european center for constitutional and human rights to prepare the criminal charges against the torturers the german attorneys here
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specialize in international law they work together with syrian lawyer and journalist must end darwish in human rights and while bernie's. instead of accusing individual torturers the team are targeting the top of the chain of command high ranking officials from syrian intelligence services. to change. international law expert patrick crocker explains to colleagues attending the meetings our german law also covers officials who failed to prevent crimes. not for something he did but for something that you didn't do and what you didn't do is he did stop the people that committed the crimes he didn't stop the crowds but. the question is is the lawyers know that officials did know what was going on and not just because of reports of torture leaking to the outside world is.
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in their view. that. it is. well having themselves been imprisoned by the regime for five years and darwish for three and a half. in two thousand and two germany adopted the code of crimes against international law meaning it can now try crimes against humanity war crimes and genocide in germany even if they were committed elsewhere in accordance with the principle of universal jurisdiction this is what at this stage is utterly unrealistic right now and to think that syria itself could take these cases to trial. because he the principle enables any state in the world to assume jurisdiction and investigate these crimes. do you. want
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stop by and potentially in germany for example and also prosecute the perpetrator should they enter the country. despite them having no connection to germany despite the crime having been committed in syria and then probably being a syrian national that is the background to the principle of universal jurisdiction . and while bunny is reluctant to take time out from his work he does make exceptions for journalists due to the public safety factor something we learn from decades of cases in damascus representing those persecuted for political reasons. his commitment to human rights and freedom of expression would not have been possible without the involvement of journalists from outside syria and also afforded him protection but after syria signed an international convention against torture in two thousand and four how bernie was deemed too dangerous for the regime.
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we hope to be inside to do something we know he will not do something we cause serious side business any agreement international agreement and in go it in. so we'd like to use this agreement to say stop is here and in fact there is that we have to do it because i think i spoke about. the issue in place in syria. one year after his release in twenty eleven his friend and fellow activist to quiz abducted the figure of all forat in the syrian legal world to this day nobody has seen or heard from him since . when he feels it is his duty to continue their common struggle for justice and the key issue here in the jails run by the intelligence agencies everybody from
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zero to from the stories of the day she needs who were released or their parents who the patient they got in the jail or in the station. but they didn't spoke about it because afraid they didn't spoke loudly public the more secret weapon of these three seeing to put the people in fear in here or just feel. terrible. fear. this is a secret weapon it was a petition to me except of course like. manson darwish also has a photo of missing lawyer took on his war alongside photos of friends and colleagues who have likewise disappeared darwish is
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a lawyer and activist for the syrian center for media and freedom of expression. darwish founded the center in damascus in two thousand and four when it was raided for a third time in twenty twelve the air force intelligence service arrested fourteen staff including darwish and his wife you're out of baghdad. after being the last to be released in twenty fifteen he fled to berlin since then he has been continuing to struggle to ensure a democratic and peaceful syria. especially the youth whose. faces a scandal for. torture the bad condition. the families who feel that they. are ignored and nobody care about their suffering. and really if we don't find.
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justice and solutions for those people for food just there's no justice on the. human right it's. that it's not that fate so we push it to go to the extent of as i. thought. it was a sham like a. human rights organizations estimated well over one hundred thousand people in syria are in captivity or have disappeared eighty percent of them following government orders. many families in syria have somebody who is missing where they detained or disappeared. marzan darwish and here are by their determined to ensure that these people are not forgotten they launched a global search for witnesses from syria in their efforts to file criminal charges
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. the united nations have proved to be a singular disappointment for seven years the body has been observing events in syria starting with the revolution and its violent suppression the un human rights council set up a commission of inquiry which has since compiled thousands of documents on crimes against humanity in syria but no action has been taken darwish embodied ten what is now its fourteenth session. in this we cannot allow impunity and if impunity prevails in syria and should work crimes and crimes against humanity will become legal everywhere morgan one hundred without legal review the terror will continue to escalate it will work that is why justice is so important to us numbers mean blood. the human rights activists want to be heard before the united nations as
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a voice of syria's civilian population as a voice committed soley to human rights and not compromised by overriding political interests. we continue to strongly support the mandate of the commission of inquiry and welcome its critical work in investigating agree just human rights violations and abuses as well as violations of international humanitarian law of which the syrian government remains the primary perpetrator but widespread practice of enforced disappearances torture and execution by the regime reinforces the need for a transition to a government that can protect the rights of all serious demands consistently dismissed by the syrian government and backed up by russia in that election the election commission bases its work on statements from anonymous witnesses which is not credible. he uses reports from dubious sources to and from governments hostile
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to syria. the commission is not trustworthy. you're not the commissioner makes no mention of the war crimes that were committed with weapons from the united states and if you would you. want to keep the human rights activists are determined to prevent the politicians having the only opinion on events in their country you know about the young woman arrested by the syrian regime on terrorism charges presents home central demand. that would mean a lot that are just as a democratic transition and accountability that we cannot proceed without official recognition of the crimes committed without compensation for the victims as part of an investigation by a transitional justice. a camel a law that. when it's the turn of nongovernmental organizations to speak of the end of the commission meeting most journalists are no longer listening. all eyes
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ears and cameras on this day or on carla del ponte the syrian commission's most determined special investigator resigned because even in the seventh year of the investigation there is still no criminal court for syria on behalf of the international community she has documented the most serious human rights violations to no avail. resign to put an end to my frustration as a former prosecutor after more than five years active in the commission we recall not up chain from the international community and from the security council it is the law should putting in place a trade beyond a tribe you know the dock for that but for the crimes of that that komi did in syria and we are in that seven year of the commission of crimes severe crimes against humanity including genocide and war crimes can be tried in the
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international criminal court in the hague one hundred twenty four countries have read. it's all thora to but syria is not among them which is why the hague is not an option here the last resort would be for the security council to have a case referred to a special tribunal on syria. but so far attempts have been vetoed by russia and china. carla del ponte he said she did not want to be an alibi for inaction by the international community. so it's a disease that right now i don't see a way out. i don't see the political will to achieve justice actually that other. else and i still imagine that the high officials have political and military leaders might one day appear in court. but if it is a little bit ahead for the host but i have to admit it's only
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a small unfortunately and health. and human rights violations documented in syria are appalling. no you for i have come across a new methods of torture i had never heard of before in forty year olds for a living banda most importantly. other torch it involves keeping people alive for as long as possible before they die. and that is unbelievable this is all gladly meanwhile the syrian human rights activists refuse to give up on their course. i know that tomorrow there is nothing to change we will not get to model my man whose results were this is a process we should keep fighting keep trying to achieve some succeed and this
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is a mile apart from the justice for all it to take time need a little for the for the underwater the most from what convert to keep the voice of the victim the voice of the femi as the listen here in the united nations over. a beer five hoot and holler to our us new things who get dangerous when one thousand sided to join the attempted revolution in twenty eleven anyone talking of freedom and democracy risked your g. forces began shooting at the demonstrators they considered alternative forms of protest the would not make them direct targets. was like i don't know more than hundred a lot of number of balls and they would they were to freedom. democracy and we just threw a lot of number of balls from the street the same see the cars work on and this and
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the board could keep going down until it nearby the house that the sheriff had lived in and it was so beautiful and another one that with the red thing it was like also good for love it in the lakes we have a lot of fountains in the mosques and a lot of squares and the color that this water would read the same time we were we were like covering this border there were like hundreds of people killed in homes and. it was protests likely that led them to being added to the intelligence agency's wanted list before the first year of the revolution was over agents tracked down khalid and a beer and took them to branch to one five. years old that. was. when it comes to the issue of human rights violations the syrian community in berlin rallies together
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they include torture survivors and families who do not know where their loved ones are or whether they are even alive. the organizers of this meeting in berlin also invited kathleen mushy ul head of the un's new investigation on syria's war crimes in syria established despite fierce resistance from russia instead of just gathering documents she has been tasked with preparing court proceedings despite the absence of assyria tribunals the former french challenge praises the efforts of the syrian lawyers and is frank in her criticism of the international community's failures it is a civil society not originally the the prosecutors are the judges were taking the lead in the civil society that decides that report is enough and now we need action deflection they call them. very courageous and. and very professional prosecutors that they have cases for marzan darwish mushy or elles
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independent status is essential. their witnesses are afraid of becoming victims of revenge again once the regime has regained complete control is that is why we need a neutral institution affiliated to the u.n. so that the witnesses feel comfortable testifying and do not have to be silent on what happened. why them and. june the twenty ninth twenty seventeen and historic day in cars were home to germany supremum court. manson darwish gave testimony to germany's attorney general. it was the first time the journalist was able to speak before judicial officials without fearing his statements could land him in prison. yeah it's true that as the locals are the most fun but then things that over the
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weekends send the message that there is no more impunity and just as it's possible even for the sealion of the order to have been. released so this level as a human being we don't accept this kind of war crime against them in the city of humanity and say oh this is what the what a problem for a lot of. muslim darwish was questioned by the german state attorneys over the course of two days he testified on his own three year imprisonment and how he was tortured daily for an entire year you also reported about friends in the same prison who did not survive the ordeal i am a trainee dentist was tortured to death and there are photos of girls whose body and those of over six thousand others. all the syrian military photographer had to take pictures of those tortured to death after over two years he could no longer
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stomach it and deserted subsequently smuggling his photos out of the country he is codenamed caesar for his own protection his pictures catalogue the systematic human rights crimes by the regime in damascus. on this particular day darwish was interviewed for twelve hours with many traumatic memories resurfacing. of these. countries. the german attorney general was unusually candid in his assessment of the photos taken by caesar documenting the merger is torture. he sees that in the scenes or files testified to thousands of ordeals thousand thousands of desecrated bodies to mention we have subjected your files to a legal and forensic examination and i know you mean its engine and. we want to
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clarify why these people had to die. and more investigations also have the aim of your terminating who the originator is about fish who is responsible for these people having to die in such conditions and most indecent we believe that this user files are authentic the. interest and it's and. france has also opened investigations into the responsible parties from the syrian regime. five years ago the life of. change radically the french syrian and his wife stopped going dancing and playing bridge and going out to meet friends. they had received a phone call from a beta sister in law in damascus the syrian air force intelligence service had conducted a nighttime raid on her home in the upscale embassy district first taking away her son patrick. the next day they picked up obeyed his brother. a french teacher
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a fellow prisoner released shortly afterwards told him what he saw. they had to stand with their heads against the wall for twelve hours i mean. i was in had taken off his slippers. then in the afternoon they brought patrick in. they were forbidden to speak with. dad no problem i'm fine. his father asked were you tortured and. no no i'm all right but he wanted to reassure his father but after what the witness told us we did have the impression that they had tortured the boy. then they were separated again. then was led into a cell and his last words we knew were let me out of here i'm suffocating that was
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it the last sign of life. durbar decided to take action using contacts in syria proved a hopeless undertaking he then addressed the french president the foreign minister and other senior officials his brother and nephew like himself are french citizens the bar received polite and sympathetic responses from the ellie's a palace. you're off a lot on the door of i went right to the top. but nothing else happened at all. not immediately but then french t.v. picked up on the story the international federation for human rights intended to refer the case to the french judiciary. then file charges in paris concerning inforced disappearance with lawyer aspect that now finally state prosecutors
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launched proceedings. with the assad regime providing zero information on the whereabouts of the band's brother and nephew witness testimony is vital. claim aspect tard contacted human rights organizations to find people who had been in the same prison at the same time bill forat is in syria denied all accusations of kidnapping. and while bruni in berlin informed her that there was one witness in germany he had likewise been in the prison run by the air force intelligence service for them in the. law and according to alba name on the witness was able to provide detailed testimony. is one which officers serve there. how interrogations were conducted. and how the general conditions were there. to.
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get. a p.c. fashion week that the fact that a dictatorial regime makes people disappear and provides no information for the family is a form of terror it is political terror that is used deliberately it's an organized set up the fact that obeyed and the whole family are in the dark about the fate of patrick and mars then is the decision of the bash al asad regime and that's what we're trying to say it's organized and it's had. there are orders involved. to say it was planned this way fast. the next day and while bernie arrives in paris as does the witness from germany who did not wish to be filmed because he still has relatives living in syria. revealing his identity would put them at risk of reprisals potentially fatal from the regime
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. that fear also complicates the work of investigators in europe across the continent there are witnesses of victims and also perpetrators who have defected the authorities in paris only have access to the witness from germany because the syrian lawyer was able to gain his confidence. and while goony intends to testify himself before french investigators another in cling of hope for abated. as in germany the aim is to see international arrest warrants issued against the heads of syrian intelligence a warning shot to those responsible if they arrested while crossing an international border they could then face trial a move also intended to discourage the perpetrators from committing further acts of violence. for four years now abated
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the bar has been waiting for a sign of life from his brother and nephew. ours has found a job as a mechanical engineer in the german port city of the smart which will be the small family's new house. his daughter years mina has never set foot in syria her parents' home land. i've moved more than eight times in the last five years. yeah but there's no place like home or if you shop at the. hope to go back soon my mother we ask him what home means to him how much. i don't yet have a clear answer on that. and for me. home is where i am.
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and where i find my goal of mine. the outbreak of the revolution meant to dream come true for a beer she was overjoyed to see syrians daring to go out onto the streets and peacefully stand up for their rights what has since happened there however she finds extremely distressing. over abortion have become a civil war and the media and our revolution to become that i suppose it's that it's all over that no one ever talked about the regime anymore and this is really hurt us because there is a lot of people being. killed in a lot of people being tortured because the now president you know. so but.
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more. than. anwar alberni wants to hear the testimony of additional witnesses in norway his only option is to travel from one country to the next to prepare for the case until perhaps there is after all an international tribunal on syria. has alberni waits to meet a witness he receives a devastating phone call. but call it tells him of rumors that his old friend and colleague has died in captivity that had been no news of him for five years the rumors are unconfirmed but the call is deeply upsetting to everyone who knew him. sad news for us anyway when. the us. he was arrested owned.
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by disney all of it's moved a lot of washington about his being more to the. albert ne meets the witnesses in his hotel as sam was twenty two when he was arrested by syrian military intelligence the young man now wants to submit a detailed account of his ordeal the lawyer looks for evidence that corroborates reports from other witnesses before combining the individual's statements to form a broader picture. of what is assigned was crammed into a four by four meters cell with one hundred ten other people about labor stripped and forced to stand all day long they were allowed to go to the toilet once
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a day and had to sleep on top of each other. all they were given to eat was bread and dirty water many suffocated others died of starvation or because their wounds from torture were left untreated. it's been six months since a beer and khaled filed criminal charges with german prosecutors with the help of anwar alberni the case has set a precedent being the first example of war crimes and human rights violations being investigated while the conflict in question is still ongoing actually this calm down in its parts of from get a promotion actually they can just as is one or like this a big name part of their evolution that was started as a lever and we just want to continue we are not going to surrender the powers like
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everything but the south that it's a message to the people to have people that being to the family that has black sons being killed in torture it's it's it's worth it for the people that's told the president that we are thinking about it and we are doing something. that is in a way. you know not in in only like talking or only like. having a report or whatever we are we are trying to do like actually on. the day on which and what i'll do need delivers his testimony to the german attorney general in counselor is perhaps one of the most important in his life. we start the girls from. gaza yes. it's a bit because it's my go to my good to help just. to find. some.
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hope hold on. to the syrian. and while bernie will be naming the officials overseeing the torture and the senior intelligence service officers who have been committing serious human rights violations with complete impunity the most senior is alie man look head of all four intelligence services and twenty twelve he was appointed director of the national security bureau. left ten a general rafi chair how dame head of military intelligence until twenty fifteen and considered a close adviser to us sat on strategic issues. his successor mohamed is also among the accused gen mohammad quaalude for was the head of the notorious torture center branch two three five. head of the air force intelligence service is considered the most brutal official likewise stands accused of involvement in the
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violent suppression of the civilian population the german prosecutor has two objectives. next to my fifty inversely so those people who are parties to these crimes by those who were responsible for torture intially work rhymes and crimes against humanity is the kind of we want them to know that germany is not a safe haven. and to the victims we also want to give them a clear message that they are being taken seriously your frame is to investigate the suffering they were subjected to and also to look at the perpetrators provided they're here in germany or europe and make them accountable and of them sort of. that is the hope for the syrians the hope for justice and a life in freedom. about
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. how we can get them to. stand up in. syria. and then for this or so i think it's very important as the sort of culpability of justice. here myself. i hope for those for the. blows happy. with my choice i hope the source my actual the truth will become but i would not leave this . fight should the british are fighting back. maybe i should see that you're not a privacy right. inputs folk of mine i think of my daughter. and so i wanted to feel comfortable in the future when she might ask me for it is what
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did you do better than it has to come out on the fourth i want to be able to send an unambiguous message to my daughter now faced with i'm that we did do something matters my daughter she can the soviet it was it must have been. why i will act and i will live as a person has a bright side and no one has the right to take my rights from me this is why i want my daughter to see to see me not pm. labeled. or of following up to follow the lead without thinking. i just i will just leave the life there would let my daughter know that she can do anything she wants if it's the right thing to do.
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read the real trial it resides. when i come from there are lots of people in fact know that the breed in the future was not just democracy to me that's one reason i'm passionate about people and aspirations and they can sense. the television reporters tried to fit in but in after the fall of the flood in one our member thinking at a time if the girl in broken for what happened if people come together and unite for a pool. when i do the news that often confronts difficult situations war conflicts being discussed dealt i see despite my job to confront was the media's on policies and development to put the spotlight and issues that matter most hunger to security question nationalisation. a lot has been achieved with so much more needs to be
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john and i think people have to be at the heart of solutions my name is a mcclatchy and i work at the delta. britain's parliament will not photon prime minister teresa mayes breaks a deal on tuesday may admitted lawmakers would reject the deal by a significant margin she said she needed more time for urgent talks with e.u. leaders european president donald tusk has called for a meeting to discuss breaks it on thursday but he said the bloc will not read negotiate the terms of the deal. french president manuel my car has reached out to protesters who reject his reform plan c. they proposed raising france's minimum wage by one hundred euros a month and scrapping a solidarity tax for pensioners and excepted partial blame for the protesters anger
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of also warned the violence would not be tolerated and often most of. the recipients of this year's nobel peace prize have called on world leaders to take action against sexual violence as a weapon of war crime to lese dr denis mukwege you and iraqi activist how do you were accepting the prize of the ceremony and costello. about one hundred fifty countries have adopted a landmark pact on migration at a united nations conference in america the proposed agreement aims to tackle challenges arising from the mass movement of people but the pact has come under heavy criticism with several countries including the u.s. pulling out of the process. tonight two of europe's most powerful leaders engulfed in crisis the vision of europe's future under fire across france anger at him money well the president of reform who's now cursed as president of the rich and british prime minister to
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resign may for more than two years she has sworn breaks it means breaks it but today in parliament it became painfully clear there is no consensus on what brics it should be no agreement that it should be at all i'm bored go off in berlin this is the day. you. just. want to brics it. the government has lost control of invents and is in complete disarray because there will be no enduring and successful breakfast without some compromise on both sides of the day if the prime minister cannot be clear that she can and will make renegotiate the deal then she must make way and. i don't even know what i'm going to
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jermain from the players i took up the responsibility of being prime minister of this great country i've known in the mind you too used to all know the results of that spectrum. and coming up later on not so young a grand crisis for its president emanuel mccrone breaks his silence on the yellow vest protests that have many in his country seeing red and maybe i have given you the impression that i did not care that i had more action priorities and i think i must have hurt some of you by what i said. we begin the day inside the british parliament where theresa may today will did her prime ministerial powers and put the brakes on brights of her brakes that parliament was scheduled to vote tomorrow on may's plan for withdrawing the u.k. from the european union but opposition is huge
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a rejection would have been certain so may decided to defer she says she'll attend an e.q. summit later this week but e.u. leaders are already saying the breaks it deal will not be renegotiated and theresa may she knows that today she told the scores of shouting lawmakers some of them calling for her to resign that while they are quick to condemn her brights plan they remain reluctant to present one of their own many of the most controversial aspects of the stealing clues in the past are all simply inescapable facts of having a negotiated brix it those members who continue to disagree need to shoulder the responsibility of advocating an alternative solution that competed if it. so if you want a second referendum to overturn the results of the first be honest this risks to fighting the country again. if you want to remain positive
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the single markets in the customs union be open that this would require free movement through changing across the economy and ongoing financial contributions none of which are in my view compatible with the results of the referendum. i want to leave without it do you feel the front that in the short term this would call significant economic damage to parts of our country who can least afford to pay. or we heard to reason may mention that word back stop and we heard that word a lot today it has become the brights bone of contention in may's deal that well it just seems to defy solution what is the backstop why is it so controversial here's a primer on the one issue that could for ever be a blockade. the united kingdom wants to leave the e.u. on the twenty ninth of march two thousand and nineteen a transition phase will be in effect until the end of two thousand and twenty
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during which the u.k. will stay in the e.u. single market and customs union follow e.u. regulations pay fees but will no longer vote during that transition phase the future relations between the u.k. and the e.u. will be defined if an agreement cannot be reached by the end of two thousand and twenty the transition phase may be extended by two years if there is no agreement at the end of the transition phase and imagine see regulation the so-called backstop will prevent the installment of a hard border between the republic of ireland and e.u. member and northern ireland which is part of the u.k. many fear the civil conflict called the troubles would be reignited by customs and border control posts the deal what ensure that more than three million e.u. citizens in the u.k. and one million britons in the e.u. could carry on with their lives as before following the transition face. and joining me here in the studio is john worth he is a political blogger who blogs a lot about bricks and he's
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a regular commentator on briggs and here on the day it's good to see you again john . this irish border dilemma i mean it's not going away and it seems to be just as install day as it was two years ago and it seems there is no common ground to be found in which to listen to what the leader of labor the opposition leader jeremy corbett what he had to say today to resubmit bringing back the same botched deal either next week or in january and can she be clear on the timing will not change its fundamental flaws and deeply held objections right across this house which go far wider than the banks don't allow. mr speaker this is a bad deal for britain a bad deal for our economy and a bad deal for our democracy our country deserves better than this. is jeremy corbyn there why does theresa may think that that will be successful at this summit
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that she can try to get a better job or do you think she thinks that all think she still believes that somehow i don't think if she were to be really rationally thinking about that there's anything that brussels could offer that it's safe to resume a now what commercials really give her this summit this week that would appease that level of opposition that you know what we saw today in palm and so i think it's essentially pointless what she's trying to do is go and try and get some negotiation from concessions from brussels brussels also sees a parliamentary dynamics whatever they would give what terms is all they that that would prove that and so i think it's it's a hopeless strategy and she has been warning of this domino effect too she said if there is a second bridge that referendum in the result is the opposite of the first and there will be calls for a third referendum do you think that would happen. those people who are solidly in favor of brakes it may ultimately demand that the problem ultimately how
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if it is british politics is blocked just now it has no receipt you should to the northern line border issue it doesn't know what future relationship it wants for the european union there is no consensus about the way forward and ultimately what you've got to do first and foremost is remove that block britain's going to leave the european union without a deal on twenty ninth of march twenty nine hundred s. there is some agreement to unbolt the situation how do you do that yet polman to vote to block a situation that's unlikely or potentially you hold a referendum on the argument for a referendum is essentially to say polman contiki decision let's give that back to the people not an argument sometimes a poem made today so i'm worth stay right there will be back with you in just a moment to rescind bay's decision to postpone parliament's vote on her brakes of plan well it drew the ire of scottish lawmakers scotland's first minister nicholas sturgeon and she was scathing in her criticism of tweeting this and she tweeted so
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it is confirmed pathetic coward as it is from the prime minister yet again the interests of the tory party are a higher priority for her than anything else this can't go on and she went on to throw her scottish national party's weight behind tossing theresa may out of office german corben if labor lodges a motion of no confidence in this incompetent government tomorrow the s. m.p. will support it. and in the e.u. the european union there was exasperated at britain's decision. at the european parliament breaks a coordinator in tweeted the following i can't follow anymore after two years of negotiations the tory government wants to delay the vote just keep in mind that we
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will never let the irish down this delay will further aggravate the uncertainty of for people and businesses it's time that they make up their mind hashed. brags that . all right johnson you see right there i mean the the european union i mean they must be scratching their heads and wondering well what does britain want from us for it it's impossible to know. the reason may says she wants some changes to the backstop but what changes to this movement backstop can the european union office essentially british parliamentarians are saying britain wants the power to unilaterally be able to change that relationship in the northern ireland border but why would the republic of ireland why would the e.u. possibly trust the u.k. in this situation and ultimately as well as the relations between the northern irish policies particularly the d u p this supports reason is government and the government itself already horribly bad and so ultimately i can't see anything that's going to come of this summit later this week other than some nice words that
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the european union hopes that the backstop will never need to be used is this a case of to resume a doing everything and anything to save her political i mean that looks absolutely will be the case and do you believe that's the case but i can't see any other reason or any of the logic for what she's been doing this week other than that because she clearly doesn't have a plan this is hopeless as i see it going to brussels to try to extract some more concessions she's also repeatedly refused to say when will the house of commons get to vote she was off that multiple times today and she said well we will have a day a vote at some point in the future we are hundred nine days to bracks it today is twenty ninth of march of next year there are millions of people's lives depending upon this their investment decisions depending on this rules about how planes fly how goods will be shipped how medicines can be moved and we do not know how that is going to work it's a day every lakesha of duty yeah well today the european court of justice through
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another element into the mix it delivered a ruling let me see if i can do that teleprompter there we go on article fifteen which lays down the guidelines for leaving the european you. now you're being where justin says that britain has the power without any go ahead from brussels to reverse the entire budget process particular fifty t.e.u. must be interpreted as meaning that where a member status notified very council in accordance with article v. some tension to withdraw from the european union that article allows that in the state for the slowness of withdrawal agreement concluded between that member state and the european union has not entered into force to revoke that notification unilaterally. so john what about this does this really make a difference i mean the timing on this is certainly you know ironic when you have what happened in parliament and you've got europe saying well you can come back and
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join us it's quite extraordinary taken so long for us to get to this stage of understanding is what britain should have done is right at the beginning work out whether the notification could be revoked unilaterally they didn't decide to do that so it's a pity it's taken until today to work this out this judgment ultimately could be significant but not just yet if britain gets to january or february and there is no break that deal in sight everyone is starting to panic and starting to get worried britain could essentially say hold on a minute we want to stop the whole lot may is not ready to do that just now but maybe a month or two months from now when the clock is really counting down to that to that twenty ninth of may is that date this judgment may well come to britain's ressam i mean you've got what basically the highest court in the e.u. telling britain basically you know if you want to you can forget about the whole thing in we'll just like it never happened does that strengthen the chances then for a second referendum i'm not sure because it kind of strengthens the radicals on both
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science essentially that the brakes it is say on but it's so easy to turn round we need to stand together to make sure we see this through and strengthens the remain as hand because and to reason maze line no deal is better than a bad deal now actually there is a way of stopping our deal it's essentially saying we stop the whole lot so it essentially imperil his remaining people to vote down any deal it to reason they would put forward so ultimately i think it's kind of a school george if you like in terms of the significance of this of this judgement today it strengthens the radicals on both sides and it's going to be interesting to see. later this week just the reaction that you receive a gets when she goes to the e.u. some like rachel think what's going to happen to not going to be very friendly and their reaction towards her i think all right john which is always good to have you on the show good to have your insights we appreciate it. well a million british citizens are estimated to be living in the other twenty seven
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nations that make up the european union let's hear about the concerns that they have over the u.k. leaving the e.u. to one of them if only he could he said for cured watkins learning french is now a matter of urgency with direction looming the young consultant is worried she will soon become less competitive in the job market and learning french will definitely help me with future prospects i think just just having english is not enough anymore especially as the u.k.'s leading. the english importance might go down the british national moved to brussels in two thousand and fifteen and was impressed by the city's international atmosphere. supporting b.s.o. player but now on the eve of the crucial breck's of vote british ex-pats living in the e.u. face an uncertain future. i think i'm sad that should be an option it's an opportunity that's offered to me that i'm all for example and i wants it's news
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that after march twenty ninth and it's still possible would i do that these but it's not just the paperwork direction poses a question of identity on the cards you fail very you know if you still but also being here you know people when people ask me why form and i say of the u.k. and then the next question will be something about practice it always is. and i do you still feel you appear to go out there coming out of europe serious. in politics many of the britons in brussels work for european institutions. briggs that is obviously something that we talk about a lot this special with my other british friends the ones that work inside the institutions and outside the institutions it affects us all it's a bit of a worry is that johnson is one of one point three million british ex-pats in the e.u. many say they're. being used as a bargaining chip in the negotiations we don't have a voice and means with forgotten about and we don't feel like the british
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government really has about a situation despite the frustration here and watkins remains hopeful. that i can continue to do that. to rise up and might do all. that sort of position where i might have to apply for jobs he says and set an option out see that would be great. and settled. by the pa maybe half castes will say but now i see myself going about so. i said i hope i have to go back for want kins and more than a million other britons the european continent is the place they call home. now these were the streets of paris on saturday protesters while you've been the
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french capital for a fourth straight week in some of the worst violence that the city have seen since the one hundred sixty s. the unrest first a rock to do what you planned fuel tax increase and then spiraled into a national protest against the government the yellow vest protesters as they're known got the attention of the president and they hit the french economy where it says. and while paris was full of tear gas and water cannon everyone was asking where is mr mccollum the french president has drawn criticism for staying out of sight and for staying silent about the violence today he finally spoke to the nation he made his opinion of the republic of a lousy opinions to be expressed and this idea that not everybody needs to share them and i don't need to have discord like that off islands when violence arrives in the region he said you know the way they do to say the but. in the beginning
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i understand that people are angry and books who don't who are know and upset about that and many among us it's a many in a moment are you a bottom range citizens can share that and we're not appointed by the government my advice we are not going to back won't bother you but to business as usual on the other side going only because in the past we have had too many crisis like this some moment the story we have come to a historic point for our country with and through dialogue rice backed and engagement comment meant for some of the you that are going we're going to them into a manage or we are working on it and i am going to speak to you all malek care about as you people only fight is for you about and that all of we only
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fight for from this ibid. all right i'm joined here at the big table now by the bo he is the berlin correspondent for revenue front internet. it's good to have you back on the show let me just ask you as a citizen of france do you believe your president when he says he feels the pain of the people. i'm not sure but. it was of course is go to show these and these address more empathy danny did during eight months we remember some of these. some of his sentences about french people being too lazy or whatever and of course his style contributed to create a gap between him and the citizens always also between him and his former voters and to to to reinforce the major of somebody being quite arrogant why
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do you think he was he was so reluctant to speak out about the protests have been really he hasn't been seen in public in over a week i mean how do you explain that. i mean of course you mean the defect that he's that he disappeared with a fairly well you know he they were saying you know i'm missing my goodness yeah i think it is trying to do was to wait till. the children and the last saturday to see these days there will be would have been as much violent as the last one it was not because there where. more than one hundred thirty thousand people taking part to these protests and throughout france but the violence is when not as important there where one week ago and also use of these week without any public appearances the. two. meet quite
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a lot of people. in but also on the phone and to to find to find solutions because it was under pressure for sure and he has had to react and he did tonight we heard him take partial responsibility for the rest. of us forty one years of. giving twelve enough workers of territory is often a just about public services are being pretty nice they have the impression of not heard through not being able to follow changes in our society in the last year and a half we have probably not been able to react to it as we should have and i assume my responsibility and. do you think i mean there is trying to show that he. is trying to show more imperfect for the people do you think that the
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public was was too quick it is judgment i mean we've seen a one hundred eighty degree turn you know the president of reform and now he's the president of the rich i mean has the public maybe been. too harsh on him or too quick to judge. maybe yes maybe not what this sure is that the first meters he took in the spring of two thousand and seventeen where or where measures in favor of rich rich person in favor of the enterprise which was a typical. off for politics and he wanted to create. a better atmosphere for investments in france etc but of course these politics can last quite a long time to two and the. these the situation and to.
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improved economical situation and what what was missing was also a response for the difficulties of a lot of french people especially in the territories as he said into the village emails about yeah exactly people who boat house fifty kilometers may be from the next town where they live and now the costs to go there every day are too big there is no little hospital the school the post of is closed and they have the impression nobody listen to them they are lost they are the losers of the. situation. what about the concessions that mckown has offered does he have the money to increase the minimum wage by what is it a hundred euros. is the money there. the money is needed is not there
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but budget will of course mean that frons has to increase is deficit and will probably next year or not be able to respect the three percent crit teria which is the russian ruling within the members of the eurozone run normally the normal in next year or we should have had a deficit of two point eight percent and probably it will be maybe it will be three point half percent which is not maybe a catastrophe. maybe it was necessary to respond to these to these huge protests if he had knew that we knows if he if you would have been able to. to to lead the country for first several months of course the problem is it's a term. after the politics in made during eighty. now always mores
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it's a new chapter with the social big but you also try to underlined the some big reforms he wants to make about unemployment about pensions that the east still wants to do them so it's a very. a tight rope right now let's go to book it's always good to have you on the show we appreciate your insights. well the day is nearly done the conversation continues online you find us on twitter. you can write directly to me off t.v. don't forget use the hash tag the day and remember whatever happens between now and then there's another day you'll see that everyone.
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can. do that. looking for new job. i mean based on logic like you. don't mention things. more and more octopus an intelligence is playing a role in hiring procedures. a change for the better. or just plain frightening to morrow to do next d.w. . the man who saved the lives of tens of thousands of women who conducted one operation after another nobel peace prize laureate dr mcclain. sure those words in
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children who were conceived through rape and couldn't fathom having to treat their grandchildren some. are not easy to measure g.'s life to fighting sexual violence in the come the last of her pocket. watch a lot of shows up in forty five minutes r t w. how do you move sustainable way to scupper the boathouse you talk about starts generally thirteenth on t.w. . a continent is reinventing itself as an african street scene discovers it's true potential inventors entrepreneurs and high tech professionals talk about their visions successes at day to day business the difference a few. bits of. history you know everyone's to school.
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is the. digital africa starts december twelfth on d w. that. gets you into tomorrow today the science show on d w. this time we had two small extra dorothea rabbits hang was released into the wild was it a success. as a job applicant you may soon find yourself being vetted by artificial intelligence brave new world. like it or not our future is definitely digital but is it also sustainable we look to and says here on tomorrow today.
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the very far east is home to a huge number of plants. and animals. the species diversity is astounding. that's tropical forests are under threat from logging making way for fun plantations for in indonesia the island of sumatra still has a tropical lowland forest in the book take up to national park a team that is looking for a very special animal. we're on a mission to find dora she's here somewhere deep in the sumatran jungle. is what i just paid to project his team released the orangutan into the wild equipped with a transmitter. of. dora has been in the jungle for quite a while now so we can no longer predict where she is we have two thousand square kilometers of forest here so it takes time but then suddenly you hear
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a rustling in the trees. of the city. in the end doris curiosity gets the better of her when she appears. she's now eighty years old. three years ago she was released into the wild. but before that she'd been told all she needed to know to survive in the jungle how to climb how to build a nest and how to find food. these are things baby orangutans normally learn from their mothers but dora was an orphan. she'd spent most of her life being cat illegally as a pet. as a result she's very tame even after three years in the wild she readily takes to
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humans. but you've got the conservationists are keeping a close eye on dora right now they're worried because she appears to be losing weight. so very. i love. because. a dog will. is. interact with. very well also but. mark. in the jungle pater party has been working with orangutans for seventeen years he and his team have released one hundred seventy into the wild so far. but they'll need twice that number to produce a population that can survive on its own. our main aim is
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to protect lowland rainforest the orangutan is like our poster child the ambassador of the rainforest if you will and if we don't protect it we'll lose the. eighty percent of sumatra as rain forest has disappeared over the last fifty years that means the iranian towns natural habitat is disappearing none of them could survive in an arm or acacia plantation these monocultures are completely different from their natural habitat that's why it's so important that we preserve the remaining twenty percent of the rainforest. the focus now is on preserving the protected areas that already exist. it's too late for anything else. family has also found a new home in the book it to go national park where she's now living in the wild.
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all the orangutans in this nature reserve were born in captivity each one with its own story. for him bonnie has lived in the wild for years right now she's coming back to the center regularly to show off her young son roger . when you observe an orangutan and you often see behaviors that are typical of human beings you can really see that we're closely related. each animal is an individual with a different face a different character and a different speed at which they learn new things they're like one big family. veterinarian and honey how tante is going to check dora over.
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not only has she been losing weight she's also been having difficulties climbing. probably because she was in a fight with another orangutan and is injured. and . if you are a problem. yes . this national park. means fertile hills it's one of just remaining lowland rain forests and one of the last remaining centuries for orangutans.
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survive here than tigers all the other animals will be automatically protected to you that's why it's so important to preserve what we have here. continue to observe as they release into the wild for at least two years the project will only be considered a success if the animals have offspring. our hope is that the population here will become so large that they can survive on their own and reproduce so that there will be a new population. long term. perhaps when she's a few years old or. have a baby to show off. helping to ensure that the orangutan population in some continues to grow. but the problem is that for decades the rain forest in sumatra has been shrinking dramatically that is caused temperatures in
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the region to climb as an international study has established what effects this will have dora and have. this is unclear so so. let's stay with our closest relatives for a moment how intelligent eight that is thrust of many scientific investigations around the world. one finding is that apes do as well on intelligence tests as young human children. but what is intelligence really. this is curt and this is cute curtain canuto are the same age and equally intelligent. they inherited their intelligence it's in their genes researchers
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have already discovered more than one thousand genes involved in intelligence and they believe there are many more so will curtain knute develop in similar ways in school at work and in life generally. when they're three years old curtin to take an i.q. test for toddlers does better than kirk why. parents spend a lot of time playing and speaking with them that nurtures logical thinking and spatial awareness. curtis parents would rather spend time with their smartphones so he often has to play by himself. at this age newt is smarter genes only provide a foundation they need experiences in the real world to develop. a study of twins look at the ratio in which genes nature and environment nurture influence a person's intelligence by cues and twins are more similar than they are between other siblings but when twins grow up in different environments the similarities between them also fade that reveals how much environment can affect intelligence.
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on an i.q. test and age turn current has over to. because in current school the children are given more individual attention. on the other hand has to follow a rigid learning plan one that doesn't pay much attention to the interests and abilities of each child environment can also hinder the development of intelligence . by the time they start to think about a profession curtain knute are once again more strongly influenced by predisposition as you grow older genes play more of a role in overall intelligence. at fifty both are established in their careers as a doctor and commute is a carpenter. they each followed a very different path in life but how much was determined by nature and how much by nurture. when caught and their
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various professions chances are they each had a conventional job interview but moves are afoot to transform the recruitment process particularly in larger companies. in future artificial intelligence may play a major role in selecting a candidate. a company looking for customer consultants office video interview the applicants. my name is i am passionate about individuals and people the questions are pretty recorded and applicants get to answer from the comfort of their own home what's unusual is the selection process a software program analyzes the voice on the applicant's face the movement of the eyebrows the smile the data is then assessed using algorithms to decide who's best suited to the job. in the course of about a twenty or thirty minute interview we can collect one hundred thousand data points
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about your voice the vocabulary you sure internation and your facial expressions and correlate all of that to success in a job. as a u.s. startup based in utah are the specialized in video interviewing technology the program they offer is fed with the data of faeries people who've been successful in a particular job the system is specifically designed for large corporations that often get thousands of job applications so the machine is really good at figuring out what. what type of person is going to be great for this job to find out more we've come to massachusetts institute of technology or mit the elite university is considered one of the birthplaces of artificial intelligence it's a i live or a tree is constantly working on new ways of applying the technology directed daniela also believes ai could be helpful in recruitment artificial intelligence can look at many more candidates than humans do and artificial intelligence can
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compare those candidates across many more different axes then people do with artificial intelligence we can also be biased the process of recruiting so there are many ways in which a i can't help. but not everyone is applauding mathematician and data scientist kathy o'neill is convinced an increasing number of institutions are placing too much faith in algorithms. they think algorithms are objective and true and scientific it's a marketing trick were being scored with secret formulas that we don't understand. that just that often don't have systems of appeal. a lot can go wrong when we put blind faith. in big data. she says artificial intelligence turns biased into written code so if a company has mainly employed middle aged white men and not many women or people of
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color the algorithm will automatically decide in the same way we put but to hire. we want to make sure that that doesn't replicate itself in the interviewing process she would do a lot of testing and a lot of statistical analysis to make sure that isn't the case if we do see it we eliminate those characteristics from the model as well. so what does the future hold ai experts say they don't expect robots to be taking over recruitment any time soon they emphasize that artificial intelligence is merely designed to assist personnel management in choosing new employees. a very powerful tool but it's not going to solve all of our problems just like it's not going to take down the world the important thing is to figure out the match between where the technology needs and what the technology is capable off so my name is like part of you has yet to make any money with its functional analysis and it's still
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unclear whether such technology will ever become mainstream but we may have to accept that artificial intelligence could soon play a greater role in the job market. we are still on facebook which you'd think is being interviewed by robots powered but artificial intelligence. general for entering the us says that ai could be great at this task even hopes that someday he will be interviewed by artificial intelligence. she well could hear takes an equally positive view he says it would make the selection process more rational based on logic rather than emotional preferences but charles abunda is totally against an ai interviewer which he says is. ultimately man made he doesn't like the idea of being interviewed by what he calls a filthy robot. also takes a critical view warning that just
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a machine that can be hacked or interfered with. andromeda says that if the ai interviewer has an internet connection he try to get it to be his friend. when we say it artificial intelligence we often think of robots if they also be accepted by us humans in our everyday lives they'll have to learn about our habits . d'anna rodriguez from columbia sent in a question about not in robots but in living creatures. all animals and why have you look wide open jaws and. take a deep breath then exhale slowly for an average of six seconds it could be due to
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fatigue. boredom. maybe a way of dealing with painful emotions or equalizing pressure in the inner ear theories abound but it's still not clear why we yawn. nor why other animals your appeasement threatening gesture there are lots of. animals your well most mammals many of them can be seen doing it except giraffes whether in the wild or in zoos no one has ever seen your supposedly or have you then please write and tell us. not only mammals. other vertebrates such. his reptiles do too that's been definitively proven. and so has the fact that contagious it's a matter of empathy can have a social function and some scientists claim that the juror. is connected with
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intelligence the more nerve cells in that cerebral cortex the greater the length of its. primates are especially intelligent. the problem is red why are great but only if you. do you have a science question that you've always wanted answered we're happy to help out and send it to us as a video text ovoid smell if we answer it on the show we'll send you a little surprise as a thank you can i just ask. you find as i do w dot com slash science or drop us a line at g.w. under school site tech on facebook d w dot science. what's the total amount of resources on the earth and how much. that is expressed
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in the ecological footprint with which a research organization keeps accounts of productive surface areas around the globe what is a cost to produce food and clothing or dispose of waste or generate power to. the countries shown here in green use fewer resources than they have the red countries have an ecological deficit or overshoot the united states for example acts as if it had five at its disposal on average the world's population is currently using up the resources of one point seven so we need more sustainability and that is difficult even in a digitalized world. back in the analog arrow we talked about the impending advent of the paperless office. we believe that telecommuting would let us assume all work from home making the world a greener place and computers have brought environmental benefits have been think we no longer have to crumple up a sheet of paper after
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a typo that something right. there are other digital age developments the internet now allows us to stream all kinds of content. even our cars are linked to the net but is that all help us to be more sustainable. at the institute for ecological economy research in berlin two months from terry assist trying to find out how green digitalisation really is. many people believe digitalisation automatically reconciles environment and economics and leads to savings if you think about how many devices a smart phone can replace it seems great like it should definitely lead to a reduction in resources but it's not that simple for him manufacture and distribution of the digital devices the infrastructure cables data centers and so on also eat up a huge amount of energy but. with his interdisciplinary research groups ontario's
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has for the first time modeled an eco balance sheet for digitalisation. his results are surprising. just one example the internet is a huge energy goes a lot it accounts for eight percent of all german electricity use that's a lot of internet. so it's a significant factor. if the internet was a country it would be third in terms of power consumption globally after china in the u.s. . smartphone obsession is a common condition nowadays. even here more energy is being used than you might think. in. constantly use computing and storage capacity in the cloud when our end of vice is open and out of a third of the total power consumption is on the smartphones. thirds goes for the
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provision and transfer of data to the smart phone because of overall power consumption in digital infrastructure is ten times higher than in end of vices. so is the. digital way of life ruining the environment it's hard to say. to compare let's look at an analog example the book. we used to have to chop down town plus trees to make the paper on which to print them. now e-books have grown common reading material has been liberated from the paper page and is now downloaded directly the trees are left standing that's good for the environment isn't it. many resources flowing to the production of an e-book if you take that into account at my desk but we don't actually start saving in environmental until you read thirty to sixty books depending on how thick they are . so for people who are casual readers it isn't worth it. let's look at the
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home cinema in the old days we bought video cassettes and d.v.d.'s all that stuff had to be manufactured using energy and resources with streaming that can be avoided a clear cut advantage or at least you'd think so. in the old days you'd drop to the video store to borrow a film now you dream it instead so you save a third of the energy a big step up in efficiency. about the advice largely because it's become so quick and easy we're now watching more films than we ever did in the past that's called the rebound effect as things grow more convenient it encourages more consumption and that is of course not good for the environment. another thing that's changing is mobility it used to be everyone had a car and used it without thinking twice. these days you can book
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a car share spontaneously when you really need it. eventually city centers won't be unnecessarily clogged with private cars but we aren't there yet. also a challenge is that untouched an unregulated car sharing is not yet a significant contributor to changing traffic in cities when these free floating systems are used instead of public transport they actually compete with trams and buses instead of being sensibly integrated with each other so. you drive into town then you get on with your various shopping errands in the old fashioned way before driving home again. if we all stop doing that and everyone with a good digital citizen shopped online that would surely bring environmental advantages. it's not as if we get all our goods sent to
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was bundled up in one single package but it's another issue is that every aid package is returned if it's clothes every second package so that's not good for the environment so i've lost you get the shop from the comfort of your own home at all times of the day or night that means people are not inclined to buy more. so what to do how can we deliver on the promise of sustainable digitalisation. the bottom that comes from we need politicians to commit to transformative digitalisation in a way that contributes to sustainability so hard to cut us that. so it's time for a coherent sustainable strategy the truly paperless office for example is still largely a dream. but we've made some progress at least the typewriters been retired. and it's that time of year again in stockholm francis on old gregory winter and
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the man who saved the lives of tens of thousands of women to conduct a full operation for another two nobel peace prize. gloria's doctor looked away again for sure those letters raising children were conceived through rape and couldn't fathom having to treat their grandchildren someday and for no reason to know jesus lived to fighting sexual violence in the coming the hour ahead pocketing is. a lot of close up and fifteen minutes on d w. the fast pace of life in the digital shift has the lowdown on the web showing new
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subscribe to documentary on you tube. natural riches. precious resources. and a rewarding investment. farmland has been called ethiopia's gold the country has an abundant supply and leases it to international giants. government export revenues and the colorations profit margin. but not everyone benefits from the booming business. exploration environmental destruction and starvation. government and corporate. the
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selling out of a country. dead donkeys fear no hyena. starts december twenty ninth on t.w. . britain's parliament will not for prime minister teresa mayes breaks a deal on tuesday may admitted lawmakers would reject the deal by a significant margin she said she needed more time for urgent talks with e.u. leaders european president has called for a meeting to discuss break that on thursday but he said the bloc will not read negotiate the terms of the deal. french president manuel my car has reached out to protesters who reject his reform plan c. they proposed raising france's minimum wage by a hundred euros a month and scrapping a solidarity tax for pensioners and excepted partial blame for the protesters anger
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of it also warned the violence would not be tolerated and most of you know. german chancellor angela merkel has hailed the un's global compact for migration as a milestone in dealing with international migration she spoke at a conference in america where more than one hundred sixty countries signed on to the non-binding pact. the recipients of this year's nobel peace prize have called on world leaders to take action against sexual violence as a weapon of war connelly's dr denis mukwege an iraqi activist how do you know morag were accepting the prize at the ceremony in hospital. shift living in the digital world. today game if i am just placement.
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three d. holograms of actors and setting the stage in a tiny box but first computer six barcelona now has a brothel with female androids a spanish engineer is working on programming his models to express emotions how will these new robotic sex workers affect human interaction get sexy. i want sex. talk to me. sex workers with feelings centers on toes an engineer from barcelona is working on sex robots that can simulate human emotions so i have a lot of emotion that was like. i have a brain i have the architecture of a brain that gun express emotions in a given a way that i thought and then he thought well i have a humanoid i follow. the industry and they said ok now we need.
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that out of a level. ready to assemble and then a technology that i can use to put all these together. sex robots have sensors that responds to speech and touch with computers in an artificial brain which then signals the robot to take on various emotional states. friendly romantic sexy. a robot from santos workshop costs about six thousand euros. and there are bitter disputes of quotes and up to forty percent of men in europe could picture having sex with a six six. women not so much but there's potential for that and. barcelona's sex industry has recognized that potential here the first brought from offering sex robots was opened in two thousand and seventeen for one hundred euros an hour and men can live out their sexual fantasies with the dog. but how will sex with robots
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change our love life robo psychologist martina moderate thinks these new sex companions pose a threat to real relationships but also i want to say ninety five percent of the sex robots currently on the market comply with absolutely stereotypical feminine cliches it's. completely stereotypical passive women. on the one hand that strengthens the objectification of what is human of the human body often the female body. all this on the other hand these robots bring very antiquated very gender stereotypical relationship dynamics back into the bedroom. which is if not for me. i strongly suspect that we will be quick to build a personal relationship with these devices. i'm pretty sure that onus of such appliances won't take long to name that proposition and it sometimes doesn't want this relationship to be one sided that's why he tries to construct his dollars to
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be as human like and emotional as possible. and that leads to the question what makes us human in the first place. the sense of the self who. why do i think i am myself while it's making me decide that this is me this is one of the other things that has always interested me and that made me think of an architecture for a brain digitization hundred bottlenecks are invading our love life a visionary or problematic these new sexual companions are going to take some getting used to. says no to humanoid sex slaves. and no networkers digital innovators committed to special projects today we need
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game designer to look around. when he was a teen i was forced to flee from syria he came to austria without his family one way for him to forget the war was to play computer games. i was just like. trying to escape it as much as i can with playing video games when there's a lot for city on when it's war in syria and you're eighteen more than eighteen years old then you must join the military if you're going to join the military it's either to kill someone or get killed. he wanted to share his gaming passion and tell others about his fate so with the help of developers that specialize in social issues he created path out here players assume abdulla's role and learn about day to day life in a war zone and what being a refugee is like throughout the game the real abdulla appears in pepper's grave situations with silly cliches. come on i mean you don't have to live in this region
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not in my hometown or every hometown in syria. he wants to show what it's like to be a refugee and he seems to have accomplished that. has even led to a nomination for the scholarship program. to work as a game designer and that's a dream. it's a long way to do it. we'll get there. and now standing center stage latest technology makes it possible to create virtual movies that show actors from all sides but it poses entirely new challenges for technicians and creatives alike the first studio has now opened near berlin. viewers i do-i with the actors it's all possible thanks to virtual reality technology but filming as complex the character must be recreated with a three d.
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holographic image after all you never know which angle viewers will be watching from recordings are made in so-called value metric video studios like value can at the bubbles bad film park near berlin and the design of it confirmed the actors come in and off filmed and each detail is automatically recorded without any further steps needed every wrinkle in my movements in my expressions in my gestures it captures my every movement if you. know meant that this volumetric studio was four meters high and equipped with thirty do i think cameras making it able to film actors from all angles simultaneously then special software creates a three d. holograms of the characters they can be inserted into any scene. terabytes them and that means we're recording an extremely large and complex data set if you were to copy that onto ordinary c.d.'s it would take about three thousand
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altogether i told. movie makers like canadians define rich we are now exploring the new possibilities of this technology offers but it's not enough to know how to use it producers need to create a new method of storytelling. and i do you do with the world when people can watch three sixty degree but it just like in real life we need to keep the attention center so the film maker is not moving to camera because. you have the camera you watching whatever you want to watch but then there's sound special sound so we can add directing and you did and if you were and depending on the way you be you might see or not see something so you have ways to add two and three and that narrative and depending on the behavior of the person in the content with a three hundred sixty degree panorama viewers can discover new worlds and take on unusual perspectives such as that of a toy robot seeing the world through his eyes shows as things in
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a totally new light. you can explore together new forms of storytelling so that's where you know i don't see. it we put scene many vi's a reproduction of what cinema and cinema as its own language and its own reason to be and i think in many vo we have to explore what it could be we still don't know what it could be three d. holograms of actors could become a valuable tool but picture quality is not danced enough to produce full length feature films yes there's been some use to physicians i'm sure it'll make rapid advances and that other production science will spring up around the world right now there's only a handful of these kinds of studios and about the more there are the more standards and quality will improve and then it will make a breakthrough in the market. with system mark very flawed. initial projects have already been completed using these new three d.
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recordings and by twenty nineteen volumetric studios are expected to be firmly established in the movie industry. shift says often new horizons. and no short and sweet shifts snapshot learning german with you whether at home on your computer or out and about with your smartphone or latest beginners. called. this online language course teaches german grammar vocabulary and more in two hundred twenty films. it shows what it's like to arrive in germany and the language it also shows every day challenges. the short films are accompanied by some fourteen thousand language exercises. in the internationally acclaimed learning tool academy make learning languages fun.
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and that was our snapshot. and as always to round off shift exits our internet find of the week today and our clocks. in this video clip the start is always in the center right in the center in a perfect square or box just like the title of the film. photographer enderby meyers lives in new york and loves creating interesting arrangements some are confusing. others are harmoniously colorful some are full of surprises. or just cute. his movies offer a stage for his favorite objects from daily life. where practical and artistic i am. and next
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week just a few euros could get you huge returns at least that's what sports betting providers claim but players risk not being able to kick the habit compulsive gambling next week unshift. live here's what's coming up the book is playing you have plenty to talk about here what to build. the bomb to sleep every weekend here dogs. climate change skeptics. waste if pollution says. isn't it time for good.
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eco africa people and projects that are changing no one fireman to for the better it's up to us to make a difference let's inspire. the going to pick up the environment magazine. long d.w. . time for an upgrade. our. roads all by itself close with no roof. or design highlights you can make yourself. against tips and tricks that will turn your home special. upgrade yourself with d.w. interior design channel on youtube. we make up about three quarters of our folks that under budget cuts we ought to seventy seven percent.
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