tv Wie klingt der Urknall Deutsche Welle February 4, 2021 3:00am-3:46am CET
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sue groden. wants to expand its influence with the street network consume. his news corp reach. out to google there's a morning program for except for you from good news superpower we become dependent on a. chinese gateway to your. stored food you are really teams on d w. this is data we use and these are our top stories police in myanmar have formally charged ousted civilian leader aung sun suu chain with breaking an import law authorities say illegally imported walkie talkies were found at her home she's being held in custody a civil disobedience campaign has been growing since
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a military coup earlier this week. a new study suggests the oxford astra zeneca vaccine could indeed prevent people from spreading covert 19 the research by oxford university is the 1st to show a vaccine stopping the coronavirus being passed on the university says the vaccine could cut transmission of the virus by 2 thirds. former european central bank chief mario draghi has agreed to drive to form a new government of national unity in italy the governing coalition collapsed last month after a splinter party withdrew its support druggy often referred to as super mario is widely credited with saving the euro during the 2012 currency crisis. this is t w news from berlin you can follow us on twitter and instagram d w news or visit our website that state dot com.
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she was once the hope of a 1000000 more run by the people not by the army now on song suchi could be sent to prison by the very generals who overthrew her government and he dared to challenge lead a mere putin kremlin critic alexina vone he survived a poison attack now he'll have to survive time in a russian prison tonight the 1st foreign policy test for the biden administration the world is watching what will this america do i'm bored berlin this is the day. the united states is deeply concerned this is just seems to be a. political career military get out the strongest possible sanctions the united states will continue to work closely with our partners and do it with one voice the
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reiterate our call for the russian government that is here eating human rights situation in russia to immediately unconditionally release mr nifong. also coming up amazon's c.e.o. jeff bezos he used his garage to change forever the way we go shopping now he's using his wealth to possibly change the way we see the store. for to manage and start to want to. look to our viewers on p.b.s. of the united states and to all of you around the world welcome we begin the day with the 1st stress tests of u.s. foreign policy led by president joe biden from the campaign trail all the way to
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the white house biden promised americans to focus all of his. tension 1st on ending the pandemic at home and he has been doing exactly that but 2 weeks into his presidency the world is demanding some of his attention to 2 geopolitical flashpoints where democracy is in danger number one russia and the fate of crippling critics alexina volney yesterday of only was sentenced to 3 and a half years in prison for violating probation connected to a conviction for embezzling money and of ali says the kremlin is behind the prosecution and that president putin wants him silenced the european union and the u.s. consider the volley to be proof that the rule of law under putin is being attacked the binded ministration is reportedly considering sanctions in response the year sanctions could also be slapped against me and maher on monday the military overthrew the democratically elected government led by on song suchi today suchi
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was charged with illegally importing walkie talkies a strange of skewer charge that could land her in prison human rights groups are already sounding the alarm take a list. she has been charged with. then. maybe many more on t.v. and charges against your and we are of them in any change in. democracy is in danger and the world is waiting for an answer from a new us president what will that look like what can it look like what to discuss the possibilities i'm joined tonight by tory fell sick tory is a fellow with the brookings institution focusing on u.s. foreign policy she's also a research director at harvard university she joins me tonight from washington d.c. tori's good to have you on the day before we talk about these 2 challenges for the
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new administration perhaps you could give our viewers an idea of what joe biden state department has at its disposal after the trip presidency how much credibility remains for america as a defender of human rights and democracy thank you for having me on brant it is an uphill battle for the u.s. state department for the u.s. government for the country in speaking out against these human rights abuses and these challenges to democracy and our very own democracy is being challenged at home over these last few years and we certainly have our work cut out for us americans diplomats have their work cut out for them taking on these challenges abroad you say diplomats what about america's top diplomat how crucial to this new foreign policy is the new secretary of state blinken. now that now in place u.s. secretary of state anthony blinken has has come out saying the right things on
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these geo political flashpoints he has called out russian president vladimir putin has called for the release of political opposition leader alexei navalny and the release of those who were arrested in the widespread protests across russia and he's also called out that myanmar generals who have detained a democratically elected leader on sound suki so he's saying the right things he's garnering the right support at home and i think we're going to see a strong response from this administration on both of these challenges to democracy in russia and in the end we know that the white house is reportedly considering sanctions against me and more do we know how effective sanctions would be against the military at this point it's a great question we haven't seen exactly the type of sanctions that this administration might put in place well we do know is that the u.s. government has a long track record of imposing sanctions on burma over the last decade of military
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rule leading up to the democratic elections in 2015 that were then removed and now u.s. spokesperson. jen psaki has said that all of the sanctions that were removed are now back under review these are saying things that could be put in place against the military leadership against the generals that have carried out this and their families and networks and so they could have bite but all options are on the table and them help far do you think that this white house will go to help on song suchi a bit she is she's no longer the torch bearer of freedom and democracy that she wants was. yes time to keyes inability to speak out against genocidal actions against their home minority in recent years has certainly furnished her at the in the last i think this is more of a call for me tienen democratic leadership firming teaming myanmar's kind of
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fledgling democracy and less so for this particular leader as you mentioned her reputation has been under stress in recent years in the u.s. but i still think you will see a strong push as you have seen from president biden secretary of state lincoln and other western leaders for the release of this democratically elected leader of myanmar let's consider the stress tests here russia and the imprisonment of kremlin critic alexina hall today the white house press secretary was asked about that phone call that president biden made with russian president putin shortly before or after biden moved into the white house take a listen. when he called president putin he did not hold back he made clear that while there are areas where we can work together it's a new start which is in the interests of the security of the united states he has concerns about a number of areas of their reported interference whether it's in elections in the
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hacking of the united states that solar winds hacking i should say reports of bounties on american troops there's an ongoing review that's happening which he also stated in that in that conversation so torie jen psaki there she does a good job of going through the one list of problems of the u.s. has with russia what does the prison sentencing of alexian of all what does it do to the calculus of biden's foreign policy. it adds another gent on the scorecard of challenges that the u.s. and russia face at the beginning of this administration and i think it's important to keep in mind that this is not it ministration that is seeking the reset with russia in the ways that previous administrations have george w. bush came into office seeking a reset with russia president barack obama did the same and of course we start from president very little criticism if any of president putin and his repression at home and aggression abroad so this is ministration has come in early saying that it
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is going to take seriously the challenges it views from russia in the united states when it comes to election interference with the solar with tacking but also with the imprisonment of political opposition leader alexei navalny so this is a and administration that's come out swinging showing that it is going to take challenges from russia seriously unlike the previous administration for our viewers tell us which is the easier case to be made by president biden to congress sanctions against myanmar or more strict sanctions against russia. we've actually seen support from congress on both of these fronts thus far throughout the trump administration there was bipartisan support in congress for pushing further sanctions on president putin and his cronies on russia for its occupation of ukraine and excision of crimea so i think there is a groundswell of bipartisan support for further sanctions on russia at this at this
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flashpoint advances in support from other western leaders that have already moved to impose sanctions because of the of only placing so we could see the last year movement there however i think that there is a pretty broad bipartisan support for moving forward in a critical way in both me and mar in russia when it comes to sanctions you focus on transatlantic relations the only story has given ammunition to opponents of the nord stream to natural gas pipeline from russia to germany president biden has always been against this project german chancellor angela merkel she has not budged in her support of the project can never volney can his imprisonment can it move the needle at all here so in his confirmation hearing u.s. secretary of state anthony blinken called north stream 2 a bad idea we've also seen a lot of criticism from the u.s. congress on standing criticism on north stream too there's no question that this is
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going to remain a point of difference between germany and the united states i think with this moment with the new vonnie jelling shows is that there are other issues that the united states germany and european partners need to unite on even if we were being divided on issues such as nurturing to you in finally there was quite a bit of a stir at the end of the trump administration that the u.s. role in the world has been forever diminished in tarnished in your opinion what do events in me and more and russia say to that a. well this is an early test for the a by an administration as i mentioned before we have an uphill battle in speaking out against democratic backsliding as we have of course didn't challenge here at home but i think that these issues and our early responses from the by the administration show that we as a country have a stake in the democratic backsliding that we are seeing around the world and that
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when we speak out with one voice we can move the needle on democratic resurgence but that we need to be a stronger ways at the table we need to be a leader in multilateral fora for pushing back against these human rights atrocities as democratic not fighting but it's going to take time and i think the events that we've seen in the united states show that we have just as much a stake in the health of democracy around the world as other countries do tories out from the brookings institution tory we appreciate you taking the time to talk with us tonight it's good to get your insights thank you and. well it is the end of an era at amazon founder jeff bezos is stepping down as c.e.o. later this year giving up leadership of the online retail giant that he began in his garage back in 1994 his stake in amazon has made bezos one of the richest men on the planet even during the pandemic his wealth grew as amazon's business
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benefited from lock downs and customers moving online for the last quarter of the 2020 year the company reported revenues of $125000000000.00 profit doubling to over $7000000000.00 that's a nice way to go well as we transition to the role of executive chairman to be replaced by in the jesse who currently runs amazon web services. all right so what's going on here to talk about that i'm good at the big table by stephen beardsley from the business stephen so let's start with jesse what or who is c. and what does his rise to say you know what does it mean so any jesse join the company in 1907 and he quickly moved up to something like a chief of staff for jeff bezos so he knows the company really well he's credited with being one of the architects with bezos of this idea of cloud computing services in which a company like amazon also google microsoft they rent out servers and provide data
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infrastructure for companies usually it's been very profitable it doesn't account for a lot of revenue but it's incredibly profitable sort of counts for so much of the money that they're actually making you mentioned that last quarter so much of that was actually from cloud computing services he runs that right now and his move up basically is one could say that's a bet on the future viability of that service. it's also seen his selection is also seen as being basically he's sort of very much in the mold of jeff bezos right he's rigorously analytical he's very open to a decentralized kind of leadership style very and very detailed data focused i should say and so in some ways it's really not that much of a difference in some ways in terms of leadership style then bezos perhaps the question is he hasn't had so much time on the retail side of course amazon the world's biggest online retailer $300.00 so that could be something that it would be interesting to watch business go from being c.e.o.
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to executive chairman the what does that mean for his role executive chairman this is one of the questions executive chairman is sort of a very trendy way to pull a c.e.o. out of the day to day operations without seeing them completely leave the company so in some cases we see these c.e.o.'s former c.e.o.'s remain on a sort of the face of the company in a way they usually have ties to it such as a founder in the case of bezos and it takes them out of the day to day operational tasks and allow. some sit back and do some more project oriented stuff while giving them also the ability to help someone like an n.d. jassi transition to his role the question will be how well those roles are defined right because if you're a c.e.o. suddenly taking over from the founder you definitely want to know you know at what point does base those come in what influence does he have but from what we hear amazon has been discussing this for quite some time so you would think that those roles are hopefully hashed out for jessie that's for sure we know that amazon. jeff bezos is baby right so what would you say how big is the imprint of his on the
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company and what about the criticism that the corporate culture there was was toxic you know that corporate culture really is modeled on bezos is personality itself it's relentless in terms of seeking perfection in terms of seeking customer satisfaction you know what i say seeking perfection it's not like in the model of a steve jobs where someone who says you know we have to have everything specifically right before we release it to the public amazon is known for taking bets on things to see how things work in the public and then rigorously assessing did it work did it not using data really coming through things you mention the criticism of the corporate culture it is seen as a very tough place to work it is seen as somewhere where you come to scrap for your ideas and you're credited with success when you make it all the way to the top by defending your ideas by being very vocal others would say that that vocal ness leans into hostility sometimes in meetings and that some of the criticisms were so
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what's the biggest challenge would you say facing amazon moving forward and before we run out of time what about just business wanting to reach for the stars well but i would say the biggest challenge is regulation right the question of you know amazon is both a platform and a seller that's one of the questions can it be both as far as blue origin's that's his passion project he's made that clear from beginning he's often referred to amazon as a way to get into space actually he was funding that and he still has some work to do to catch up to you on moss but they have the. and this will probably be a boost for those plans of his. to the stars stephen business stephen thank you thanks for that. if we can reduce the cost of launch by a factor of $10.00 and then by a factor of $100.00 and believe me that's going to take time and a lot of hard work but if we can do that you'll be living in a completely new world it'll be a golden age of space exploration you'll see so many people then it will be
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a big industry and a very dynamic and fascinating one it will be a golden age a golden age that was jeff bezos laying out his vision for space travel back in 2017 now the outgoing amazon c.e.o. plans to devote his full time it is well to exploring the final frontier a couple of weeks ago private space company blue origin successfully tested its launch rocket and capsule new shepherd is a reusable space designed to carry paying tourists on short trips to the edge of space. for maximum reuse ability to help lower launch costs. now compare that compare what you just saw all to the latest test flight by bezos as rival ilan musk his space x.'s latest starship prototype ended well in a fireball the same lisieux rocket managed a successful takeoff and high altitude test in texas but it went up in flames and
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you see at boma landing the last prototype made a similar fate in december and a webcast of the latest launch the company said that it had a crate flight but still needs to quote work on their landing a little bit i would say so. all right to talk about this space race i'm joined now by keith cowing he's a blogger in the founder of the website nasa watch he's also former rocket scientist himself keith it's good to have you back on the show let me get your thoughts 1st on this this space race of billionaires we've got a must we've got jeff bezos and you know i want to add richard branson what do you make of this well you know i'm often asked i know you and i don't know the other 2 gentlemen but. they read too much science fiction when they were kids like a lot of us they read so much of it they actually thought that it's possible to do then they somehow became rich and they don't know any better than the trying to do
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this stuff and they have now as 11 offices non-trivial resources sufficient to do that and in your prior piece of her just somebody seem to be so slipped down amazon has legionary the cash for words and will you and views tesla as other country and companies in the same way so you know you've got you've got people now who have the financial resources that rival who are exceed those of countries so it's inevitable you're going to see something like this happen and am i hearing you right there is there's some criticism in your description of this new space race. not at all i've known you a lot of people knowing it's not an uncommon thing to say but i've known him for over 20 years some ways he's changed but at the core of who he is easy just somebody who dreams big and reaches out to make the dreams happen and you know i mean that he has his detractors but he has his supporters and spans and you know i mean just look at any novel way of doing things whether it's federal express or whatnot it always starts with a couple of crazy people with
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a little too much too much in the way of dreams and a little bit extra money and then years recent back later and say well you know amazon what a crazy idea let's go order groceries right i mean the that is a very good point i've been reading some critiques of this new space rivalry one criticism is that this is just another story of a rich man who does some research and launches a rocket and that's it and is that is that a fair criticism. no not at all i mean he started out i remember the very early rockets and he was he asked me as is should i show the sly but he says you might as well you get over it's going to blow up to get it over with people see it but if you succeed they see you do it live and he went from doing that to the point you know he's making money i mean real actual money launching commercial satellites into space and this is not dissimilar from what we had here in the states when we had the still berens in the railroad barons back in the hundreds who were competing
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with each other and the net result is we had this vast railroad system and you could argue it through their motives yeah you might say maybe they've you know maybe should chill out a little more but the flip side is we all benefit from you know their dreams becoming manifest reality so you know big pick which sent the equation you want to be on where you know last week was the 35th anniversary of the challenger explosion and iran musk you know he's been very vocal in his criticism of the inefficiency at nasa jeff bezos he doesn't say much publicly one way or the other. do you feel like we know all that there is to know about the these men and their space ambitions. you know iraq it 1st well they're not government so they can pretty much too mean you can go back to howard hughes in airplanes or the wright brothers i mean there's always you know against people with money in a dream how much do you want to know i mean on pretty much taking a break from twitter now but the university much puts himself out there twitter and
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the u.s. debt ceiling that sets that ceiling these us is a far more private person branson somewhere in the middle he lets you know what he's doing to a certain extent with or is going into space where selling goods on the internet where electric cars or any other imaginative business usually you have somebody at the top who is sort of the main embodiment of what the company's about we had a previous discussion talked about what basis would be doing does that mean both the company probably just will spend an hour or less every day looking at spreadsheets and so forth you know we talk about the dreams that these wealthy people have but what's the reality in terms of technology i mean we're still years away from mass space tourism are we. yeah we are and it's going to be expensive but you know one thing that was brought up as you know can anybody do this i don't the training i've actually flown it of centrifuge up to 6.2 g.'s
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i've done the the suborbital thing that the rich and anybody who's a good health can do it it is the length of the other day if you can take one of these roller coaster rides and you come out of it intact you can go into space the issue really is money and one of the questions that was asked of you and just the other day with the big announcement was how does this you know rich guy put a whole bunch of money into this one flight translate into the you know the rest of us going and you know the analogy is is it feeds the funds cord to the starship project in you you fly in fly and crash it until you get it right and eventually you know you find the way that the you know the market will bear and the prices would start to come down and this is been proven before we if you look at the airline industry back in the day it was rich people's you know drinking champagne hopping on flying boats across the pacific until somebody came up with a cheaper way to do it and of course now it's you know ryanair $29.00 to $5.00 where in the wrong i mean you know that's a very good point chip saints keep telling us always connect
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a 2nd when it's not it's clear it's going to get in your insides to know objects a fascinating topic i'm sure we'll be talking again in the near future thank you. well britain has been honoring hampton's sir tom moore the war 2 veterans you walked his way into the hearts of a nation when he raised money for u.k. health care workers he died yesterday at the age of 100 after testing positive for coke at 19 today london paid his respects to the late captain with a tribute on the giant screen at piccadilly circus one of the capital's most famous landmarks and people all around the country took to their windows in doorsteps for a national clap of captain tom including the prime minister or stocks. well the day's almost on the conversation continues online you'll find us on twitter me the beat of news you can follow me a t.v. and remember whatever happens between now and then tomorrow is another day we'll
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a song. next on d w. into the conflict zone to suggest. many countries are watching anxiously to see how the new u.s. administration will reset relations with them my guest this week from jerusalem is the community affairs minister sakhi honey bee how will his government react to joe biden's new policy on iran and his waning tolerance for the expansion of jimmy savile conflict. in 60 minutes on d w. people knocking foreign coverage. and there are many answers.
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to iconic furniture the damage as you can imagine runs into the billions so original a fake that's our topic today on made. real authentic business magazine wellcome diamonds are a girl's best friend well at least that's what an old song suggests but not every friend is a true one right lab grown diamonds are taking some of the shine off the $1000000000.00 diamond business man made diamonds are cheaper and more sustainable and the technology used to produce them could also lead to innovations in other sectors great but if diamonds can be made in a lab can they still be considered precious chris color reports. a token of love. reg anybody ever hired. a marketing miracle. in the 1st film for a diamond is forever down town these b.
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ration for countless song. movies. and wars. beautiful pure pressures. are strangers to the earth's surface. their true home is in the hellish foundry of the earth's mantle more than 150 kilometers deep with temperatures over 800 degrees celsius and their conditions impossible to replicate. except that's not quite true we can make. scientists in the lab. are just see it's mind time. and they're getting so much better and faster that the future might be less on our fingers and more you know our hands.
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were never precious. this is a mish his family has been in the diamond business for 3 generations when you're born in this business you're going to be in this business this is exactly what my grandfather told me when i was i'm a 20 is. companies breaking industry. there are very few dimes was a myth. a myth created by debian years. kompany there for a long time controlled the production of most of the world's diamonds. and which has its one time chairman said increase their value by nuking them artificially skiers but if other qualities are anything to go by. quickly. for example until the yearly $800.00 it was more valuable than gold that's why it's on the top of the washington monument. and when
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a poland the 3rd to serve these guests with aluminum dishes but aluminum was never a rare just difficult to make at the time with the hammer ons something similar is happening. as far as. production that technology has actually is. probably the 1930 s. or 960. but for a long time we could only make tiny grains for industrial applications. 4 or 5 years ago we started to see advancements in technology that allowed for production of general quality diamonds and high enough quality to be used and. here's how it works we take a slice of the altar created and it's arranged in a proprietary chamber you arrange those seeds almost like a waffle and you close the chamber you raise the temperature inside why pumping it combination of propriety gases when the temp sure is in the mid 132-1500 degree
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centigrade between splits the pure carbon separated starts bonding this one are going to start connecting with this seat that's sitting at the bottom of the chamber and i mean grossly are by layer. 2 they die and ones are no longer considered greater every other girl has one but their properties definitely are. a diamond is only made of carbon. atoms are bonded together in a very tight crystal structure. that's why it's one of the hardest and highly conductive materials on earth. you can only cut a diamond with a diamond this makes it a wonder material for ins in years it could make screens more assistant solar panels more efficient. lasers more powerful hard drives and much much better electronic devices. conductors must resist high temperatures and
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voltages. today most of them are made of silicon but the thermal conductivity of the i am on is 14 times higher and selectric a resistor is 30 times greater. any day of the week well was it affordable 10 years or 20 years ago. these higher tech applications represent a very very small part of the industry at this point. i think we're going to see. more of the products we use on an everyday basis. and let's not forget we're no longer needing to mind. we're probably never going to have. high tech applications still need more time to develop. but the future of payments shines very bright. so the
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verdict on the benefits and drawbacks of fake or real diamonds is still out but when it comes to counterfeiting the situation is clear it's a major problem for the economy causing billions of dollars in damage and what's really worrying it's not just about objects news can also be fake promoting conspiracy theories and even influencing stock prices unfortunately fake news is big business. open the laptop. and check the news shock horror the earth is now spinning in the opposite direction. true of course. the less the report spreads like wildfire and shed and like people comment on it it gains momentum. thank you news can influence political decisions and manipulation actions undermining democracy. it's easy to make money with fake news
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. generates lots of minutes online and plenty of advertising revenue or. even bogus items about illuminati or space aliens or hidden forces tech giants also advertise on fake news sites and pay them a percentage per click. $62000000.00 euros that's how much is paid to disinform ation websites in europe each year. make me is the target businesses and cause great damage making share prices for oil. and destroying reputations a quarter of companies in germany have been affected $63000000000.00 euros that's how much fake news costs the global economy each year followers and likes and even entire campaigns can easily be bought online a false report can cost as little as 10 euros on the dot net the buyer is. competitors frustrated workers or criminals facing say on making
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a company's stock price plunge. social media play a major role in spreading fake news there are no clear rules each platform has its own filter criteria some tolerate making news this employing fact checkers and flag and some bad political propaganda. tech companies have the power to create new bogus realities. but uses still have a choice like the spread fake news all stuck up. track whichever way the spinning. problem is to stop fake news from spreading you 1st need to recognize that it is fake news and that is becoming more and more difficult so called deep fakes recreate voices and facial expressions that look and sound totally real putting words into the mouth of celebrities without them even knowing about it magine the
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damage this can do to someone's reputation or to business as so often technology is opening up new possibilities which can either be exploited or used for the greater good. attractive models in an ad for a smartphone except they don't exist they are generated on a computer a bunch of pixels phantoms like the model should do transforming the world of advertising online it's getting harder and harder to distinguish depictions of reality from fiction or freaks and it's getting easier and easier to take footage of real people and manipulated to show something that never happened. did fakes the videos are already a recordings transformed with the help of artificial intelligence so cleverly that it's really hard to tell if they're authentic or not. buzz feed was one of the
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1st digital news and media companies to talk about this a stunning example is a fake clip of barack obama trashing donald trump and of course he didn't say this . place or about this. president trump is a total and complete. to create a deep fake a computer program studies lots and lots of images analyzing facial expressions and the play of muscles to generate new images of say the mouth moving you don't even have to be alive to be the subject of deep fakery the artist salvador dali died in 1909 but the dali museum in florida has brought the master of surrealism back to life. this is the fun side of faking we're likely to see you these 3 pulled over. but 96 percent of deep fake videos on
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the web pornographic and almost all of them depict women celebrities such as scarlett johansson and regular members of the public but i don't know well martin in australia discovered by chance that her selfies on facebook at being photo shopped into preexisting pornographic videos it's called face what technology. is truly life shattering and it has serious lot want the questions full all employed really or will make it healthy in your well being and your personal relationships and your reputation and your dignity martin tried to get the work deleted in vain she went public with her story and works to make the nonconsensual sharing of intimate images a criminal offense in australia but the problem remains there are certain stages of the law is that we do i mean there really needs to be any progress in
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a speech on some sort of global celebrities responds to these kind of it because it's just not acceptable that a you know 26th century we have people you can see a lot around the world and this is locked. 2019 facebook hosted a deep fake detection challenge with a $1000000.00 worth of prize money just but the creation of new technologies to detect manipulated media. the images of the storming of congress on january the 6th are all too real but imagine the potential of faked images of political violence the u.s. defense department has 2 programs devoted to detecting deep fakes which it calls a national security issue so that's because we already see political polarization with political groups inciting violence against other groups that if technologically generated false information with audio visual content is added to
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the mix and speaks to the emotions as well when we really be able to determine whether political opponents are calling for violence or saying certain things. that people don't always consume media and a common considered manner reflecting on one is true and real and what is not the effects could be disastrous. says the time might come when people automatically assume that what they see in the media is fake as it becomes ever harder to determine what's real and that could seriously undermine democratic governance. it's unlikely that technology can be banned the computer games industry depends on it and so did movie maker. fakes can indeed be entertaining and fascinating and even used for the public good who knew that david beckham could speak so many languages full disclosure he can't
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. malaria isn't just any disease it's the deadliest disease that's ever been. but they. most likely follow really. speak up and say malaria. the digital age has not only opened the door to fake news and walked realities it's also created a whole new range of careers in the advertising sector lifestyle bloggers and influencers tell their audience about life and all the things that are really desirable and important but for influencers upholding credibility can be a challenge to stay real they have to choose their collaboration's wisely. andrea isn't in.
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