tv Shift Deutsche Welle March 25, 2023 10:15pm-10:31pm CET
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winning it all, but it's also about how you win it and therefore elements in the responsibilities clear autumn leaf, hopefully there can be no misunderstanding, sign him switch then mrc im circle 1st assignment is a potential title, decided at home to a former club, dorman, next saturday i, when would send by and back above their rivals in the 1st place, by and came close to leering, to call to bavaria in 2018 before he's moved to paris. now they finally have their man. and you are after dates. thanks. luckily our time. stay tuned. for more of our programming, coming up oh, that has to voted you do the flu? i played tennis testing. ah, she survived auschwitz, things to music. he was the nazis favorite conductor.
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to sessions under the swastika, a documentary about the sounds of power and inspiring story about survival. music in nazi germany, watch now on youtube. d. w documentary. ah, oh, what people have to say matters to us. mm. that's why we listen to their stories. reporter every weekend on d w. wherever we go, whatever we do, we leave behind data. when we talk on the phone, when we go shopping, when we commute to work, many governments want to use our data to boost deficiency. but where do we draw the line? when does the data collection got too far and we risk living under a full blown surveillance state? big data analytics, a blessing occur. that's our topic on shift. ah,
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honestly, i can't imagine my life without the internet and my smartphone digitalization is all around us and makes our lives easier and so many ways. but it's a double edged sword. our data can also be used to monitor us to a degree never seen before. the result is a world where anyone can be a target. this example out of highlight about india shows just how fast that can happen. this is indian activists as q masoud. he lives in one of the most highly surveilled cities in the world. in 2021. he was stopped in the streets of hydra bad by the police. and they asked middlebury, my fisma. so i asked, why did they have not given any explanation? and they said that your sim of your must. the police took a photo with his face,
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but they wouldn't tell him what it would be used for this is she was getting very intimate photograph with home didn't the, she has this photographs. this is a clos issue. the card with does exercise in the wash videos that you get didn't lead. people can question them, but the poor people you to fear. because mrs. masoud wrote to the police, but was met with a wall of silence. since then, he's been raising awareness of the potential dangers posed by facial recognition technology. i believe that building it up is of if we're taking photographs, this is about the museum. phyllis of the state, masood filed a petition in court. he wants to know how his data is being used. masoud fears to state is systematically collecting data without the proper safeguards and data privacy experts confirm his suspicions or police have digitized every aspect of
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policing. they are building databases and making profiles of everyone in the city. this excerpts are nursing is ready. doggett, there are specific places where my slice come in. if you slip people from florida, are people from low cost backgrounds or muslims when authorities abuse their power, it's often poor. people who suffer activists worldwide are fighting for institutions to respect the fundamental rights of old people, including in digital spaces in india, the internet. freedom foundation is one group at the forefront. dot ting with all of these departments is that that is the lack of transparency as to the actions. so we don't really know what they're doing. we know for the fact that it's stopping people and dickens portals you know for the fact that they have a lot of cctv cameras. it's an obvious next step to team that it is been use. it's
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a known fact that india's government is building a centralized facial recognition database. there are also databases and specific sectors including education and health care. one of the biggest concerns off in so as, as i do right now, is that a lot of these databases really mean to nick interconnected and that really result in 260 degrees. so valence that media that's going to be problematic because they would conflate purposes for me to the city data was collected and used initially wise, personally i, his being collected, it has to be collected be the purpose in mind. and it has to be minimized in such a way that only the, the not necessary to achieve that purpose is collect data protection measures are crucial to safeguarding our privacy. but protecting our private life is becoming
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a more daunting task. after all, the more data can be interlinked, the more valuable it is. that's the principle behind big data. to understand the power of big data, it helps to visualize the data you create day in and day out as a satellite image. each individual data point represents a single pixel, essentially useless on its own. only together do they reveal a bigger picture. just like satellite images show that storms are forming. your online search history will reveal who your friends are or which political views you hold. technology also allows us to comb through data and spot things that would otherwise have remained secret. for example, companies can know women are pregnant before they even tell their families by seeing that they buy products like pregnancy, vitamins, or calcium supplements. on a larger scale, big data can help governments anticipate and meet our needs as a society, for instance,
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by predicting birth rates. they can plan for how many teachers will be needed in the future. that's why more and more governments are tapping into the pools of data that they have about their citizens in sectors, from health care to education. and that's why they're eager to collect more and more that india has greatly invested in his digital future in to 1000 just 5500000 people in india had internet access. that number is now more than 800000000 to govern the evolving digital space. lawmakers are proposing the digital india act 2023, the amos to regulate artificial intelligence, machine learning, and other technologies like 5 g and crypt occurrences. a look into the smart city of hyderabad shows just how crucial it is to have such rules in place. hydra bond is considered one of the most surveilled cities in the world. as a smart city, we're probably will be old se comfortable with any better than most of us. it is
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honest, kayla say, pin i would say with all your 3 or 4 and i thought, well, this it is via heard of many of us. it is we still have long mr. blue marks. it is, is a big focus area for us as a company, a technology solutions that can help cities with improve the quality of life. researchers here analyze data, for example, to predict mosquito infestation or to better understand how rooftop coatings can help cool down buildings. or to forecast when the air is cleanest, so that people with respiratory diseases can plan when they go outside. we work on water environment, pollution, or transport, her health and safety. and when it comes to safety surveillance cameras play a key role exist, city have about that doesn't camera on the roads. to date that system is being used
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for the monitor remotely are to investigate crimes and something does happen. they go back and see what happened. the researcher says those same cameras can also be used to automatically detect suspicious behavior and alert police that something's wrong. this mutual powerful because the result is not being used to payment current. it can be used and know they're talking about it. but how can we trust that governments are striking the right balance between harnessing the power of this data and ensuring people's privacy is protected. so it's a little bit of a challenge. it is little bit of a challenge, but then likes it, is it belongs to the government. it's been the police. i won't be, but it's almost what this data data can't trust the government to keep it. if it was, can you craft government actually pose a great risk to the right? that usually, even if they do not apply, save words in principle is digitalization and data protection should go hand in
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hand. this small european country is setting an example. estonia, we are trying to become what people call a ditch to live up. think the model that we are following is something that has been implemented. and mr. now estonia, the small nation on the north eastern edge of the european union, experienced several difficult years after regaining independence in the early 19 ninety's. but then it embraced a digital transformation like few others since the beginning of 2, thousands on the house been a steady progress sandlon tom approach to build and digital lies, saw not just the government booker holds, a sockets to day citizens can do almost everything online from renewing their passports to voting in elections and now you can also apply for getting married online. well you have to show up to actually say the commitments ah,
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the application itself kind of analysis digitally. but data protection rules in estonia are very different from those in india. in case of a so now, because you know, been eunice already hasn't even diction law in place are bay. they're following the idea to it and did a little unsafe guts in india. we don't pump them. but there are only a few regions shown in black on this map where data is protected by regulations as rigid as those in the you. we have data protection laws adopted or updated in virtually all of the jurisdictions of the world. but danny, the situation on the ground is very different. that's why the digital personal data protection bill is crucial for india. these topics have long been discussed like how to prevent data breaches or how to ensure only authorized parties or accessing people's data. experts are concerned about exemption supposedly meant to serve national security purposes. but there is wide consensus better law is necessary.
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does have been good said that i to privacy follows from the fundamental i to life in the indian constitution. i was since then that as we know law, which would actually effectuated the light for days gone to non data protection line. and yeah, there is no seeing how the government is collecting and processing and the data that the collecting from the citizens. that's why eskew must suit, has decided to fight back. he's demanding his data be deleted. i'm trying to protect my privacy and a lot of people who can't come on inclusion. so i want to take their devices. felicity. masood wants to set the precedent for better data protection and india my suitcase is important to push back. 20 important to tell the police that not everything is going to be treated. okay. whatever they're doing.
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activists say the authorities are building a massive surveillance apparatus that building is the new commandment control center for hives about police. this is read you david, have access to all the ccb diamond us in. this would be any data that people are collecting. the police are collecting on the street are stored. it makes me ready. i mean, it makes them pass, you know, to the store big for me. it's as if to me i live in all science fiction will re read. the state has got too much power and it's gone simply after you this is elise asian can mean both progress and surveillance. what's your take? are we living in some, sy, fi, dystopian, or is all private data secure? let us know what you think. see you next time. ah,
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oh, ah, conflicts own with sarah kelly as the fighting rages in russia's war of aggression against ukraine. the international criminal court has issued a warrant for putin's arrest. my guest this week on conflicts zone has called the deportation of children, a genocide and demand justice, ukrainian m p, and chair of the parliamentary committee on integration of ukraine for the e. u. ivana clim push and sada joins me from 2 conflict zone next to d. w. time seems to stand still in young the victor's enemies and victims of the world war 2 on the present.
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as is the hope the continent will make russia great again. what's lacking our prospects and a chance to live their lives? in 30 minutes on d. w. d. w's crime fighters are back with africa. most successful radio drama series continues, but all episodes are available online. course you can share and disco song, d, w, africa's facebook page, and other social media platforms, crime fighters, tune in now as the fighting rages in russia's war of aggression against ukraine. the international criminal court has issued a warrant for putin's arrest, accusing him of the war, crime of unlawfully transferring at least hundreds of children from occupied areas of you praying to russia. my guest this week on conflict zone has called the deportation of children, a.
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