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tv   Europe Revealed  Deutsche Welle  June 29, 2023 2:15pm-3:00pm CEST

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but she's still under medical care regarded as one of the most influential and successful singers of all time. madonna has sold over 300000000 copies worldwide. and one several grammy awards. it's been 3 years since you last went on tour. the celebration for what have been our 12 concert series. madonna was expected to perform in the us and europe. her manager assessed details about reschedule dates would be shared soon. you're up to date, so i'm not sure what she needs the what to say to us, the ex wife. listen to their stories. the reporter, every weekend on
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d. w. the of the, about the house. it's hard for me to explain to a german, the beauty of digitization because they haven't experienced the benefits of bring uh, costs will i find it. absolutely. crucial. conversations happens. it will continue. but it's now that as democracies, we can say we are going to set the direction the company is a close to don't know was, was the time we on sites, we are walkers, we still an issue that can do it all by this. so you're the sandwich. between the us and china sandwich. so i need to free itself if it wants to avoid becoming a digital calling in one of the vehicle going yeah.
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the, as our lifestyles are rapidly changing, friends work business transactions, all walks of life are permeated by digital transformation. and since the cobit pandemic, this process has accelerated, the digital economy is growing 7 times as quickly as the rest of the economy. it's our future, like it or not. there are real opportunities, but the dangers should not be underestimated. so far, europe has not produced any big i t enterprise of its own. the question now is, can we catch up and finally, take our digital future into our own hands. except for this device, after
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a separation i decided to give it to go. something to you'll confronted with all kinds of questions. what do i with you? how do i present myself with impression to i want to convey it was so difficult to put together this profile case for him to stop. by the know the city was pretty new to me and they wanted to get to know new people inside. i'm not the kind to walk up to a stranger and a bar and say hi there. how's it going to gets? yeah. try it is a new keyboard come through with difficult. the separation of my friends told me i should get back to living my life and the click swipe type. we'd love our smartphone apps and they are increasingly shaping our daily lives. dating platforms are extremely popular. every 10th european uses at least one out of a would you really a i feel something even it's a messaging stage that was just confirmed when we met in person and it was
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a connection there right away. i should think i like the way you wrote an answer. it was pretty light and easy but it was like ours work itself. yeah, i don't think we would have met without the app or 90 and how did you decide to leave the us 30 minutes. we decided that we would be exclusive and at one point i think one evening reach of said, you know, we haven't used it for like a month or something. so it's, let's just delete it. it's and that was, it's kind of, it's true. yeah. to do that. yeah, because it should be that it's probably, you know, like a, somewhere on a server, but you don't have access to it. and so yeah, we just decided to the screenshots of all the messages we had sent each other before we met physically. it's kind of our history. are you
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aware of your personal data rights are absolutely not on my side. no, not at all. and you absolutely not in your because one aspect is that so you can, you can request or data to platform like 10 there are ok. you lead to the even easy to do that. they save it for some time to do the present or in terms of the data protection. there are several problems of dating at. for instance, non know a very few of these out and verify a person's identity with basically revealing himself to strangers. that's giving them personal sensitive thing. so without knowing who is actually on the other end . yeah, they look good the much. you have already had an experience where one of the photos i've shared with someone has recycled back to me for somebody else. and i said to someone, there's actually a photo of me, but like, i'm not identifiable by and i knew i took the photo. so i think privacy is
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a huge issue, my safety rules that yeah, i keep my face kind of separate from my sexually explicit material, just in case someone decided to put it on a mall again. and then you're out there forever. let's hope you get some dental and changing apps have become ideal sites to correct the kind of personal information that could be found elsewhere, including details like h, i v status on sexual orientation system for myself. this information is sold to 3rd parties and we can no longer see west. ok, states restored. and what happens to a company's was in the sunni dates, food orders, work transactions, data is the fuel that feeds the digital transport network. nothing works without it . so what happens with all of this data? it doesn't just fly through the air, but it does speed through under water cables. $450.00 cables in total run along the
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ocean, flowers, digital highways connect to europe with the us especially. but also with the rest of the world and our likes, posts and online purchases are transmitted through digital highways like these. they are distributed at internet hubs and stored in thousands of data centers like this one. our simple swipes and taps are enabled by a gigantic behind the scenes infrastructure like intended. when you hit the internet, you tend to think of one big network is put in reality that are off 55000 individual networks intended. that's why internet exchange points as the notes are being incorporated into the concepts of the internet, to link comp, the networks at the various sentences. i'm so feel one of the biggest internet
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exchange points in europe. the checks is located in frankfurt online. in one of these top security computing centers from canada, she knows only we haven't switch buford, we don't have a computer. we have switches, switches, arbitrate traffic, exchange between different networks for the ultimate tvs yet. and the process is probably going to make data of course, and takes place at break neck speed. mercedes exchange points hard supply days. you have to think of these exchange points as international. the traffic is international venue to monitor if someone from italy wants to send an email to russia will see, will probably send it from it to the to d kicks the time the russian provider can both make it up at the gigs and deliver it to vladivostok. on wherever i'm getting for testing and not a lot of people are stuck, whatever it might be. an incredible network,
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a work in constant progress. it's the basis for all our activities in the digital world. but europe has a problem. most of the data is stored in processed by tech corporations from the us and transparency is not their middle name. cloud storage is inaccessible. we don't know what happens to the collected information. when you enter data on a website, you relinquish control over it. enterprises can do pretty much what they want with it. it's not uncommon for them to create virtual profiles of us. what we do consume think, and we're not being screened just for fun. the goal is to predict and influence our decisions. even our political opinions so called micro targeting is routine tech companies do everything they can to make us feel at home on the internet. but actually behind the scenes, it's still the wild west,
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and the law of the strongest, prevails. at times, this can have extremely destabilizing effects and the school very much started. i'll never forget one of the 1st articles that worked . you got a huge number of shares and like, it was on the lines of amazing. this plant can cure everything confirmed by doctors . something like that, well, those are, and in 24 hours i made 4500 euro, who should say, i thought, well, i can do this for the rest of my life. a cool, almost i'm done with definitely tells you the business of misinformation has long taken root in europe. most click bater is, are located in the western balkans, especially in north macedonia. lacking better job prospects, young qualified web designers earn
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a living by making web content. as soon as this has clicked on money flows, fake news is a lucrative business. press the pictures, the phone, the phone will pull a truck half an hour of work per day is equivalent to 10 north macedonian average salaries to purchase this i think meant that there's an interesting story about this. got started as a jo level of thought to what we wrote an article about obama's daughter being hit by a car full by article went viral. hope you're doing well, the dollars lot different they came up with and that's when we realized we could do more than publish completely and verified news about health and beauty. go down, let me speak to an example of any of it as to what scared of the law. so we started selling on time on our pages and a lot of the slaughter and just i'm, we stopped checking with a post were about at the apple store. if you paid for the slot,
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we shared the post for a shuttle to do. the us market was where the macedonian click bater is made their big money with big news on facebook and google, they share responsibility for and a store at turning point. the 2016 us selection are usually pretty good, like where so you, most of the rhetoric of these posts was mainly pro republican. now let's go back those figures paper. why is that a problem? you will select by sharing this content with the large audience, we indirectly influence the outcome of the 2016 election when trump was elected president of the united states of america. but uh, you know, because of all of above and that will be feasible and facebook for under a lot of pressure, especially from the american governmental switch. almost as i knew about the propaganda on social media. but they didn't stop us up a time for a minute. it's funny that you should have just pulled the plug center that we need
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to play a little phone pulled up like that. but so that they'll come up. it took them almost 7 months after trump was elected president and me to shut down all our pages and advertising accounts and so on. who point to use us and see to visually see the counter. if i come in a small eastern european town, a group of young men influenced the united states election. this is valence, infamously known as the fake news capital of the world. and we now know it wasn't just the us selection that was undermined by fake news. right, that and the 2017 presidential election in france were also affected. so far, state institutions have found it pretty much impossible to take action against it. corporations like facebook act, like independent states following only their own internal regulations. there are numerous social media platforms,
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but the global supremacy of facebook. now meta is overwhelming. joy and corporate bulldozers are also found an e commerce, basically the giant's reign supreme in almost all digital areas. a few us corporations have built the digital infrastructure of the 21st century and dominate it. and so should we in europe simply resign ourselves to a tunnel dependence on these corporations. or can we find alternatives? the commission has decided to find a 2400000000 years and the european union has hidden google with a record fine equal to $5000000000.00. because media to those, to the 2015, an important step on the road to independence. the you declared war on the monopolies of individual tech joints, the 1st public institution in the world to do so, i promise we cover up to 13000000 yours in on page texas b,
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e u has set out to curb the dominance of individual market players to give citizens more control over their own data and to hold social media accountable for publishing, fake or harmful content. what is happening right now is that democracy takes back sort of control of the essentials from very long time. really essential decisions have been taken in close board rooms. i'm not, you know, democracy. and that is not to exclude the commercial side of technology. but that is to say that it's a 100 to send to do, to me is that it is our elected representatives. who set the direction in our societies? it's hard to imagine the huge tech corporations backing down. they have a powerful lobby that spends 100000000 euros annually to influence political decisions to their advantage. a large part of this,
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some comes from the u. s. b, e u is currently working on to groundbreaking legislative packages. once passed, it will be possible to combat to fake news and illegal content more effectively. and companies will have to be more transparent about their internal algorithms. but that's not all. we now, in the process of a piece of legislation called the dental market's act, that will oblige those who hold significant market power to some degree to hold back. right now we have an amazon case which is exactly on this that you are a small merchant on the amazon market price. it's really difficult to get your own data to get to know what your customers like, but amazon retail, they get all your data. now what you sell and what you don't sell so that they can compete against you. so, so that kind of seemingly quite simple things that you can get your own data should
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be a positive result of what we're doing right now. but our fines and regulations and now how does europe compare to the rest of the world in relation to tech companies and infrastructure? not well at all. 75 percent of the capital value of all data platform companies lies in american hands. china can claim about 20 percent of europe share is a mere 4 percent. that's a serious problem. so why hasn't europe produced anything comparable to google or microsoft? i think the reason why europe has not fostered these giant companies was mistakes that we made. maybe a decade ago, because if you want to scale a company, you need a big market. and if you want to scale a company, you need a lot of risk willing capital. and neither of those 2 things were provided 10 years
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ago in europe. square in the us, you would have and very, you knew, find digital single market to languages, english, american and spanish. and you would have a capital markets where capital would come with competence. the but europe is beginning to gain ground. there's a lot of investments in the startup sector, especially from the european investments bank. stockholm could serve as a model. the swedish capital has a successful startup and investor seeing the this is mainly due to spotify. the music platform founded here. sophia,
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vince was part of the correspond by team when the company was launched back at the time and i joined supported 5. how we got to meet interesting people. was that to be hosted friday beer said our office that i think was the embryo of the kind of stuck on text at the time for us at least, but no conferences and no ms. wps and no co working space system, no ex elevators and no helps. today sophia bens works for cherry ventures of venture capital fund services. you are on the lookout for the next big tech company . the funds i work for. we invest primarily in european start ups. when you work at a tech start up and you want to launch in europe, of course it's a bit of a challenge because it's very different depending on if you're rolling out a product in spain or in germany or in norway. so for me, my years that's 45 river north, seeing in the, in a number of markets. we learned the last that i felt like after having launched
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into european markets, we had gain so much sort of insights and lessons learned. that the us launch was, of course, you know, a big chunk of work and not easy, but we were better equipped to do it because we had launched in europe before some of our names or connections. so from the founders a, some financial and support of fi. i was 25 and i didn't have anyone to bounce ideas, food and i didn't sort of have someone around that have done a similar journey. and i wish that i would have had that. so i'm passion of giving that to the founders that i invest in, ma'am, i mean, talk to and the biggest one is that doing and understand our culture which fortify . i think one of the key reasons why, you know, sort of, i became so big is because the founders, they were determined to build a big company and not sell too early. and i'm really impressed with how they have been so to, to really make it a massive company coming from europe. the effect that has on the ecosystem in
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general is incredibly inspiring. there's a lot of companies being started every 2nd a feels like in every 2nd basement. there's some new founder creating a new company. i think that's, that's the soon. and it shows, by example, that it can be done. so there's no excuse today 20 times more money is invested in european startups then 12 years ago. but it's still a pittance in comparison to funding in the us and funding is only one of the challenges. if europe wants to be more digital, the independent or it needs to solve another problem. micro chips. nothing works without them. but only 10 percent of micro chips are manufactured in europe. the bulk is imported from asia. here's where history takes an interesting turn. this is where the socialist government of the g d. r produced their 1st micro chips
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. and this is where europe might actually catch up, dressed in the designs are sticking 1961 that's jumpstart to 60 years ago to a micro electronics institute was set up here. so you have a technical university working in the field. and that's the development of numerous industries, even off of the political changes of for the 2 and clever economic policy in the region as ensure the survival and further development of this no house most institution does raised and is now the launch is micro electronic center in europe, and that includes the entire ecosystem needed for a high tech industry like micro electronics. it's now silicon fax ending, like silicon valley and california. it's tim, tim, silicon valley and california. the us and you own the founder cause noting so that's amounts to about 70000 jobs in
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the tristan area in the road micro electronic sector does this for the potential is a maintenance is, was the digital transformation poses gigantic challenges to the european economy, production processes are increasingly digitalized and interconnected. this means secure data exchange is paramount, but currently it's far from acceptable. european industry has taken action. francesca funds dalio, his goal is visionary. he is the managing director of gaia x, one of the most daring projects and digital infrastructure. he's planning to build a european infrastructure that will enable secure exchanges between diverse industries and producers. 324 of the continents. most important enterprises are
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already on board. as our 14 national centers, the stand off, what's the window soft? the paper method you went to your he got caught up dory. we're currently designing software to connect existing computers, or data centers and cloud c or the software will run on the infrastructure that's already present in the leading. our rules will identify those. wishing to gain access and with the data, so we move from relinquishing control about data to others, to controlling our own data to control they go through that to understand what secure data exchange could mean for us in the future. let's take an example from the tourist industry. think of a person traveling through different countries using different means of transport. in the future, one single payment $1.00 check in one id check will suffice for the entire journey . the travel agencies, airline companies, and border controls, will all be using a common platform at the beginning of the journey. however, the traveller will have to consent to access to their data. guy x for their part
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will guarantee secure data exchange with their block chain technology. every single access and every alteration will be transparent, the europe's economy is still not in the same league as the us and china, in relation to digitalization. according to e, u estimates europe would have to invest 1250000000000 euros over the next decade to be competitive. but at least with it's a reconstruction fund. d e u has covered a 10th of that amount. the some regions, however far out stripped the rest of the content of the estonian test driven digitalization like no other country in the world. the topic cut worked for the estonian government for 5 years says it's cheap digitization officer, but he's also
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a private i. t entrepreneur of this combination of private and public involvement is typical for us donia different atlanta q 2 weeks time. that's the reason why anyone to pick them a c i o. sure. i officer government. they influence you. one society is a way bigger than a ceo of the i don't know that a large or something if i think they call much money, i product from 0 to a student, i see the sector. what change to me? i didn't make it residential. that is most of the one that show it was always 2nd teamwork, but it was being effort. estonia as health care system is one of the most impressive examples of digital transformation. all hospitals,
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doctors and laboratories are networked together. the say we managed the communication within the stony and medical system is very useful. early access to this information enables us to treat patients based. so a good example is the ambulance, the site, the key knobby, the mainland alarms a data b. s escape, we send them by god. we have an e ambulance light goes what this means that the ambulance no longer uses paper with an i patti. if we already have the patient's id code here, we can see that previous medical reform, if you need them before the ambulance reaches the patients, anything we can see medical history is how you prescription immunizations data. as i get at the hospital is immediately informed about the arriving patient that it can prepare in the time. so that might be a southern us debate and of course have you this of course raises the question of data protection. how can the individual maintain control of their sensitive data?
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the estonian health care system has clear and consistent guidelines. assume you know there is on the will get on the exist seems and the goal is my not and great. this is my health care data log. here i can see the names of all the doctors and nurses who have access to my data and the name a we could give them, i don't smoke. if i see a no name, i can file a complaint and ask why that person was checking my data. to say there is no good explanation. that person goes to jail really soon. it's as simple as that. is there a bigger liquid series? good. this is hard to and this ensures transparency and gives you confidence that your data is safe in the hands of the nurses and doctors or the medical center about the fear of digitization and relinquishing control of your personal information is not justified on to say here, i'm one of those at the so why does this, don't you have such a head start in the digital realm?
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the reasons are historical, but also geographical. he likes to remix. what does it, every big change brings its own problem, is that the rest only is the problem was that we had to build our own economy when the country was liberated from the soviet union. where uh, let's say we didn't want to be like the soviet union and we got to model. let me take a moment. you said me starting out for leaks. uh is the meeting or something that made on but the disadvantage of a stone you is that although we're relatively large, but bigger than switzerland or denmark, our population is small is um i see by the way, you have a lot of small towns and villages where it is very difficult to provide certain services effectively, such as banking and government services. the united seems that there was yeah. so that was our problems in model. what we realized that we needed to get people using the internet to many digital tools of the month. the does it the 100?
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this donia has the most unicorns in relation to population in europe. unicorns are startups with a market value of at least $1000000000.00. estonia has become the catchphrase for the countries digital economy. big circumstances on that one. so it just varies already. be on so hardy disappearance if you all services i provided online. be that health, education or finance? see so everything back into the dark stone. you cannot go back to paper. must just tell me that some of the systems just don't work like that anymore. so my 1st i'm a lot on this is why we have data embassies outside our country. let me, i give it to equipment and it's a mass of cyber attack, or something similar happens. we can reboot our country from outside our borders ag, which could by that put the, put them on that topic. cut is speaking from experience in 2007. estonia was the victim of the 1st politically motivated russian cyber attack. not
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only did the country defend itself valiantly emerged from the conflict even stronger. today, the nato cyber security center is located in tollen units from all nato countries are trained here, driven by an optimistic vision of a thoroughly digitized society. the government went one step further. it is, it is on line to be found. the e residency is like digital citizenship, also to the, to the, to the with that. so you can start a business, run it by wind it down. so today we have about 90000 e citizens. we've managed to open up our economy to a lot of people and this is just the beginning. we're all in the process of exploring this new digital worlds so you can watch them as of the modem of it. as sonya exemplifies how digitization process is, can succeed, private and public initiatives overlap with mutual benefit. the
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similarly style projects can be found across the continent and look very promising that we need to our digital democracy has never been a facebook democracy. can i see? click here and democracy when work a radical forward looking project has been launched by the city of far so lona: it's banking on the digital realm to strength and democracy through citizen participation. we need the, our idea of digital democracy was a cross between physical spaces such as urban neighborhoods and a digital democracy that safeguards people's rights and privacy. and most importantly, enables them to exert power over public decisions. italian francesca, 3 of us has long been committed to grass roots democratic platforms. 46 years ago, she started as the municipalities,
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1st information officer. gross was 15 minutes. okay, of human factors. our biggest experiment was in democratic participation. for this we created a platform called desi dean, barcelona barcelona. this evening is one i love to see them as a digital platform for citizen participation assigned this. i know that it is designed to enable you to participate digital, but also to inform you of all the offline event and presence. yeah. do it on. i was in the last 4 years and don't talk to so patient processors of all kinds of being creative, seo, mobility concepts and planning and design those public space and spiteful leak. with this, the generally people get on the 1st large scale experiment enabled us to discover the true priorities of the city at the grassroots level. the god bless you sadly, but you know, not like i was like when we did housing as a basic right for all the development of
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a new urban construction model called super easy because i could see i'm a little bitty citizens participating in dc team, but crucial and realizing super yeah, a mobility plan was developed and $120.00 junctions were identified in the city. the entire streets and intersections were designated traffic freight and converted into green public spaces for the residents. that's what digital citizen participation can look like. a showcase month. in the past 4 years, 40000 people have participated in strategic planning across the city about 70 percent of citizens proposal for incentive on us if these proposals are examined. and there is always a follow up process in this way that it didn't as already had a big impact on the city policy. doing what was the out to this to be much, we have much alone. i saw this after we developed and tested him here in barcelona
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. it was introduced in helsinki in iceland and madrid, turn in milan and drone at the moment. 80 cities across the world are using it, but it is almost become a european platform for democratic participation of the participants in a democratic got it was driving to work and seeing towns that were visit the deterioration main street just looking like there was no life and i'm thinking, how do you solve a problem? like this? long before the coven pandemic, a civic movement in ireland was attempting to halt the decline for rural regions. the plan was to motivate people to work remotely from home. tracy q is founder of grow remote for grownups, is community development organization. and we make remote work boots visible, and they said, there are no jobs here is it defeats the statute. and then what we should be saying
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is, there are jobs everywhere, and i'm here gro remote connects the job seekers to the jobs. it also offers training in remote working skills. remote work, we mean location acknowledging appointment. so not free announcing entrepreneurship diction. nomads just employment. like how's it going? hi. how are things? how are you going to do jobs? congratulations. yeah, thank you. you have moved up into senior engineering. amazing. i've never ever thought that's you know, remote or it could be something that i'd be able to do. yeah. and so yeah, i just decided to apply on spec and then there it was to have to foster their 55000 jobs open today in any community across here that could land there if only people knew about them. but we do have a lot of people as well that are from around here that you know, perfect for a little child slip like why there's no reason that other people can't do exactly
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what i'm doing. oh, you don't have to go to a big city just to get a good job you can have on wherever you happen to be. yeah, that's fine. grow remote aims to support people within their own region and help them to take their futures into their own hands with regular work contracts. many digital workers can only dream of such conditions. 28000000 people work for internet platforms across europe. and by 2025, there will be 15000000 more. most of these jobs are precarious food deliveries, for instance, the couriers are registered as self employed and part time they have practically no rights or job security. we have no insurance when it's cold and there's, there's no contracts. so basically you can rent a whole day laborers with no rights deliver food orders to our doorstep. the toleration of such abuses doesn't reflect well on the european welfare states. the companies are closed. you don't know who is in charge. don't know who has managed
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them. where you have for me, let me sit on the go to. oh so you room a silly fled from nigeria. he has lived in italy for 6 years and is still waiting for a permanent residency permit. he's one of 60000 bicycle couriers in italy. i have a friend of mine on zillow, and he gives me a fly of about organizing for this movement called writes for writers. and i was so interested because ultimately nobody was talking about that we didn't have anybody re presenting those in the national level. and we've developed for some money for station the we need to because of work and not just try this. so we decided to just the point stop the moment to send the message that we are no slaves. we have office, so with yourself. so right, the who made the movements and we're so glad that they want to
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intolerance, came and support us. and one for now is just just it's the side to give a permanence contract. it's the beginning. this is not all the ones i'm one of the lucky ones, the permanence contract. but we also fight and for the rights of all those not just me. couriers across europe are protesting. they demand recognition as regular workers. it is clear that for many the digital transformation is not a positive development, but rather a means of exploding those already in a week or position. i have those from believe that it concerns this recently. now the things the digital lies in is a change of light because most of the countries, the robots of delivering foods. so yeah. so i think
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the, yeah that, that if there will be a change. yeah, that will be a change very soon that will help might not be needed anymore. so the heated debates on the couriers rights are still ongoing. a foot and a stone at the start ups are one step ahead soon the human courier will be optional . so you know what, i mean, the threat of x at all, but they all, i mean, these are what am i angle, i assume the soonest. i said, i'm really not going, it's not science fiction. these robots are not toys that just drive back and forth . we've already used them to deliver 1800000 packets for future development. now, europe is very important. most of them and i believe will soon be in a position to offer our services. in many cities, the equals one said in a new study by mackenzie has examined labor market developments in the u. 520-3021 1000000 jobs could be lost to automation.
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on the other hand, 23000000 new ones could be created. so there are prospects even if everyone will not benefit equally. i'm gonna ask you to talk to the, the present. it gives you some numbers to pay your own. like what kind of to the cost will you sort of store? i find it hard to explain the beauty of digitalization to a german because they've never really experienced its benefits. let them look at how simple life gets when you don't have to run around in circles because everything is automated. so it sends it please. and that's why the germans or the swiss are not putting everything into digitalized in their country. what are you familiar with them sooner so many of the interesting when you compared digital systems, the ability to automate various services. yeah, you can see that western europe is 10 to 15 years behind scandinavia owns
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a lot. there was a, someone live in europe has a long way to go to catch up with the us and china on the digital front. but the road ahead is a special one, perhaps even exemplary. nowhere else is the transformation. so people centered matters of privacy and citizen. sovereignty are taken seriously, as is creating awareness of the issues. for me, the most important thing is that people feel empowered. that's is my data i created, i own it, i control it. that's we, as a society decide, what do we want to do with technology so that we remains a society for humans and not a technological society. the potential is there, europe could use the next transformation wave to become more digitally independent and stronger. the digital future is in our own hands,
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the a special edition of conflicts soon weeks. tim, sebastian, this is a border crossing point from moldova into ukraine, severest fight the con moment between ukraine and russia is roughly a 100 kilometers away. the big question dominates here,
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is where most of the 2 things mix targets in 30 minutes on dw textile production in room. that's what we do here in process the, the, its hellions of pioneers in the cycling which ultimately ends up being fashion again under sustainable focus on d. w. not just another day. so much is happening all at once. we take time to understand this is the day in depth look at current news, events analyzed roy experts to come to critical. i think yours not just another
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show. this is video weekdays on d, w the . this is the w news live from the last name. memorial. march gets underway in paris for the teenager killed by police and a traffic stop crowds. turnouts demand justice of a 17 year old. the shooting has prompted 2 nights of unrest. questions about credit us and prompts the gates lower income and ethnic minority.

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