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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  May 15, 2024 12:02am-12:30am CEST

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has long use similar legislation to crack down on independent news media and g o's, an active is the law threatens george's democratic freedoms, and it's chances of joining the e. u. brussel says the law is incompatible with that emission and that it flows european values. but pro european georgians don't want to accept defeat just yet, and take to the streets in their thousands again. i'm to call for lucian berlin, and this is the day the heroes who are participating in the i get, it shows you guys in, because this georgia has been through this, you know, conventional project physically and mentally, always for the century, enabling the slot as a russian law doesn't lead to a constructive engagement because this law has nothing to do with the, with the russian. well, when you want to go to the rules and your friends, you will tell us, you know, to take the unit, right?
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those people say on us the right, and so if the government is no genuine dismissal the whole bit in georgia, we'd find the way to speech to the floor. principles of democracy took principles also on the day. do you want secretary general antonia guiterres warrants of an ongoing humanitarian disaster and dar 4 and so don't need to prove it alone is this new window of time to prevent starvation in data, food disclosing rapid lead, violent flashes, you know, fashion, preventing a getting through and the tech on the city would have devastating consequences, supposed civilians and likely see the conflict that across thoughtful
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a welcome to the show. george's parliament has approved a controversial law that a sparked fresh protest in the capital to police. the police confronted demonstrators outside parliament, while lawmakers clashed in size before the vote. critics of the ruling party fears the so called foreign influence bill will be used to persecute and stand bound to sense and will dash georgia's hopes of joining the european union. the legislation requires media and other organizations to register as quote, pursuing the interest of a foreign power. if they get more than 20 percent of their funding from abroad. of our correspondent maria, such a monster has been covering the protest in the capital to please see. and gave us more on the protests on tuesday. the
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th at murray and critics have compared this legislation to a law in russia as it has been used to crack down on defense. before we get back to
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you, let's give a review or some work on the to banks in george's parliament descended into an old mountain bruise is the so called russian more past it's food and find reading. another milestone for a controversial bill which has sparked weeks of mass produce outside crowds again, voice bill positions ewing. the little will be used to suppress political, the st. moving georgia a when you from it's a u. s. parade, sions, and towards russian. things were protesting against russian low, but in reality, where protesting and again, instruction was in because we've been through this, georgia has been through this in organizational roger, physically and mentally, always for the centuries. and we're not going to let our government finally decide this. when you want to go to your role and your friend, you will tell us, you know, to take just a little issues and say,
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just low. so the ruling georgia dream policy and says it's committed to european integration and projects, comparisons between this bill. requiring organizations receiving more than 20 percent of funding from abroad to read just as agents of foreign influence and roles and russia is opposite by branding or labeling of this law as a russian law doesn't lead to a constructive engagement because this law has nothing to do with the, with the russian law having passed its 3rd reading, the bill now goes to the president who has said she will be television. but that will likely only cause a delay in the government says it plans to use its majority to override anybody. so the full, the more is officially adopted from other and maria, there are a lot of concerns and opposition to the bill inside georgia and abroad. what was the governing georgian dream party? why were they sold determines to pass this bill? the
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actually doesn't have a formal position and they need to be in georgia. he said that the extra, the center of the country through n g o said are being sponsored by brussels and washington. she also said that she will know the georgia on a possible one. so we can see that the rising and positive i was talking is from the the you have to say that this is not genuine in time. some of these on the, not the see, the russia run the but an overwhelming majority of georgians. want to see their country move closer to the you in fact join the block. why did they fear this,
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phil crowds up and those plans the they say the or with the government, the country, the bill of those will be the largest to the fact the in order to suppress the protest movement here in the overlaps the on the moving, the east or are they moving for the was gonna see probably in october those maria cut the months of reporting from to b. c. thank you so much for that update. conflict
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and disasters are pushing a record number of people out of their homes to seek shelter from war and destruction. the internal displacement monitoring center says more than 75000000 were forced to flee within their own country. in 2023. the worst effective nation is to don, we're civil war has this place more than 9000000 people. many of also left to don for nate, bring chat, a warning or next report contains some disturbing images. full year old yaz mean has struggled to walk since she was shot in the lake. she is from l janina into don's west staff full. but he's growing up in the camps. the displaced people across the border in chad last year is fighting me at the home. yes. mean, fled with her family. but the rebel power military groups, the rapids support forces caught up with them. a bullet toll through yes means leg
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and he's her mother. why did i do her mother who was 8 months pregnant was killed and yes mean was left all alone. some people found her on the road and brought her here on the road to the buddha. we old suffered the rapids support forces killed and wounded. so many people like i heard a recent human rights watch report accuses the rapids support forces and allied militias of carrying out attacks in west of full killing thousands. the report says this indicates ethnic cleansing will crimes and genocide. the power military group has been at will with through don's army since april 20, 23 and 4 is a front in the civil war. thousands of people were killed in clashes and asked
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strikes, you know, fashion over the weekend. it's the last major cc and all for still under the sudanese armies control, the city is reportedly under siege and there is a communications blackout to the united nations ones but fighting is endangering 800000 civilians in alpha and preventing aid from reaching the region. when millions of people are on the brink of salmon, that time is running out to prevent starvation and therefore, as intensifying clashes north, the forest capital l flasher are hindering our efforts to deliver vital food assistance into the region. the un has called the situation ensued on one of the west humanitarian disasters in recent memory. age groups via that the violent seemed all full could lead to another mastic and force millions more people to flee for their lives. alba share interests as an analyst and research are honest with
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don and joins as from the u. k of us, you're welcome to the w. you have been mapping and documenting human rights violations in su, dawn, what can you tell us about the scale of the atrocities being carried out as well? so certainly tonight's blackout since mid february, the atrocities and the crimes that have been reported us to be the under reported. it's become very difficult to be able to ascertain and verify a lot of these catastrophes that we've seen here in about any information that comes off of su, done, and said this is a drop is a drop in the bucket compared to all the atrocities that we'd be happy to and now with the recess essentially seating the city of sasha an essentially they've begun to seat after a few days of a rather few weeks of very heavy warnings from international organizations and communities. it's very imperative that this each i'm coming to the city of an
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session with a population of over 800000 people and estimates of over a $110000.00 people in terms of casualties, which is more than hiroshima and nagasaki. the needs to be much more heavy handed approaches to make sure that this seizure and conflict doesn't go forward. and we'll look at how to put an end to this. but 1st i want to look back in history. are we back to the same situation where we're seeing 20 years ago with the same actors involved as well as centrally, was seeing the same tactics and strategies being used? that's for sure. it's a um, now the history terms of the rapid support forces as you say, the same that have committed the atrocities 20 years ago with ethnic cleansing and genocide against those of african descent or those be considered to be more african that has be many reports, especially of from the old union uh, you know,
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to monetary and not showing a document to, to satellite imagery in terms of scorched as tactics and the raising of villages down to the ground along with eye witness and source reports that show that tell these stories. however, it's thanks to technology that we get to see the same things happening. know the very same exact that happened 20 years ago, and that's such, this is a fee on, on many different posts. however, there is an opportunity now to to cut the shots without having to continue on this man. how can this be cut short? how can so don, find a way out of the spiral of violence. there have been regional efforts to end the fighting. why have they been not, why are they not been successful as well? the subsidy, the power dimes of this conflict is intro to the coal west or east or north and south. the sit down is essentially going through a well, many people may say
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a counter revolution. others may say this war as a resource grab opportunity on both would be correct. however, because there's so many different external players involved from egypt to u e to russia as well. it's not, that's easy to southern the cut this conflict short um however, what should be the these, the international players really have a heavy, a hand on to its allies and friends who have a hand in this should sit down more to tell them to, to stop bombing to stop funding the belligerents as it's causing more um, comment done each time it is uh and any returns. but this will also sedans, median age is before the war was 17. seeing the most of of, of the fights as being thought of the young people. what is the median age, go to be after this? what would it be less or would it even be more because they won't be enough for young people around a such. this is what we're seeing. we're seeing
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a whole kidding, also sacrificing for generation in, in, in real time. and it's imperative that for sit down in the world to go forward together, they needs to be a heavier and onto those allies who are funding an ami, the belligerent. yeah, the internationally, the warrants, or don is often called a forgotten or how dangerous is the lack of attention for the people in the country . and for those who want to see an end to the blood shed, i know some may say forgotten. well, personally, coolness and a globe was so selectively ignored. well, there is information that does come out there are it has to be in the numerous atrocities that has been reported. yes, people have turned a blind eye to it. and the reason why it, they may have turned a blind eye the, there's many different factors within that made it. the racism may be an opportunity if it's better off of sedan,
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was not in the mind lights. and in this case, however, in this instance, the best way forward with to be, to put more eyes on sit on to keep focused and eyes on sit on the reason why we're not getting as much information i said was due to the, to the comes blackouts that has been with many different report stating that it was the results that committed this attack. and it's very important that there is internet wide. so we can document these abuses so we can send money in a to, to those who are desperately need to be able to communicate with those on the ground to really do need that help. and that has be many initiatives and ways of doing that. one of them being stalling and in fact, but even installed and is being threatened into that. i'm interested in closing down due to a, in a, a power low market. so compared to the, the,
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the usual market start start link would find itself in. yeah. as such, the cities on the ground and, and elsewhere have taken very extreme and desperate measures to make sure that they can mitigate and help me to gauge the catastrophe. missing into that. yeah. and you are trying to keep eyes onto john. it's a very important work you're doing that was researcher of us, your address, great speaking to you. thank you so much. thank you. 5 to hey, iris has just shifted gears with us. artificial intelligence pioneer is open a. i rolling out there a new interface that works with audio and vision as well as text. the new model called g p t for o has move beyond the well known chatbox features and is capable of real time, almost natural voice conversation, open a eyes under pressure to expand the number of people using their technology. here's an open, a video of it's new product. ating
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a blind visitor to london is the king in residence at the moment. it looks like a canyon residents right now. the royal standard flag is flying above buckingham palace, which is the signal that the monarch is present. how exciting to be there while the king at home trying to tell me exactly what they're doing right now, please. right now, the ducks are gently gliding across the water. they're moving in a fairly relaxed manner. not in a hurry. occasionally, one of them will just had under the water, probably looking for food, and then pop back up. that voice might sound familiar to you. let's bring in like cookie the senior elector and computer science at kings cause london and a general of a specialist. welcome to the day. like it looks like we can now have real time conversations with an a i that has eyes, ears, even a slight sense of humor. how big a deal is this? so i think this is not something that i pay, i isn't, isn't as much of
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a leap as it seems. most of these functionalities were actually in g p. c, before. but the big difference now is that they're connected together. that's why they cooling a multi modal a i said before, we typically connected through one mode at a time either text or images audio. but now the systems able to make those connections between it which allows it to do things a little bit faster. a little bit richer, but it's not a huge meat for it's it's, it's more just the, it's feels a lot more natural now. and i think in particular the, the emotion in the voice is definitely something that people have responded to a lot. yes, there's always worries about the power of this past of all being a technology. what are your concerns with g p a 4? 0, i think one of the risks with technology like this is that we see it do something and then we kind of assume it can do a lot of other things, right? so if you see my dog shake hands with me and you think going to the mines by can shake hands with people. we don't think that my dog is also an expert in theoretical physics. and so when we see g p t for do something,
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we need to make sure that we don't imagine all the other things that it can be trusted to do. that's where things get a bit dangerous. when people start asking some medical advice or to make huge life decisions for it, it's still a much simpler piece of technology, but it seems, it's just a very polish one. there are you said that there are limits to what it can do. one thing i'm personally quite happy about is that it doesn't seem to be able to get real time news updates. and why is that, for example? so by actually might be more of a, a social and political and legal issue more than a technological one. so, connie open, i is in a lot of court cases around the well to do with how it retrieves and uses data. i'm one of the most significant cool cases is brought to it by the new york times, who alleges the open i is essentially producing a competing product using the data. so i think that's made opening on a bit more cautious and allowing its technology to use life and use data. i'm one of the reasons why that's sort of trying to stop its technology from kind of
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getting it into more legal hope of what's been already is. so at least for the time being, we might have to wait until those court cases are resolved. and i really want to talk about where the data comes from, because a i is of course, trained on existing data. it needs more and more to become so sophisticated. you said that there, the near times is accusing open a i and other big players of cutting legal corners to harvest data. so where is it coming from right now? do we, even though, as well actually, i mean that's a great point that you make that in also cases we don't know what the date is coming from when we do know, typically it comes from 3 main sources. one is what we call open data set. so those have been made by academics like myself and they've been released out into the internet. and often those sources have been collected and very controlled ways and sort of cleaned up where the bulk of the data came from previously is from open access data or data that was just out of that on the internet. and this is where a lot of the legal kind of gray areas come in. oh,
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can i and companies like it claimed that it was okay for them to gather data from sources like read the news websites, things like that. we can see the whether it was okay as another question, the 3rd place the data comes from and i think this is really important. so something that gpc for a is from you and me using these tools. so for companies like open i, who are running out of data from these other sources they need, they use us to give them the future of that data. and that's why they're really interested in getting people to kind of turn on that microphones turn on that cameras and gives those companies more and more data that they can use freely. because unlike things like the new york times, if you use strategy bt you're agreeing to give them that data. so everything you put in this field for the next generation of that technology. all right? that we are seeing giant leaps and generative technology. how are those developments going to affect our, you know, our industries, our businesses and, and societies the way we interact with each other? yeah, i think um,
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best buy so many concerns i have about to and i think lots of the concerns come from the difference between near term things hang on long term thinking. right. so in the mid term people are making most of guesses about why i will a won't be able to do. and that means that making quite big decisions about whether i should have a role in our education system or health system, a legal system. and we don't really know the respects are going to be kind of 51015 years down the line. lots of people don't realize this, but small tools like also correct on your phone. for example, there been studies that have shown that actually made us worse at spelling, but it took us out a long time for us to realize this. so i think for me, the big it is not so much whether chattahoochee is fun to use right now, or if it can help us write an e mail. but it's about the impact it might have on us and our children on children's children. and the way they learn and use technology um and communicate with each other, you know, a long time from now. so this is the main worry i have is that we move too fast, you know, and that we integrate it into place as it shouldn't be. and that's the main thing i
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think so concerned about right now. yeah, we only have about half a minute for that tough for them to go without asking you. because when talking about new way, our technology, we often talk about, you know, single players like opening i alphabet because they're the ones we have more direct interaction with. but looking at it more broadly and with so many interest. and you know, so many stakes here, which country is currently leading the global a rates as something us as a china? it's hard because it's a big split between public and private investment. the us in china is definitely the 2 front runners. if you meet someone from any other countries government, they'll confidently say that the but no one claims to be the best. the 2nd, my guess would be a lot of the stuff is happening behind the scenes. and if we look to say, just in terms of private investment and the coverage at the, well, probably the us is edging things out right now. but so much i stuff happens behind closed doors, but it's really anyone's guess what it might look like a year from now is mike cook of kings college london. thank you so much. that was fascinating. thanks a and that is our time. but make sure to stay informed,
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stay engaged and stay in touch. you can follow our team on social media or handle there is at the, the units. and if it's the latest headlines you're looking for, there is of course, always our website that is w dot com for now though, from the entire team here on the day. thank you so much for spending parts of your day with us. the next time by the
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