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tv   Shift  Deutsche Welle  November 24, 2024 3:15pm-3:31pm CET

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tens, tens, $5.00 costs cents a shift. and you can always stay up to date for visiting our website at www dot. com or visit social media channels. our handle is at www. i'm going to jones. thanks for watching the . what thing is, what do you get for $0.50 or $0.50? no, not thinking come sales and lots and lots of stuff. did you know it costs $0.50 to feed one hungry child for one for the evening. with the share of the meal,
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you can share your video with children with just $0.50 and a tab on your smartphone. together we can end global hunger. please download the the lift spot with the bad news. alter, perhaps, worldwide are trying to withhold information from the citizens. we contact free and trustworthy informational means, and that for granted the good news, the always to circumvent censorship. we'll talk about that. and the 2nd also on the show police in different countries, us scaling technologies to hunt down criminals, less crime sounds great. there are also drawbacks. what should we consider when deciding to involve a i and testing in crime? and we'll also be talking about something, a little light to instagram and take, talk off full of inspiration for the holiday of your dreams more while people are also using ai so that trouble is taken out of the best sol, guys. these are the topics that i'm moving the tech world,
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the free and reliable information online. is it risk world wide government sense or content? and they know like, and or even shut down the internet temporarily to withhold information from citizens and activists are exposed because that private data isn't say these problems were discussed in november 2024 at the following will sign summit. invalid free information is a very endangered space eats because a lot of autocrats blocking the internet and we are in a situation where at the end maybe there is not much exchange anymore between people and between countries. so i think uh we have to take really care of the internet and making it for you again. so what are the biggest challenges? online sense to ship? the strictest form of online sense to ship is china's great firewall. it controls internet traffic between china and the outside world, the chinese engine that is only connected to the outside that look at a few key points, making it possible to monitor exactly what goes in and out by blocking uses from
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entering websites and filtering keywords. it prevents access to certain information, it can even monitor and disrupt supposedly dangerous content governments. one thing to blog information have several options. i would say they can access the 3 different levels. they can either interfere at the level of uh, let's say, the internet's address book dns. so they can choose to give you the wrong directions in terms of accessing a particular site. in some cases, they might just close the road. they might say, when you're trying to go in a certain direction, your pockets will not go through any more. or in other cases, they might look at specific features or properties of your traffic. and they might decide that certain classes of traffic are allowed or just allowed. russia use a similar methods, the government agency was covenants or monitors, i'm sense, as mass media and creating social media. in 2024, russia found content from so cool of foreign agents and criminalize ads on sites
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promoting v p. as all virtual private networks, apple was even false to remove some vpn apps from the ups store, the pans help people get around online censorship. in simple terms, they create a virtual tunnel that highs ip addresses and keeps use of anonymous finding them doesn't just cut citizens off from free information. it also puts political activists at risk this way unwanted reports and can be blocked before it even stops . activists in danger, people campaigning for issues such as democracy, social justice, the environment, refugees agenda, right, of being cognitive and not just by repressive regimes. active is everywhere. i need to step up the digital security to avoid surveillance on hacking. my recommendation to you would be to use something like 4, which is and then an image network that provides additional layers of security. i would suggest following a set of the common best practices avoiding password reuse,
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making sure that the sites that you are sharing your information with are secure and you know, following some of the available information out there. and in terms of improving your digital self defense. in case you want to run, pop your digital self defense check the tool project website. you can find more information that how can new technologies help with these problems? not only the active is have to step up the game, but editors a news networks do too. oh, you worked with vpn techniques, we worked with mirror techniques, but at the end it's a cut in most race against sensors. and blockers, a mirror site is a copy of a website hosted on a different server to improve accessibility and low times. it helps distribute traffic and shows the site remains available even if the main service bound. they also work in regions with restrictive internet access. iran has been blocking dw websites since 2009. but thanks to a cooperation with the free vpn tools, cy,
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phone dw, actually reach as many people back in september 2024. the w have more than 3000000 online visits, any ross 75 percent of them via the dw sites on up. if you want to use the app, just write an e mail to the w hyphen w at sites and 3 dot come apart from the pins. and there are websites a lot of hope lives in new encryption technologies they could make internet censorship. honda encrypted dns or domain name system makes the address book of the internet more private. so you called me track so easily encryption on other levels would make it harder for others to control what you can access. and this is why you as an engine that use that come into the equation if you want to help guarantee free access to information online, find out about these technologies and use the helping to fight crime sounds great. right? facial recognition could help catch criminal spots. the circled predictive policing
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might even stop crimes before that happens. but it's not that simple. most security threats of privacy, that's way up the pros and cons of and policing police and they, i, a recent studies found that 75 percent of european citizens support the use of allied by police and military, for example, the full civilians, surprising given that innocent citizens have also been homes by faulty. i don't get me wrong, kansas through large amounts of data quickly like data bases of one to persons of crime statistics. it can also draw conclusions faster than any police officer but a i makes mistakes and can be misused. check out what happens and what a service, for example, facial recognition systems, 75 percent of odds and teen as caps. the service is under video surveillance. the city rolled out a massive facial recognition program in 2019 within months. the government claims nearly 1700 wanted criminals had been caught. but dozens of arrows were made as
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well, meeting to and justified police checks and even arrest. one resident tmo, if a roller was wrongfully detained for 6 states data protection act of as soon as the city which led to the system being shut down in 2022. the system has been in limbo ever since. activists and city representative haven't yet been able to agree on a legal framework because there are more consent to the investigation found data, not just on crimson. also on politicians active this janice police using the system to track people and legally an even bigger concern with facial recognition is that it can be used estimate profiling. china, for example, has use this technology to monitor, detains, and lives and we go minority. and facial recognition also has a general slow, doesn't work equally wealth. everyone's studies show it's least accurate for people of color women a non binding of individuals. so that is a lot of work to be done for, for these systems can function without bias. predictive policing. what is crimes to
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be prevented before that committed? that's the idea behind predicted policing with a i large data sets can be analyzed to spot buttons and trends. humans might miss berry. this could make police look more efficient and we're just human error decision making. but the accuracy and fairness of these models depends on the quality and diversity of the data. the trained on the risk of reinforcing existing bias is as high when a i is trained on biased historical crime data, it can reinforce those biases over police to minority neighborhoods. may appear to have higher crime rates as a result, predictive policing tools could on saturday target these communities increasing and the quality never the less predictive models already being used in certain fields. vincent, they help assess the risk of large events like football matches. this allows police to focus on areas where issues i'm most likely to occur. for example, fights and police kind of work. hey, i can save police officers time. for example,
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a i might be able to do paper work in the future. it can also ensure that offices in the right place at the right time, and it could even lead to fair decisions by removing human prejudices from the equations. but to get that some obstacles need to be of a comes 1st. data bases must be trudy representative and diverse to ensure they treat everyone for alex on 2nd, the needs to be a clear legal framework on what data authorities can access abuse of this technology could threaten our privacy and civil rights. what do you think of a policing? let us know. okay, time for something like to you planning a vacation with a i instagram and take talk. it has never been easier to discover these places. now google is joining it with a i to months, but do algorithms really make the best travel guides? it's a trip planning according to a survey in the us, $1.00 and $5.00 young people already using
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a i. so the travel tons office designed to con trips or chat books like touchy bt and gemini, couldn't be your personal travel guides. yeah. all 3 ways they can help us be finding the perfect destination chapel. it's process. mountains of information that can take you hours to dig through. so if you're up to something specific like warm beach with smoking spots, they can help foster don't enter detailed prompts that include things like temperature. thanks the trip planned activities. secondly, creating your itinerary. okay. i can help you create a travel route tailored to your location, a length of stay, the city visits tried google maps and most of the use of a i and computer vision to create 3 d models of how a given place might look at a specific time up to 4 days in the future, but the feature isn't supported in every city yet. i'm fairly booking flights on hotels. many travel sites now have chatbox to simplify the booking process. google's gemini chat, but also off as a solutions by being integrated with google flights on hotels. it can come pad
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times and prices for you, for the convenience. but that's something even more useful for jen z when it comes to planning a trip using is the and take talk of travel guides. take talking to instagram, make it easy to find hidden gens like cool restaurants. i've seen that use aside from travel ads, the platforms kind of actually give you a real glimpse into places. here's how to do it using june location to see posts from why you want to go. you can search by hash tags of the country. a city you want to visit to get some inspiration for cool spot. if you're not sure where to go yet, try a general hash tags like cash type, travel, or stuck travel photography. they might give you an idea. alright, your trip is booked, your rate is planned. so what could go wrong? well, this kind of travel planning has its downside. what you see online might not be what you'll get. images shed by influence is designed to have a block. the appeal reality might be somewhat disappointing and you definitely need
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to, to pass on crowds, hey, i will spit out the most search places as well. social media algorithm more use those probably been suggestions to replicate the post over tourism might only get what that means. a popular place will become overcrowded with tourist. i'm not often result in contact with locals. big boss alona, for example. those goals protested against overwhelming torres, proud last summer. and there's more to keep in mind. double check information from campus. they might get things wrong or be updated. also look for reasons of use of the places you want to go to, the quality might have changed over the years. so how do you plan your trips? that's so for me today by and see you next time, the leasing policy basically like aware of a space, the small step towards
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a very big dream. putting an astronaut on mars. and while they're still a long way to go, these researchers and mentors carrier sites fixed on a cheap nation. mars. next on d. w. can a century old novels still be relevant to look at homeless muns masterpiece, the magic mounted? what is it actually about? and why is it worth reading today? the follow us up to magic mountain to find out unveiled in 60 minutes on d. w. he's got any issues with a lot say what? the of
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the, the the rod province in our mania. this is where the austrian space for him is simulating what life might one day be like on the red planet. mars lawyers this boss looks almost assume. this is the newest law simulation station, fixed for a team of 6. i'm a little gas journalist who spent the month doing things that people could be doing on mazda and 20 to 30 years. so this is kind of like a sneak peak into the future. the preview often took on an international team of.

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