1. May 2022
    1. The government hopes to stamp down on, among other things, death threats, knife sales, assisting people to commit suicide, the glamourisation of anorexia, vaccine scepticism, fraudulent advertising and racist abuse directed at England’s football team.
    2. the bar should be high, and the rules should be applied carefully, frugally and narrowly
    3. The bill will require tens of thousands of internet firms, from foreign giants like Facebook and Google to niche web forums, to do more to protect their users, on pain of fines of 10% of their worldwide revenue, or even being blocked entirely.
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    1. Inefficient international institutions may collapse amid an accelerating arms race, nuclear proliferation and the multiplication of regional conflicts. Such change would lead only to more chaos in the years ahead.
    2. That would lead to a reformation of the global order, with major changes to the UN system, archaic norms of international public law and recalibrations at the IMF, the WTO and other bodies.
    3. If a deal with Mr Putin is possible, a deal with Xi Jinping would be a logical continuation.
    4. the final outcome of the collision between the Russian and the Ukrainian models will be postponed.
    5. Triumph for Ukraine might lead to a tamed and domesticated Russia. A quiet Russia would allow the West to cope more easily with China, which would be the only major obstacle to liberal hegemony and the long-awaited “end of history”.
    6. it is about our understanding of modernity itself and, consequently, about our preferred models of social and political development.
    7. two views on the modern international system and on the world at large; two opposing perceptions of what is right and what is wrong, what is fair and what is not, what is legitimate and what is illegitimate and of what national leadership should entail.
    8. very different ways of organising social and political life
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    1. The other three goals are to make supply chains more resilient; to promote infrastructure investment and clean energy; and to form new rules on taxation and anti-corruption.
    2. with high standards for workers’ rights and e-commerce rules.
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    1. Even if policymakers can ease the way for the likes of Mr Shevchik to come, America must still tackle an emerging talent gap with its principal geopolitical rival, China. China awards over 100,000 more advanced degrees every year than America does. America’s byzantine immigration system excels at kicking out foreign-born graduates. The place remains attractive to skilled foreigners—if only it will let them in.
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    1. “They have placed bets from Mauritania in the north to Namibia in the south and in many countries in-between,
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    1. Data Poisoning is an adversarial attack that tries to manipulate the training dataset in order to control the prediction behavior of a trained model such that the model will label malicious examples into a desired classes (e.g., labeling spam e-mails as safe).

      What is data poisoning?

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    1. Social media research foundation - a good idea for data visualisation.

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    1. Tech giants begin to support data sovereignty, and data localisation. Google has opened cloud servers in Spain for data localisation. This service will be offered in collaboration with Telefonica, the Spanish telecom giant.

      A new 'data sovereignty' business model was highlighted in Google's announcement: “Accelerating digital transformation also requires cloud services that meet regulatory compliance and digital governance requirements. In particular, highly regulated sectors like government, healthcare and financial services need additional controls to store data and run workloads locally.”

      You can find more information here.

    2. “Accelerating digital transformation also requires cloud services that meet regulatory compliance and digital governance requirements,” Google wrote. “In particular, highly regulated sectors like government, healthcare and financial services need additional controls to store data and run workloads locally.”
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    1. How different generations of diplomats incorporate and adapt not only to new tools but to this changing context of diplomacy affects their incorporation and appropriate use.

      I think this is very important because our senior diplomatic colleagues come from a very different generations than ours. In this respect, we not only get to learn from their expertise but they also learn from younger diplomats who might find it easier to navigate online and digital tools.

    2. This classroom demonstrates online learning as a tool for continuing education and training in a diplomat’s busy life and for outreach to constituencies. Does your mission or organisation use online training tools? What examples can you share?

      Yes, out diplomatic institute provides online training courses to members of the Mexican Foreign Service. These trainings cover a variety of topics like consular documentation, protection or even protocol.

    3. Twitter is being used for the conduct of state and even for Twitter diplomacy.
    4. used for both diplomatic listening (information gathering) and diplomatic talking (public diplomacy).
    5. Facebook and Twitter
    6. These technologies, among others, impact how modern diplomacy performs its main functions as outlined in Article 3 of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations: representation, protection of nationals and consular assistance, negotiations, information gathering, and promoting friendly relations, including public diplomacy (UN, 1961).
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    1. Not because global solutions aren’t needed – they are an important part of the picture. But while many structural solutions to inequality do require global action, the radical changes needed on both the domestic and international fronts are not in the Davos wheelhouse because they threaten elite interests.

      Global solutions are needed but not by WEF.

    2. People, however, are no longer fooled by the Davos talk of equality, transparency, respect and diversity. They are well aware that those who benefitted and continue to benefit from the pandemic that left them struggling to put food on their table  – such as Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla, who made an eye-watering $24.3m in 2021 and is attending Davos – are not interested in the systemic changes needed to tackle inequality.

      ||VladaR||||MariliaM|| A good summary of Davos.

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    1. Share of topics related to clima-te/energy issues in news coverage on investment funds 2015–2022

      ||Jovan||

    2. INCLUSION OF PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES LIKELY TO GET MORE RECOGNITION AT LAST

      ||GingerP|| A very interesting text on public perception of people with disabilities.

    3. n May 2022 WHO have estimated that covid deaths have been under-reported and estimate there have been over 15 million deaths worldwide

      Estimated death by COVID.

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    1. I propose the below structure

      ||sorina|| ||VladaR||||Katarina_An|| This is ready-made structure. We will inform Soutila that we will use it for our report.

    2. here is need to create the African Union Senior Government Officials Group (AUSGOG) that will report to The Permanent Representatives Committee (PRC)

      We can includ this as proposal and quote this thesis.

      @sorinat@diplomacy.edu

    3. the African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM) can play an important role in assessing the cybersecurity readiness of African countriesand review their compliance with international standards,notably the national Cyber security governance, institutional and legal frameworks as a first step to identify the adequate assistance for each country and sub-region.
    4. TheNews 24 (2019) reported a number of 21Internet shutdowns across Africa in 2018 against 13 in 2017 which unfortunately had economic implications in the region. For instance,CIPESA (2017) points out that Internet shutdowns have cost up to US$ 237 million in Sub-Saharan Africasince 2015.Moreover,Internet Shutdowns,restrictions and content blocking affect negatively the everyday life of African citizens as they rely on Internet to access knowledge and perform important activities,such as communicating with others

      shutdowns and content blocking.

    5. The Foreign Ministers of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Regional Forum (ARF)also engaged in developing CBMs and agreed in 2012 to develop “A work plan on security in the use of ICTs focused on practical cooperation on Confidence Building Measures”. The work plan was adopted in 2015 and put in place an Inter-SessionalSupport Group composed of Senior Officials and ARF Foreign Ministers to promote CBMsand Preventive Diplomacy through practical cooperationactionsamong states (ASEAN, 2015).

      ||Jovan|| Useful for my session next week with ASEAN ambassadors.

    6. PSA and AGA Architectures can be used to address challenges posed by thedigital technologies advancements
    7. still handled at the technical level
    8. These two Architectures (APSA and AGA) did not include policy dialogues on cybersecurity, Internet policy or any other topic related to Digital policy as an emerging issue to enable the Continent to tackle the challenges of the digital era.

      Gap on AFrican level (we can quote this thesis).

    9. Accordingto Bedzigui (2018), we need to link the two AU instruments APSA and AGA to enhance AU response to instability within the Continent, since both architectures includePSC and most security crisis or conflicts are related to either instability in Africa, bad governance or non-respect of democratic rules and human rights

      This could be an interesting insight

    10. t is noticeable that existing mechanisms and programs donot include the threats and risks stemming from the use Information Communication Technologies (ICTs),as wellas the new possibilities that cyberspace offers to perpetrate transnational criminal and terrorist activities that may also disruptthe functioning of African nations.

      ||VladaR|| ||sorina|| ||Katarina_An|| It is interesting that there is lack of link between traditional security instrumetns and cyber ones in Africa.

    11. Table 2

      ||Jovan|| we can check if this exists in word.

    12. South Africa

      ||sorina|| Sorina, we have something of our focus countries.

    13. In addition to undertaking cyber capacity building activities, so far a number of programs and legislative frameworks have been adopted by the Sub Regions notably: ECOWAS cybersecurity guidelines, ECCAS Model Law / CEMAC Directives on Cybersecurity(Data protection, e-transactions, cybercrime); SADC model law on data protection; SADC model law on e-transactions; SADC Model Law on Computer Crime and Cybercrimeand Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA);model Law on electronic transactions andModel Cybercrime Billadopted in 2011(Orji,2015).

      to include in sub-regional instruments

      sorinat@diplomacy.edu

    14. the AU Commissiondeveloped Guidelines on Internet Infrastructure Security (ISOC, 2017) and Guidelines on Personnel Data Protection in Africa (ISOC, 2018) where explanations and guidance on domestication of the Malabo Convention provisions are given.

      To be included as example of guidelines

      @sorina

    15. we can consider establishing IGFsin Africaas a successful model,especially in recent years with the increasing participation and involvementof government representatives.

      ||sorina|| Do we have this data?

      ||VladaR||

    16. Whilethe USA, Russia and China did not sign the declaration it is reported that four African countriesnamelyGabon, Morocco, Congo and Senegal have signed the declaration (Radunovic,2018)

      ||sorina|| vladar||VladaR|| Vlado, please find some intern to make geographical survey of membership of Paris Call. From this we can extract participation of Sub-Saharan African countries

      ||minam||

    17. Africaparticipation in the GCCs is limited to few countries such as Senegal, Kenya, Morroco and Tunisia which are members of the GFCE which generally nominatedelegates from the ministry of ICT to attend the conferences without internal coordination with other Ministries.

      ||sorina|| Do we have this statistics?

    18. Thepace of ratification is very slow withonly four countries ratified (Senegal,Mauritius, Namibia and Guinea), this is due tolack of assistance and support from the African Unionto Member States, the lengthy processes within the countries,lack of awareness of decision makersand parliaments on the importance of cybersecurity and its relation to national security and prosperity.

      ||sorina|| We may quote this thesis with the reasns why ratification of the Malabu convention is not gaining off.

      I will check with Moctar if one of our recommendation will be to help African countreis to ratify this convention.

    19. Among the aforementioned African countries,four countries havealready ratified the Budapest Convention (Mauritius, Senegal, Moroccoand Cape Verde)

      ||sorina|| we shold have this info about 4 countries that reatified the Budampest conventon.

      ||JovanK||

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    1. the new information sources

      Information gathering has still remained a core function of diplomacy even with the internet.

      What has changed is the speed of dissemination of information and breath of possible recipients. In the past, any information once disseminated would not be accessible immediately to the public but with internet there are many sources that may sometimes post unverified information which may escalate a situation. The diplomats therefore need to be ahead of the pack and have mechanisms to monitor relevant information sources proactively and in some cases share the information that is not restricted from the public openly and faster than was done in the past.

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    1. They emerge through open dialogue. Because conversations are the basis for any new solutions.
    2. reinforcing a more focused form of multilateralism
    3. renationalisation of system-critical resources, value chains and production processes. In other words, reduced dependencies and risks, and fewer suppliers.
    4. polarisation, sharpened power politics, a trade cold war, eroding world rules, blocked exchanges and, as a consequence, widespread losses of prosperity.
    5. a decoupling of economic areas with regionally closed cycles.
    6. sectoral globalisation
    7. When our democratic environment is threatened and values agreed under international law falter, Switzerland too is threatened.
    8. to strengthening its own and common fundamental values.
    9. There is no neutral attitude towards the brutal violation of fundamental values, which are also our values
    10. First the financial crisis, then climate change, the pandemic and, on 24 February, Russia's attack on Ukraine.
    11. Open world markets and technological progress generated prosperity for hundreds of millions and provided a boost for more democracy, freedom and stability.
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    1. He predicted the U.S.-E.U. data deal announced by Mr. Biden would be struck down again by the European Court of Justice because it still does not meet E.U. privacy standards.
    2. Amazon Web Services, the largest cloud computing service, said it lets customers control where in Europe data is stored
    3. Google Analytics, which is used by many websites to collect audience figures, were told this year not to use the program anymore because it could expose the personal data of Europeans to American spying.
    4. If tech companies were required to store it all locally, they could not offer the same products and services around the world, they said.
    5. drafted an executive order to give the government more power to block deals involving Americans’ personal data that put national security at risk,
    6. In Kenya, draft rules require that information from payments systems and health services be primarily stored inside the country, according to the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation
    7. Shifting attitudes toward digital information are “connected to a wider trend toward economic nationalism,”
    8. The debate over restricting data echoes broader fractures in the global economy.
    9. But users might lose access to some services or features depending on where they live.
    10. And the movement of data has become part of geopolitical negotiations, including a new pact for sharing information across the Atlantic that was agreed to in principle in March.
    11. an early draft of an executive order meant to stop rivals like China from accessing American data.

      ||Pavlina|| Do you know more about this draft?

    12. Driven by security and privacy concerns, as well as economic interests

      Main reasons for control of data flows.

    13. Now the era of open borders for data is ending.
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    1. there are fewer and fewer places where all parties can come together.
    2. “We risk that the world splits up into a multi-power system. We have different philosophies, ideologies; even inside countries we have a polarization which you haven’t experienced 10, 15 years ago.”
    3. For a bunch of people, it’s just five days of making as much money as they can because they’re masters of the universe and they’re seeing other masters of the universe and they’re meeting every 30 minutes and getting deals done,”
    4. the need for multinational collaboration was only growing more urgent.
    5. having people and ideas and goods and services move faster and faster across borders, is what gets you a global middle class over the last 50 years
    6. whether the war is an isolated conflict, or the beginning of a much broader realignment of world powers.
    7. Mr. Schwab barred not only Russian government officials but also all Russian nationals from attending.
    8. “One of W.E.F.’s big ideas has been that shared economic prosperity would bring the world more together,”
    9. have fundamentally challenged the viability of that aspirational worldview.
    10. has extolled the virtues of an interconnected world, one where the free flow of goods, services, people and ideas would lead to shared prosperity and peace.
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    1. thefollowingplurilateralinitiativesintheWTO

      Could plurilateral be risk for multilateral approach?

    2. itseemsfairtoquestion
    3. AsearlyasFebruaryandMarchexperts,backedbyofficialstatisticsofalldeathspercountry,stressedthefacts,thatareasonableresponseshouldberecommended.
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    1. Expect an ecosystem of alliances.”
    2. In April the EU agreed such a deal with India and has embarked on a similar process with Japan. Tech is also being discussed in the Quad, the security dialogue between America, Australia, India and Japan.
    3. into a “tech alliance” of democracies
    4. As for the EU, the European Court of Justice may yet strike down the new version of “Privacy Shield”, too. Similar lawsuits are possible in America as well
    5. But Open RAN and virtualisation also weaken two big European firms, Ericsson and Nokia, which are in the same business as Huawei. And they create opportunities for America’s big cloud providers, in particular Amazon Web Services and Microsoft, to get involved in telecoms.
    6. America’s negotiators want the TTC to speed up the deployment of two new ways of building mobile networks called Open RAN (short for Open Radio Access Network) and “virtualisation”.
    7. Optimists note that ordinary Americans, if not their elected representatives, seem open to the idea of such rules: they trust tech companies even less than Europeans do (see chart).
    8. But in most areas, the council’s woolly pledges hint at the difficulty of the task ahead. In AI, the EU and America aim to “develop a shared hub/repository of metrics and methodologies for measuring AI trustworthiness and AI risks”. In climate and clean tech, both “work towards a common methodology for joint EU-US recommendations on selected carbon-intensive products”. In tech investment, the pair are thinking about holding a “tabletop exercise” to learn how the other side reacts when a Russian or Chinese firm comes knocking to acquire a local company. In other words, officials still are trying to find a common language.
    9. an early-warning system to avoid the sort of bottlenecks that have led to the current shortage of microchips
    10. more information and harmonise regulations
    11. an “open, free, global, interoperable, reliable, and secure” internet
    12. the “Declaration for the Future of the Internet”,
    13. If America and the EU had not even been able to agree on data flows, says another official, other attempts at transatlantic co-operation in tech policy would have been futile.
    14. the agreement did not sufficiently limit American law-enforcement agencies’ access to the personal data of European citizens.
    15. It is supposed to be the main venue in which America and the EU co-ordinate policy for the digital realm
    16. the pair account for 55% of the global market for information technology,
    17. The TTC is the West’s response to efforts by China and others (notably Russia after its invasion of Ukraine) to build an autocratic digital world and bring the physical supply-chains that underpin it under their control.
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    1. ||MariliaM|| There is sharp decline in tech markets. Here is an interesting analysis.

    2. Back then companies had neither healthy balance-sheets nor promising business models. Nowadays many of them have both. The stomach-churning market gyrations are unpleasant to a generation of tech founders, workers and investors who have lived a long bull run. But they are unlikely to stop digital technology eating the world.
    3. Cyber-security firms, such as CrowdStrike or Palo Alto Networks, could see their fortunes return thanks to fears of Russian and Chinese cyber-attacks.
    4. focus on the quality names in tech.
    5. The industry has suffered from an abrupt reversal of fortunes, explains Mark Mahaney of Evercore ISI, an investment bank. In recent years more than one factor gave tech a boost: the coronavirus pandemic pushed life and work online; government stimulus programmes further increased demand; and super-loose monetary policy made tech’s long-term growth more attractive to investors. Now people are turning away from screens and leaving home again; the war in Ukraine is creating paralysing uncertainty; and economies around the world are suffering from inflation and soon, perhaps, recession.

      Here are the main reasons for decline of tech industry.

    6. Although they were meant to reach the Moon no matter what, cryptocurrencies are also coming a cropper. Even some hardened “hodlers” have been getting cold feet. On May 12th bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency, was trading below $26,000, less than half its peak in early November. Other digital monies have shed even more value. The next four biggest coins have lost more than 70% since their peak. Non-fungible tokens (NFTs), even more speculative titles to digital assets such as art that can be traded, have been hammered, too. Sales of NFTs in ether, another big cryptocurrency, have dropped by more than half in recent weeks on OpenSea, a big NFT marketplace.

      Drop of trade market.

    7. all the assets that climbed to dizzying heights over the past few years are now coming down to earth. It is harder to say how loudly they will burst—and which might still reflate.
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    1. it isn’t too early to say that the war in Ukraine will accelerate the geopolitical and economic shift from the West to the East.
    2. Joe Biden had hoped to put Russia policy on a “stable and predictable” footing in order to focus on America’s Indo-Pacific strategy. The war in Ukraine undoubtedly will distract America’s attention and syphon away resources. It will further hollow out Mr Biden’s Indo-Pacific strategy, which already has too many aims and too few tools and not enough supporters
    3. By contrast China is the largest beneficiary of the rules and regulations of global commerce and finance made by the West after the second world war. China has a huge stake in safeguarding the existing international order.
    4. Mr Putin’s Russia is nostalgic for the heyday of the Soviet empire.
    5. But the war in Ukraine has inadvertently proved that Beijing and Moscow’s rapprochement is not an alliance.
    6. Europe’s security, now as in the past, can only be achieved with Russia’s co-operation.
    7. Mr Putin’s all-out war against Ukraine has failed. Precisely because of that, he will fight until he can declare some sort of “victory”. Presumably this will involve Ukraine’s acceptance that Crimea is part of Russia, its promise not to join NATO and the independence of the two “republics” of Donetsk and Luhansk. The challenge is whether Russian troops are able to control Donbas after occupying it.
    8. But it will lose Russia’s partnership. And it is only a matter of time before America takes on China again.
    9. It expresses understanding of Russia’s “legitimate concerns” over NATO’s expansion, while underlining that “the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all countries must be respected”.
    10. IF THE ENEMY of my enemy is my friend, is the enemy of my friend also my enemy?
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    1. Scientific sanctions on Russia may affect significantly research on climate change.

      As it is analysed by the Economist, the main setback on climate research will be on Artic and Siberia's permafrost:

      Permafrost research, crucial for understanding where climate projections will end up, is likely to suffer in particular. Two-thirds of Russia is covered by permafrost, and this frozen ground locks up huge amounts of organic material. As it melts and that organic material decays, greenhouse gases in the form of methane and carbon dioxide are released into the atmosphere. Without good data on these emissions, understanding about their contribution to climate change will decline.

      So far, as the Ukraine war escalates, there are no moves towards re-establishing scientifc cooperation between Russia and the West. The continuation of this situation will significantly affect Artic and climate science in both parts of the world.

      More information is available here: https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/russian-and-western-scientists-no-longer-collaborate-in-the-arctic/21809236

    2. Of Russia’s top ten scientific collaborators, according to publication statistics from Nature Index, a database that tracks scientific output, only China has failed to impose post-invasion academic sanctions on Russia. There is thus a looming funding crisis for dozens of Russian research and data stations that were maintained by Western support.
    3. Russian researchers have, for example, been “disinvited” from academic conferences, such as the Arctic science summit
    4. Two-thirds of Russia is covered by permafrost, and this frozen ground locks up huge amounts of organic material. As it melts and that organic material decays, greenhouse gases in the form of methane and carbon dioxide are released into the atmosphere. Without good data on these emissions, understanding about their contribution to climate change will decline.
    5. Sanctions, says Dag Rune, rector of the Arctic University, in Tromso, “will have devastating consequences for Arctic research, and the consequences for climate change are obvious. Projects in the Arctic”,
    6. Information from stations in Siberia and buoys in the Arctic Ocean provide irreplaceable data on climate change.
    7. Hundreds of long-standing partnerships like Dr Aspholm’s have been put on indefinite hold and projects involving Russian researchers have either suspended their participation or been put on ice entirely.
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    1. ||VladaR|| Vise nista ne razumem. Sankcije su pomogle Rusiji da se obogati.

    2. Sanctions permit the sale of oil and gas to most of the world to continue uninterrupted. And a spike in energy prices has boosted revenues further.
    3. we estimate that Russian imports have fallen by about 44% since the invasion of Ukraine, while its exports have risen by roughly 8%.
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    1. ||MariliaM||||VladaR|| here is an interesting article o brainstorming. As we finished one, it seems that we did well on most points from this article.

    2. Some simpler rules are much more likely to help. Define the parameters of a brainstorming session upfront. Try to make a specific thing work better rather than to shoot for the Moon. Involve people you don’t know, as well as those you do. Start by getting people to write their ideas down in silence, so extroverts and bosses have less chance to dominate. And be clear about the next steps after the session is over; the attraction of holding a “design sprint”, a week-long, clear-the-diary way for a team to develop and test product prototypes, is that the thread connecting ideas to outcomes is taut. All of which would make brainstorming a little more thought-provoking and a tad less heart-sinking.

      Some good ideas for brainstorming

    3. “Step-laddering
    4. “Figure-storming”
    5. Some personalities are immediately comfortable saying what they think; others need to be coaxed to share their opinions.
    6. different personalities and different styles of thinking
    7. f decision-makers are not in the room, then the suspicion will grow that time is being wasted
    8. managers and non-managers.
    9. The most feasible suggestions were generated at the start of brainstorming sessions, presumably because they were also more obvious, and the most original ones came later.
    10. to produce suggestions that can actually be translated into reality
    11. One tension is between creativity and feasibility
    12. Normal routines afford employees precious little time to think.

      Our 'thinking Friday' should help

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    1. Tesla, his electric-car company and source of most of his wealth, has lost 29% of its market value—$305bn—since the Twitter plan was hatched
    2. to check Twitter’s claim that no more than 5% of its users are bots,
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    1. to avoid dangers, seize opportunities and maximise the space for manoeuvre.
    2. Some see it as a Vienna for the 21st century—the natural place for antagonists in Asia’s growing Great Game to meet.
    3. “We have always invested a lot of time and resources trying to understand the environment we live in,” says one Singaporean policymaker. The country’s diplomatic corps, for its size, is one of the savviest in the world, and by far the most effective among the ten-member Association of South-East Asian Nations. A plethora of academic institutes, all with ties to the state, specialise in covering the region.
    4. The tiny state of 5.7m was born at a time of turmoil in South-East Asia. Its position on the narrow Malacca Strait, through which much of the world’s shipping and energy passes, gives it a precarious sense of being a nut that could be smashed in a fight between great powers. Regional rivalry between China and America has grown sharply.
    5. For that, Singapore has better prospects. Some China-based journalists wound up in the city-state by chance—the Financial Times’s Beijing bureau chief happened to be in Singapore with his family as China locked down and has stayed. Others are drifting in as China remains all but closed, including from Hong Kong. Crucially, it is not only journalists who are coming to Singapore. The Carnegie-Tsinghua Centre for Global Policy in Beijing is a joint venture between an American think-tank and one of China’s most prestigious universities. It aims to encourage dialogue and collaboration between scholars in China and the West. Its American head, Paul Haenle, a former White House official, now resides in Singapore. Some Western countries have spread staff who were formerly based in Beijing to other embassies around the region, including missions in Singapore. Such arrivals jokingly refer to their new home in the city-state as “Beijing South”. Few say they will never return to China if or when it reopens—but nor do they openly commit to doing so. Meanwhile, a trickle of expat business executives moving to Singapore from Hong Kong is turning into a steady stream. The country’s attractions are undeniable. Its people are refreshingly direct. English is universally spoken, which is not the case in Hong Kong. Clean, green, prosperous and safe, it is, as one of its officials jokes, “Asia-lite”—easy for many Westerners to adjust to, but with plenty of exotic brushstrokes.

      Why Singapore is becoming an important center for 'China wathcers'?

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    1. ||ArvinKamberi|| Here is some update on the current situation of cryptocurrencies

    2. Tether is not only a financial bridge between crypto and conventional money—ie, dollars in bank accounts—but also between all kinds of crypto pairs that are traded on exchanges.
    3. These act as a bridge between conventional banks, where people use dollars, and the “on-blockchain” world, where people use crypto.
    4. The market capitalisation of crypto has slumped to just $1.3trn, from nearly $3trn in November.
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    1. After enduring colonialism, decades of unfair economic practices and covid-19 vaccine apartheid, we cannot accept regressive climate policy as another injustice.
    2. The EU’s recent decision to label natural gas and nuclear power as green investments recognises a critical truth: different countries will follow different paths in the energy transition.
    3. This is partly because of a naive belief in leapfrogging, the assumption that, like skipping landlines for mobile phones, Africa can ‘leap’ to new energy technologies.

      naive analogy between digital and energy/enviornment.

    4. President Muhammadu Buhari has also pledged that Nigeria will reach net-zero emissions by 2060.

      This is another good map: what are pledges of countries for carbon reduction?

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    1. We need to adapt to digital diplomacy and host targeted seminars to sell South Africa.
    2. Diplomats need to be more innovative and find new ways of practicing their craft.
    3. Twinning provinces and cities is one way to forge economic relations with countries abroad.
    4. We will defend our non-aligned position and maintain an independent foreign policy.
    5. It has disrupted global supply chains, driven up the price of essential commodities and plunged the world into a new era of economic instability and uncertainty.
    6. Powerful countries must no longer be allowed to disregard international law.
    7. The current formation of the UN Security Council is outdated and unrepresentative.
    8. Publicising our successes in advancing democracy, good governance and human rights must form an essential part of our public diplomacy efforts.

      An imiportant focus of public diplomacy.

    9. The African Peer Review Mechanism is a critical tool to advance good governance and democracy under Agenda 2063, but beyond African countries themselves, there is still not enough awareness about what the APRM has achieved.

      Unknown success story

    10. Africa has found a new voice that is bold and unapologetic.
    11. South Africa’s voice on the international stage has been amplified.
    12. This stance has put us firmly on the side of social justice and principled solidarity, and reaffirmed our commitment to progressive internationalism.

      New element of progressive internationalism.

    13. It was South Africa, alongside India, that initially sponsored the proposal to the WTO for a temporary TRIPS waiver to enable countries to produce their own vaccines.
    14. has also changed the diplomatic landscape.
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    1. shaping a refreshed progressive global architecture through BRICS
    2. the trend from the pandemic era of digital conferencing
    3. to engage with prospective investors and take the initiative to personally
    4. Economic diplomacy
    5. the African Agenda
    6. the complete overhaul of the UN system
    7. We have not seen concomitant actions with regards to other conflicts, including those where the laws of war and the UN Charter have also been breached.
    8. The need for a rules-based multilateral system is more urgent now than ever in our history.
    9. to maintain robust trade relations with a plethora of countries across the political divide of the Cold War. This approach is as valid today as it was then.
    10. Non-aligned countries like South Africa
    11. “Positioning South Africa’s Diplomacy to Advance our Domestic Priorities.”
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    1. Titlte: Need for more innovation in South African diplomacy

      South African diplomacy need to be more innovative in order to adjust to the post-pademic era. It was the underlying message of President Cyril Ramaphosa, President of South Africa during the Annual conference of heads of missions of the Department of International Relations and Cooperations.

      As a practical step towards more innovative diplomacy, President Ramaphosa said 'We need to adapt to digital diplomacy and host targeted seminars to sell South Africa.'.

      The Annual Conference of South African diplomacy stressed three priority areas for innovation in diplomacy:

      1. to attract tourism, trade, and investment by using innovative tools and approaches.

      2. to strengthen people-to-people relations towards cultivating tolerance, and cultural understanding. The main focus should be on youth development programmes.

      3. to strengthen public diplomacy via the use of social media and other advanced tools and approaches.

      Source: City Press

    2. The world has changed significantly since the advent of Covid-19, and so should our diplomatic craft.
    3. disseminating information on different social media platforms and at appropriate events.
    4. strong public diplomacy machinery as primary currency to strategically position South Africa’s foreign policy in host countries.
    5. youth development programmes, and coproduction in the film industry and arts and crafts, among other things.
    6. to identify relevant platforms and structures, working with local communities – business, youth and NGOs – in the countries of accreditation.
    7. cultivate tolerance, and promote cultural understanding and appreciation.
    8. to strengthen and encourage people-to-people relations through engagement
    9. to promote and position South Africa as a preferred destination for tourism, trade and investment
    10. With rigidity, there is little room for real innovation, and efforts must be made to avoid it in our recovery strategy.
    11. developed mechanisms that are able to quantify the value that our missions bring into the country’s trade and investment landscape.
    12. reviving the economy in line with the economic reconstruction and recovery plan.
    13. “We need to adapt to digital diplomacy and host targeted seminars to sell South Africa.”

      Interesting request.

    14. research and analysis of global developments and how these may affect the home country, advice on the home governments’ response to prevailing global situations, engagement with foreign diplomats and the host country, public diplomacy events, and trade and investment seminars and road shows.
    15. Open covenants of peace, openly arrived at, after which there shall be no private international understandings of any kind but diplomacy shall proceed always frankly and in the public view
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