11,015 Matching Annotations
  1. Jul 2022
    1. nonfungible tokens.
    2. The underlying technology,blockchain, is what’s called a “distributed ledger” — a database hostedby a network of computers instead of a single server — that offers usersan immutable and transparent way to store information.
    3. What was first acuriosity and then a speculative niche has become big business
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    1. data justice approach is one that centres on equity, recognition and representation of plural interests, and the creation and preservation of public goods as its principal goals.
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    1. Here is the latest summary of Zoom updates that we should use more in our teaching and event activities.

      It is particularly relevant for our courses, as we use Zoom more and more as our teaching platform.

      Please have a look at the annotation, test them, and prepare a possible user scenario in order to inspire others to use these features (e.g. use Awesome screen-recording).

      ||Jovan||

    2. Support for Zoom Apps in Webinars 

      Does this mean that we can open mentimeter without asking participants to log into mentimeter?

    3. Support for translated captions

      How does it work in practice?

    4. Quicker enablement of gesture recognition 

      what is this option?

    5. Persistent Gallery view after pinning 

      Do not understand this clearly.

    6. View profile cards in during meetings 

      Useful for understanding time zones.

    7. Whiteboard features

      We have not used a lot whiteboard features so far. ConfTech team should expeirment and give us some user scenarious to inspire use of these features by our lecturers and event organisers.

    8. Downloaded transcript records will include the speaker’s name, as well as timestamps, when saved locally.

      Useful feature

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    1. Help a Reporter Out

      ||DylanF|| HI Dylan, do we have account with HARO for helping journalists to find our resoruces.

    2. to find sites that link to your competitors, but not to you (yet)
    3. Resource Link Building

      this could be done by fast-learning intern.

    4. that journalists would use and link to from their articles.
    5. “Most visited websites” has a US search volume of 4.4k and a global search volume of 11.9k.
    6. ou’ll need to create assets that publications want to link to.

      We have these assets.

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    1. We need to put reason and strategy back in the saddle. And we need to do so with urgency.
    2. sustained focus
    3. in the era of China not rising but risen.
    4. not by the latest Twitter feed, but by deep policy grip.
    5. Building strong relations with emerging nations such as Indonesia is critical.
    6. near shoring, reshoring and even friend shoring

      New language in opposition to off-shoring.

    7. A common approach to regulation would help.
    8. The US-EU Trade and Technology Council could be made into an effective piece of collective policymaking machinery.
    9. They admire the Western system more than we realise.
    10. Meanwhile the West and the international institutions it controls have been bureaucratic, unimaginative and often politically intrusive without being politically effective.
    11. increase defence spending and maintain military superiority.
    12. between “realpolitik” foreign policy – basically unprincipled, and “values-driven” foreign policy – that pursued by the decent people.
    13. The transatlantic partnership between Europe and America is at the crux.
    14. Pursued with coordination, commitment and competence.
    15. We need to be open to the possibility China changes. But strong enough to withstand it if it doesn't.
    16. should not seek comprehensive “decoupling” or shut down lines of interaction or cooperation.
    17. “strength plus engagement”
    18. China will compete not just for power but against our system, our way of governing and living.
    19. Sometimes out of interests. Sometimes out of dislike of the West. Sometimes because leaders share the propensity for the undemocratic model. Sometimes the nations will be pulled only part of the way.
    20. the first time in modern history that the East can be on equal terms with the West.
    21. virtually impossible to think Taiwan will return voluntarily, hence the fear that China will use force rather than persuasion.
    22. It has an ancient civilisation, one of the pre-eminent cultures, and a people increasingly well-educated and prosperous.
    23. the end of Western political and economic dominance.
    24. the biggest geopolitical change of this century will come from China not Russia.
    25. alled “Western policy”.
    26. our belief in big-nation rationality.
    27. what it means in respect of China.
    28. a pivot point
    29. to raising living standards; the only way to improve services whilst reducing costs, for example in health care; the only answer to climate change if we want to maintain development at the same time as cutting emissions.
    30. all about harnessing the technology revolution.
    31. Western democracy needs a new project.
    32. The challenge of democracy is efficacy.
    33. about delivery
    34. domestic politics appear dysfunctional; and to the outside world, foreign policy looks unpredictable.
    35. “too much; too little; too weird; too weak”.
    36. placing as much emphasis on cultural as economic issues;
    37. rampant populism.
    38. There was no realistic alternative, but the policy distorted our economies, rewarding those with assets, penalising those without and was combined with austerity, cutting services upon which the poorest in society depended.
    39. inflection point

      New language instead of 'pivot'. ||Jovan||

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    1. Ukraine, he assessed, has held on to a number of qualitative edges, but these have shrunk. And Ukraine remains heavily outgunned.
    2. patterns of behaviour emerge.
    3. Causal Exploration, or CausX
    4. darpa, one of the American defence department’s research agencies, hopes to do this by using natural-language processing to comb through the texts of hundreds of thousands of reports from think-tanks, commercial media and the department itself, looking for correlations human readers would probably miss.
    5. Advanced Joint Effectiveness Model (ajem).
    6. Pioneer,
    7. Real pilots from democracies are assumed to be more creative that those from authoritarian regimes that discourage personal initiative.

      It is very simplistic since creativity is very individual characteristics. People could be more creative in authoritarian states as they try to survive pressure.

    8. to approximate mental and cultural factors
    9. brawler, a simulator of aerial combat produced by ManTech, a defence firm in Herndon,
    10. probabilistic
    11. deterministic
    12. is currently developing or upgrading roughly 100 predictive models, small and large.
    13. requires users to estimate 30 values
    14. it gets seven out of ten forecasts broadly right.
    15. the Major Combat Operations Statistical Model,
    16. When fed information about Russia’s initial push to seize Kyiv and subjugate Ukraine, which began on February 24th, the model predicted, on a scale of one to seven, “operational success” scores for the attacker and defender, respectively, of two and five.
    17. the business of trying to forecast the outcomes of conflicts is going into overdrive
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    1. Che Guevara, liberation theology and Sub-Comandante Marcos
    2. The problem with this search for Utopia is that it coexists with generally poor government.
    3. It guarantees everyone the right, among other things, to “neurodiversity”, to “the free development” of “the personality, identity and life projects” and to “leisure, rest and the enjoyment of free time”.
    4. natural paradise peopled by Rousseau’s “noble savage” and a blank slate on which any project could be inscribed.
    5. This was nourished by myths of El Dorado and the Amazons; by tales of the prodigious civilisations of ancient Mexico and the Incas;
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    1. the “broken record technique,”
    2. Asking permission in this way doesn’t make you appear weak, rather it shows you’re thoughtful and considerate of others.
    3. You can use phrases like:
    4. it can provide you with an air of authority, since the meeting organizer is deferring to you for your point-of-view.
    5. in advance of the video meeting, review the agenda and let the organizer know where you’d like to contribute.
    6. To avoid coming off as disruptive, signal your desire to contribute by:
    7. over half of their working hours in meetings,
    8. put a lot of pressure on herself to make a “high value” contribution, which often held her back from speaking at all. Heidi was also exceedingly courteous. She never wanted to be perceived as pushy or rude.
    9. 45 percent of women said it’s difficult to speak up in virtual meetings and one in five said they’ve felt ignored or overlooked by colleagues during video calls.
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    1. to develop digital diplomacy training for EU’s

      Diplo has experience and expertise in digital diplomacy training gathered over the last 2 decades.

    2. monitor development of digital policy globally, while also informing the EU’s internal policy making.

      Digital Watch

    3. while understanding the different starting points for digitalisation and use of technologies across the world.

      recognising diverse interests and cultural contexts

    4. theDigital Diplomacy and Cyber Ambassadors Networks

      It is not likely that EU can maintain two separate networks for 'cyber' and 'digital' diplomacy for two long. These two threads in covering digital aspects of foreign policy will need to reconcile on national and EU levels. US State Department cover both aspects under one organisational unit.

    5. digital public goods, and digital commons

      Malta can contribute with experience in the field of common heritage of mankind and global public good approaches.

    6. digital, cyber

      One of the main problem of this document is still terminological confusion between digital and cyber. They are used interchangeable with emerging practice of 'cyber' being associated with security and 'digital' with everything else.

    7. the EU’s Green Diplomacy and Cyber Diplomacy.

      EU has been trying to walk global politics on 'two legs': climate and digitalisation. It remains to be seen if this approach will survive Ukraine war and other crisis ahead of us, especially on the side of climate which could be endangered due to energy crisis.

      In this 'two leg' walk digital 'leg' may help climate 'one' which could start limping in coming years.

    8. by strengthening existing multilateral, regional and multi-stakeholder processe

      EU reiterates traditional approach. Typically language is multilateral and multistakeholder. Now, they added 'regional' as new element which is strictly speaking 'multilateral'. This could be just drafting point or new nuance hinting that more and more digital governance will shift to regional level. It is realistic development ahead of us.

    9. to further develop the EU’s capabilities for analysis on technological and digital policy developments.

      Digital Watch activities

    10. s all digital and cyber work
    11. fully coherent and mutually reinforcing with the EU Cyber Diplomacy Network
    12. to strengthen regional digital diplomacy hubs in key EU Delegations
    13. their effects on European digital sovereignty, internal security and foreign, security, trade, development and defence policies.

      multi-disciplinary approach

    14. to make full, systematic and coordinated use of the network of EU Delegations and Member States’ representations to work with third countries,
    15. an EU office in San Francisco
    16. a methodology for observation of online election campaigns as a systematic part of all EU election observation missions
    17. UN declaration of principles for international election observation
    18. theEU Cyber Ambassadors’ Network
    19. the EU Digital Diplomacy Network,
    20. growing scope and sophistication of disinformation and foreign information manipulation and interference (FIMI)
    21. to promote sharing of standardised digital data
    22. to promote digitalisation and data sharing in favour of sustainability and the SDGs

      linking data and sustainability/SDGs

    23. Public diplomacy

      Mention of public diplomacy

    24. funding to combat Internet shutdowns
    25. by fostering digital literacy

      link to Malta's priority on the UN SC.

    26. 19.

      human rights

    27. n international standard-setting processes
    28. the whole life-cycle of digital technologies
    29. 18

      human rights

    30. he Declaration for the Future of the Internet.
    31. with like-minded partners
    32. to promote new and innovative digitalisation tools d

      which one?

    33. a global tech panel

      What is a global tech panel?

    34. for continued dialogue and cooperation with the private sector, including online platforms, and civil society
    35. a Team Europe approach

      ||sorina|| What is this approach about?

    36. as part of the implementation of the Global Gateway strategy.

      Probably, we need to analyse more the Global Gateway strategy.

    37. o increase the visibility of the EU globally
    38. the digital trade provisions in existing EU trade agreements
    39. Eastern Partnership’s EU4Digital Initiative
    40. the UN Tech Envoy
    41. he third committee of the UNGA,
    42. he Human Rights Council,
    43. 10.

      mix of human rights and multilateral cooperaiton.

    44. EU coordination on elections and appointments for positions at UN and other relevant multilateral bodies
    45. particularly in standardisation bodies,

      More relevant approach.

    46. as appropriate, including multi-stakeholder

      More conditioned approach to multi-stakeholder approach.

    47. EU Digital Diplomacy and Cyber Diplomacy

      What is difference between digital and cyber diplomacy?

    48. to monitor global digital regulatory activity

      relevant activities for Digital Watch

    49. -

      cybersecurity

    50. a climate neutral economy
    51. -

      link digitalisation and climate change

    52. promote European examples of ethical approaches to data usage

      GDPR

    53. -

      cybersecurity

    54. -

      process and governance approach

    55. Exchange with stakeholders from business, academia and civil society as appropriate, both in the EU and beyond
    56. -

      content policy and cybersecurity

    57. through support for the Paris and Christchurch Calls
    58. -

      cybersecurity

    59. -

      Link between EU's internal and international policy

    60. -

      human rights

    61. 11406/22EA/fa4ANNEXRELEX.1EN-

      Conflate together SDGs and Global Digital Compact.

    62. theInternational Telecommunications Union (ITU), International Organization for Standardization (ISO), International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC),

      It is usual list of international standardisation organisation.

    63. he Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).

      Why EU does not include W3C and other standardisation bodies

    64. -

      digital standards

    65. based on the multi-stakeholder model of Internet governance.

      shift from dual approach of multilateral and multistakeholder approach. Internet governance is considered in narrower context as governance of technological infrastructure. It is departure from the WSIS definition of IG which considers IG as not only governance of the Internet but also governance on the Internet (data, economy, human rights, etc.).

    66. -

      technology

    67. -

      human rights

    68. a human-centric and human rights-based approac
    69. -

      geopolitics

    70. common geopolitical priorities
    71. 5.

      Cybersecurity

    72. built on universal human rights, fundamental freedoms, the rule of law and democratic principles.
    73. its technological and digital sovereignty
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    1. A creative disruption toward our analog and digital prosperity is our best, and often, only defence.
    2. We need the subsea cables, the data centres, the telecommunications infrastructure and other enabling technologies to close existing and emerging digital divides, but we cannot afford to get the short end of the stick when geopolitical tensions ineluctably flare up again.
    3. what strategic autonomy in the digital age would look like for African countries is worth asking
    4. comes to mind, illustrating that when bulls fight, it is indeed the grass (in this case, African citizens) that suffers.
    5. Meta’s bizarre exception to its hate speech policies, including a scenario where violent “political expression” targeting Russian officials from users in select jurisdictions, as well as praise for a right-wing Ukrainian battalion is permitted, stand out in this regard. 
    6. African countries ought to give serious consideration to the terms and conditions with which access to the internet and gateways to the digital economy are provided to the public.

      It is crucial aspect!

    7. Elsewhere, India is aiming to export its “India Stack” to African countries as a template for building digital public infrastructure.

      Anything more specific on 'Inidia Stack' initiatives in Africa?

      ||Jovan||

    8. it is also about putting the continent on a trajectory that can enable it adapt to a rapidly evolving geopolitical landscape that has ramifications for technology and the digital economy.
    9. African policymakers must ensure Africa’s digital economy is not reduced to a pawn on the geopolitical chessboard and a mere battleground for resurgent great power competition between geopolitical blocs. 
    10. has showcased that “neutral” service providers of digital technologies can and have become powerful governance actors capable of making unilateral decisions with considerable ramification for information flows.
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    1. ||VladaR||||sorina|| While you are in the region, here is an update from Tanzania. It seems that they are trying to play more dynamic and prominent role by relying on economic diplomacy.

      ||mwendenATdiplomacy.edu||

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    1. important test text

    2. 19 PostsSort byLatestOldestDropdown arrow6 min agoDismissed Ukrainian prosecutor general calls for unity in a farewell address to parliamentFrom CNN's Olga Voitovych
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    1. They created a huge pre-release hype. As a result, on the day the stores began selling the book, there was an enormously long queue. Potential customers raved about the product. Do you know why that is? The answer is simple: fear of missing out (FOMO). It’s an impressive psychological force. It makes people think if they do not get this product, they might miss out on the opportunity.

      Pre-release is important because of fear of missing out (FOMO).

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    1. Backlink Analytics

      baclink analytics

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    1. Calibre is a good software for ebooks publishing

      ||Jovan||

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    1. Virtual interaction is a simulation of real human life.
    2. my temporal body to be genuine flesh and my soul something that is authentic and eternal
    3. Many scientists and philosophers have suggested that we all might be living in a simulation of some advanced civilization. As fantastic as it sounds, Scientific American reported in 2020 that the odds of this are probably about 50–50.
    4. no-Zoom weekends and a complete moratorium during your summer vacation
    5. on boundaries around our use of the technology
    6. good Zoom hygiene
    7. keeping virtual meetings, classes, and conversations short and to-the-point.
    8. For happiness and productivity, virtual interactions are better than nothing. But in-person interactions are better than virtual ones for life satisfaction, work engagement, and creativity.
    9. videoconferencing inhibits the production of creative ideas.
    10. the Journal of Applied Psychology, researchers who monitored 103 virtual workers’ fatigue during meetings found that when workers used their camera (versus having it turned off), they were less engaged during meetings that day and the one after as well.
    11. One 2021 study in the journal NeuroRegulation found that almost 94 percent of undergraduates had “moderate to considerable difficulty with online learning.”
    12. may be better for well-being than having no social interactions, using video-calling to the point of fatigue has been shown to predict high rates of depression, anxiety, stress, and dissatisfaction with life.
    13. it mutes mirror neurons (which help us understand and empathize with others) and confounds our Global Positioning System neurons (which code our location).
    14. Zoom fatigue has six root causes: asynchronicity of communication (you aren’t quite in rhythm with others, especially when connections are imperfect); lack of body language; lack of eye contact; increased self-awareness (you are looking at yourself a lot of the time); interaction with multiple faces (you are focusing on many people at once in a small field of view, which is confusing and unnatural); and multitasking opportunities (you check your email and the news while trying to pay attention to the meeting).

      On emotional aspects of tele-conferencing.

    15. Zoom fatigue rises with frequency and duration of meetings.
    16. Videochatting may promise the benefits of face-to-face meeting without germs and commuting. But it can provoke burnout for many, and even depression. When it comes to human interaction, it is like junk food: filling and convenient, but no substitute for a healthy diet.
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    1. ISBNs will need to be changed if certain changes are made to your book.
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