21st century cities: smart cities in India, or how to develop future citiesAzamat Abdoullaev
The success or failure in meeting the world’s most pressing challenges will be decided in cities, which are reaching a tipping point on many issues:
poor governance and weak institutions (#1 perceived impediment to prosperity);
inadequate infrastructure (US$78tn of investments needed over the next 10 years);
rising inequality (1bn living in poverty in cities, 75% of cities worse off than 20 years ago; housing (881mn living in slums, 1bn new homes needed in cities);
crime (top concern for citizens); environmental challenges (cities occupy 2-3% of land mass but account for 75% of natural resource use and emissions, 70% are already dealing with the effects of climate change);
and new and pervasive risks (terrorism, higher securitisation, disease and pandemics) (source: UN-Habitat, UN, World Bank); 21st Century Cities: Global Smart Cities Primer, Bank of America, ML, 2017].
Isam Shahrour "Woh Hup Distinguished Lecture – Smart and Resilient City" at the Civil Engineering Department of the National University of Singapore (NUS):
Could the Smart City improve the resilience and sustainability of urban systems (the city)?
Smart Cities and the Value of Ecosystem ServicesSylvain Remy
Presented at the "Urban Planning. Strategy, and Real Estate Management" Round Table at the College of Engineering of Seoul National University on 29 April 2016
Harnessing Urban Ecosystems for Ecologically Smart CitiesSylvain Remy
Presented at the "Smart Cities" Large Scale Event (Marcus Evans) in Incheon, Korea on 24 October 2016 (http://smartcities-lse.marcusevans.com/EventDetails.asp?EventID=22894&PageID=520)
Smart cities - Perspectives from the SouthWaternomics
This is a presentation made by Adegboyega Ojo at the Waternomics final event on 31/01/2017 for sharing an overview of smart cities in developing countries
21st century cities: smart cities in India, or how to develop future citiesAzamat Abdoullaev
The success or failure in meeting the world’s most pressing challenges will be decided in cities, which are reaching a tipping point on many issues:
poor governance and weak institutions (#1 perceived impediment to prosperity);
inadequate infrastructure (US$78tn of investments needed over the next 10 years);
rising inequality (1bn living in poverty in cities, 75% of cities worse off than 20 years ago; housing (881mn living in slums, 1bn new homes needed in cities);
crime (top concern for citizens); environmental challenges (cities occupy 2-3% of land mass but account for 75% of natural resource use and emissions, 70% are already dealing with the effects of climate change);
and new and pervasive risks (terrorism, higher securitisation, disease and pandemics) (source: UN-Habitat, UN, World Bank); 21st Century Cities: Global Smart Cities Primer, Bank of America, ML, 2017].
Isam Shahrour "Woh Hup Distinguished Lecture – Smart and Resilient City" at the Civil Engineering Department of the National University of Singapore (NUS):
Could the Smart City improve the resilience and sustainability of urban systems (the city)?
Smart Cities and the Value of Ecosystem ServicesSylvain Remy
Presented at the "Urban Planning. Strategy, and Real Estate Management" Round Table at the College of Engineering of Seoul National University on 29 April 2016
Harnessing Urban Ecosystems for Ecologically Smart CitiesSylvain Remy
Presented at the "Smart Cities" Large Scale Event (Marcus Evans) in Incheon, Korea on 24 October 2016 (http://smartcities-lse.marcusevans.com/EventDetails.asp?EventID=22894&PageID=520)
Smart cities - Perspectives from the SouthWaternomics
This is a presentation made by Adegboyega Ojo at the Waternomics final event on 31/01/2017 for sharing an overview of smart cities in developing countries
This document concludes by looking at how a holistic approach is essential when driving sustainable developments, as well as how the future of a resilient city is to believe in an ecosystem where all stakeholders and the environment have a symbiotic relationship. Furthermore, as the world transitions to adopt the learnings from recent responses to emerging challenges at scale, we come to see more resilient and sustainable strategies to drive the growth of cities around the globe.
Two of the main current challenges faced by society are the growing urbanization and ageing of population. ICTs play a key role helping us addressing these socioeconomic problems which are paramount for our future progress. Firstly, this talk will overview the opportunities and strengths brought forward by ICT democratization in all societal sectors to make cities more age-friendly, sustainable, productive and satisfying environments. On the other hand, it will also review the weaknesses and threats associated to the increasing adoption of ICT to face these societal challenges. For instance, it will review the need to capture and process personal information to offer assistance services and ease decision making in cities, together with the threats to privacy that personal data management may cause. Several European projects facing the challenges of Sustainable and Inclusive Cities will be described in order to illustrate the high potential of this idea. Both their scientific-technological contributions and their economic potential will be overviewed, highlighting the potential of the Silver Economy – the new market opened to address the progressive societal ageing. Secondly, this talk will give further details about three core pillars to make reality this idea of more elderly-friendly ambient assisted cities, namely Internet of Things, Big Data and higher stakeholder participation and collaboration. Through use cases extracted from European projects, examples of novel personal health devices connected to Internet, new ways to correlate and process information in order to enhance decision-making and emerging approaches to make elderly people to have a higher involvement and engagement in aspects related to personal autonomy and their higher societal involvement will be provided. Finally, the talk will conclude exemplifying how Spanish administrations are addressing ageing problems through smart healthcare technologies.
Future City Summit Annual Meet 2020 Note.
On 16th December, the second day of the conference, the key points were on-
Victoria Side Chat on Sustainability, Environment and Humans
Moonshot of Hong Kong and good Cities Diplomacy of Asia and the Emerging World
Post Pandemic Recovery Agenda
Frontier Urban Economic Planning Outlook on Asia
Master Class I: Integrated Economic Urban Planning
Sustainability, Food, Waters, and Energy
On 17th December, the second day of the conference, the key points were on-
Master Class II: Integrated Economic Urban Planning
Afro-futurism Down the Road, where next?
Leadership Qualities and problem-solving
Our Hongkong, where does it lead?
Future Workforce, we position our curve by HKSESSA
Digital transformation
Evidence-based policymaking
Ecommerce and the internet world
EQ, ability to collaborate
This handbook will serve as a guide for use by municipal leaders in future public space projects laying out 10 best practices for public space projects. These 10 facets of the Placemaking approach illustrate the process that PPS and UN-Habitat have undertaken together, and demonstrate the effectiveness of such global partnerships in sustainable urban development through networks such as SUD-Net.
UN-Habitat has been developing a vision for public space. PPS has taken this vision as a starting point and has expanded it to incorporate case study narratives describing the impact of the Placemaking process in nearly a dozen cities throughout the Global South. The goal is to bring Placemaking to bear in the development of public space on a global scale.
UN-Habitat plans to use this document as a template for other public space projects and will share these tools, examples, and processes with other cities for them to then adopt for their own public space projects. This is a draft that will continue to evolve and be expanded over time to incorporate the outcomes of additional joint Placemaking initiatives.
Introduction: Technological and methodical pillars for Smarter Environment Enablement
Part I: Smarter Environments Theoretical Grounding
What is a Smart Environment?
Technological enablers: IoT, Web of Data and Persuasive Technologies
Technology mediated Human Collaboration: need for co-creation
Killer application domains: Open Government & Age-friendly cities
Part II: Review of core enablers for Smarter Environments
Co-creation methodologies: Design for Thinking
Internet of Things and Web of Things
Web of Data: Linked Data, Crowdsourcing & Big Data
Part III: WeLive Case Study
WeLive as Open Government enabling methodology and platform
Reflections on the need for collaboration among stakeholders to realize Smarter Cities
Conclusions and practical implications
1. Letter to all state governments to shortlist potential Smart Cities based on Stage-I criteria according to a number of Smart Cities distributed across states /UTs by the MoUD. This is the first stage of the Intra-State competition.
2. On the basis of response from States/UTs, the list of potential 100 Smart Cities is announced. The second stage of the All India competition begins.
3. Each potential Smart City prepares its proposal assisted by a consultant (from a panel prepared by MoUD) and a hand-holding External Agency (various offers received such as World Bank, ADB, GEF, USTDA, JICA, DFID, AFD, KfW, UN-Habitat)
4. By stipulated date, Stage 2 proposals submitted. Evaluation by a panel of experts.
5. Selected cities declared – Round 1 Smart Cities
6. Selected cities set up SPV and start the implementation of their SCP. Preparation of DPRs, tenders, etc. and Other cities prepare to improve their proposal for the next round of the Challenge
Smart City - French- Dutch Young Talents 2014 - 2015 Ahmad AFANEH
FNI Conference
20-21 November 2014
CNIT, La Défense, Paris
Le Réseau franco-néerlandais
Coopération universitaire franco-néerlandaise au service de l’intégration européenne
The growing interaction between technologies and the society led to the development of the concept of digital society. At no other time in human history have people’s interactions and behaviors been so extensively recorded and remembered in perpetuity.Digital society is characterized by information flowing through global networks at unprecedented speeds. It represents a fundamentally new situation for people and social institutions. This paper provides an introduction to on digital society, including its meaning, applications, benefits, and challenges. Matthew N. O. Sadiku | Uwakwe C. Chukwu | Abayomi Ajayi-Majebi | Sarhan M. Musa "Digital Society: An Overview" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-6 | Issue-6 , October 2022, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd51871.pdf Paper URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/computer-science/other/51871/digital-society-an-overview/matthew-n-o-sadiku
Introduction: Technological and methodical pillars for Smarter Environment Enablement
Part I: Smarter Environments Theoretical Grounding
What is a Smart Environment?
Technological enablers: IoT, Web of Data and Persuasive Technologies
Technology mediated Human Collaboration: need for co-creation
Killer application domains: Open Government & Age-friendly cities
Part II: Review of core enablers for Smarter Environments
Co-creation methodologies: Service Design and Design for Thinking
Internet of Things and Web of Things
Web of Data: Linked Data, Crowdsourcing & Big Data
Persuasive technologies and Behaviour Change
Part III: Implications for CyberParks
European projects on enabling Smarter Environments: WeLive, City4Age, GreenSoul
Reflections on the need for collaboration among stakeholders mediated with technology to realize CyberParks
Conclusions and practical implications
All living things are made up of carbon, which makes it pretty darn
important!
In the carbon cycle, make sure you take note of 4 major processes
i. photosynthesis, respiration, and decomposition
ii. Erosion and volcanic activity
iii. Burial and Decomposition of
dead organisms and their
conversion into coal and petroleum
iv. Human activities such as mining,
cutting and burning forests, and
burning fossil fuels, releasing
carbon into the atmosphere as
carbon dioxide.
Launched in May 2011, the new global magazine Southern Innovator is about the people across the global South shaping our new world, eradicating poverty and working towards the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
They are the innovators.
Issue 1 covered the theme of mobile phones and information technology. Issue 2 covered the theme of youth and entrepreneurship. Issue 3 covered the theme of agribusiness and food security. Issue 4 covers the theme of cities and urbanization.
Follow the magazine on Twitter @SouthSouth1.
If you would like hard copies of the magazine for distribution, then please contact the United Nations Office for South-South Cooperation in New York, USA (www.southerninnovator.org).
Learn about the Global South-South Development Expo here: www.southsouthexpo.org.
Also contact us about opportunities to sponsor the magazine here: southerninnovator@yahoo.co.uk. Sponsors help us to print and distribute more copies.
Editor-in-Chief: Cosmas Gitta
Managing Editor: Audette Bruce
Editor and Writer: David South
Copy Editor: Barbara Brewka
Web Design: Carina Figurasin
Design and Layout: Sólveig Rolfsdóttir and Eva Hronn Gudnadóttir
Illustrations: Sólveig Rolfsdóttir and Eva Hronn Gudnadóttir
ISSN 2222-9280
ISBN 978-0-9920217-0-2
southerninnovator.com
davidsouthconsulting.com
https://davidsouthconsulting.org
A research in progress on smart cities globally. We look at cases in China, Japan, Malaysia, United States and Spain within Europe. We are also working on an ecosystem of people interested in smart city development and policies we invite you to join at https://plus.google.com/communities/108050236028662715756?partnerid=ogpy0
Against educational technology in the neoliberal UniversityRichard Hall
Slides for my presentation at the CAMRI Research Seminar on 25 March 2015 [see: http://www.westminster.ac.uk/camri/research-seminars/richard-hall-against-educational-technology-in-the-neoliberal-university]
THE NIGHT OF THE FUTURES
Futures Space presents an evening workshop on Futures of Cities - a journey into alternative futures of how people will live and thrive in Cities. How will we adapt to check changing landscape and interact with the new and the old infrastructure? Are we creating technology that adapts to our daily lives or are we humans adapting to new developments instead?
About The Night of the Futures
This event is part of a monthly event series called The Night of the Futures. Every month, for one night, we meet to discuss a different future topic. The workshop works as a kick-off for an exploration phase in the prosecuting weeks, where we want to invite you to participate, define and discuss the discovered challenges for each topic in detail with the goal to create a cross-industry innovation project that works on pushing towards the desired solution through collaboration.
This document concludes by looking at how a holistic approach is essential when driving sustainable developments, as well as how the future of a resilient city is to believe in an ecosystem where all stakeholders and the environment have a symbiotic relationship. Furthermore, as the world transitions to adopt the learnings from recent responses to emerging challenges at scale, we come to see more resilient and sustainable strategies to drive the growth of cities around the globe.
Two of the main current challenges faced by society are the growing urbanization and ageing of population. ICTs play a key role helping us addressing these socioeconomic problems which are paramount for our future progress. Firstly, this talk will overview the opportunities and strengths brought forward by ICT democratization in all societal sectors to make cities more age-friendly, sustainable, productive and satisfying environments. On the other hand, it will also review the weaknesses and threats associated to the increasing adoption of ICT to face these societal challenges. For instance, it will review the need to capture and process personal information to offer assistance services and ease decision making in cities, together with the threats to privacy that personal data management may cause. Several European projects facing the challenges of Sustainable and Inclusive Cities will be described in order to illustrate the high potential of this idea. Both their scientific-technological contributions and their economic potential will be overviewed, highlighting the potential of the Silver Economy – the new market opened to address the progressive societal ageing. Secondly, this talk will give further details about three core pillars to make reality this idea of more elderly-friendly ambient assisted cities, namely Internet of Things, Big Data and higher stakeholder participation and collaboration. Through use cases extracted from European projects, examples of novel personal health devices connected to Internet, new ways to correlate and process information in order to enhance decision-making and emerging approaches to make elderly people to have a higher involvement and engagement in aspects related to personal autonomy and their higher societal involvement will be provided. Finally, the talk will conclude exemplifying how Spanish administrations are addressing ageing problems through smart healthcare technologies.
Future City Summit Annual Meet 2020 Note.
On 16th December, the second day of the conference, the key points were on-
Victoria Side Chat on Sustainability, Environment and Humans
Moonshot of Hong Kong and good Cities Diplomacy of Asia and the Emerging World
Post Pandemic Recovery Agenda
Frontier Urban Economic Planning Outlook on Asia
Master Class I: Integrated Economic Urban Planning
Sustainability, Food, Waters, and Energy
On 17th December, the second day of the conference, the key points were on-
Master Class II: Integrated Economic Urban Planning
Afro-futurism Down the Road, where next?
Leadership Qualities and problem-solving
Our Hongkong, where does it lead?
Future Workforce, we position our curve by HKSESSA
Digital transformation
Evidence-based policymaking
Ecommerce and the internet world
EQ, ability to collaborate
This handbook will serve as a guide for use by municipal leaders in future public space projects laying out 10 best practices for public space projects. These 10 facets of the Placemaking approach illustrate the process that PPS and UN-Habitat have undertaken together, and demonstrate the effectiveness of such global partnerships in sustainable urban development through networks such as SUD-Net.
UN-Habitat has been developing a vision for public space. PPS has taken this vision as a starting point and has expanded it to incorporate case study narratives describing the impact of the Placemaking process in nearly a dozen cities throughout the Global South. The goal is to bring Placemaking to bear in the development of public space on a global scale.
UN-Habitat plans to use this document as a template for other public space projects and will share these tools, examples, and processes with other cities for them to then adopt for their own public space projects. This is a draft that will continue to evolve and be expanded over time to incorporate the outcomes of additional joint Placemaking initiatives.
Introduction: Technological and methodical pillars for Smarter Environment Enablement
Part I: Smarter Environments Theoretical Grounding
What is a Smart Environment?
Technological enablers: IoT, Web of Data and Persuasive Technologies
Technology mediated Human Collaboration: need for co-creation
Killer application domains: Open Government & Age-friendly cities
Part II: Review of core enablers for Smarter Environments
Co-creation methodologies: Design for Thinking
Internet of Things and Web of Things
Web of Data: Linked Data, Crowdsourcing & Big Data
Part III: WeLive Case Study
WeLive as Open Government enabling methodology and platform
Reflections on the need for collaboration among stakeholders to realize Smarter Cities
Conclusions and practical implications
1. Letter to all state governments to shortlist potential Smart Cities based on Stage-I criteria according to a number of Smart Cities distributed across states /UTs by the MoUD. This is the first stage of the Intra-State competition.
2. On the basis of response from States/UTs, the list of potential 100 Smart Cities is announced. The second stage of the All India competition begins.
3. Each potential Smart City prepares its proposal assisted by a consultant (from a panel prepared by MoUD) and a hand-holding External Agency (various offers received such as World Bank, ADB, GEF, USTDA, JICA, DFID, AFD, KfW, UN-Habitat)
4. By stipulated date, Stage 2 proposals submitted. Evaluation by a panel of experts.
5. Selected cities declared – Round 1 Smart Cities
6. Selected cities set up SPV and start the implementation of their SCP. Preparation of DPRs, tenders, etc. and Other cities prepare to improve their proposal for the next round of the Challenge
Smart City - French- Dutch Young Talents 2014 - 2015 Ahmad AFANEH
FNI Conference
20-21 November 2014
CNIT, La Défense, Paris
Le Réseau franco-néerlandais
Coopération universitaire franco-néerlandaise au service de l’intégration européenne
The growing interaction between technologies and the society led to the development of the concept of digital society. At no other time in human history have people’s interactions and behaviors been so extensively recorded and remembered in perpetuity.Digital society is characterized by information flowing through global networks at unprecedented speeds. It represents a fundamentally new situation for people and social institutions. This paper provides an introduction to on digital society, including its meaning, applications, benefits, and challenges. Matthew N. O. Sadiku | Uwakwe C. Chukwu | Abayomi Ajayi-Majebi | Sarhan M. Musa "Digital Society: An Overview" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-6 | Issue-6 , October 2022, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd51871.pdf Paper URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/computer-science/other/51871/digital-society-an-overview/matthew-n-o-sadiku
Introduction: Technological and methodical pillars for Smarter Environment Enablement
Part I: Smarter Environments Theoretical Grounding
What is a Smart Environment?
Technological enablers: IoT, Web of Data and Persuasive Technologies
Technology mediated Human Collaboration: need for co-creation
Killer application domains: Open Government & Age-friendly cities
Part II: Review of core enablers for Smarter Environments
Co-creation methodologies: Service Design and Design for Thinking
Internet of Things and Web of Things
Web of Data: Linked Data, Crowdsourcing & Big Data
Persuasive technologies and Behaviour Change
Part III: Implications for CyberParks
European projects on enabling Smarter Environments: WeLive, City4Age, GreenSoul
Reflections on the need for collaboration among stakeholders mediated with technology to realize CyberParks
Conclusions and practical implications
All living things are made up of carbon, which makes it pretty darn
important!
In the carbon cycle, make sure you take note of 4 major processes
i. photosynthesis, respiration, and decomposition
ii. Erosion and volcanic activity
iii. Burial and Decomposition of
dead organisms and their
conversion into coal and petroleum
iv. Human activities such as mining,
cutting and burning forests, and
burning fossil fuels, releasing
carbon into the atmosphere as
carbon dioxide.
Launched in May 2011, the new global magazine Southern Innovator is about the people across the global South shaping our new world, eradicating poverty and working towards the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
They are the innovators.
Issue 1 covered the theme of mobile phones and information technology. Issue 2 covered the theme of youth and entrepreneurship. Issue 3 covered the theme of agribusiness and food security. Issue 4 covers the theme of cities and urbanization.
Follow the magazine on Twitter @SouthSouth1.
If you would like hard copies of the magazine for distribution, then please contact the United Nations Office for South-South Cooperation in New York, USA (www.southerninnovator.org).
Learn about the Global South-South Development Expo here: www.southsouthexpo.org.
Also contact us about opportunities to sponsor the magazine here: southerninnovator@yahoo.co.uk. Sponsors help us to print and distribute more copies.
Editor-in-Chief: Cosmas Gitta
Managing Editor: Audette Bruce
Editor and Writer: David South
Copy Editor: Barbara Brewka
Web Design: Carina Figurasin
Design and Layout: Sólveig Rolfsdóttir and Eva Hronn Gudnadóttir
Illustrations: Sólveig Rolfsdóttir and Eva Hronn Gudnadóttir
ISSN 2222-9280
ISBN 978-0-9920217-0-2
southerninnovator.com
davidsouthconsulting.com
https://davidsouthconsulting.org
A research in progress on smart cities globally. We look at cases in China, Japan, Malaysia, United States and Spain within Europe. We are also working on an ecosystem of people interested in smart city development and policies we invite you to join at https://plus.google.com/communities/108050236028662715756?partnerid=ogpy0
Against educational technology in the neoliberal UniversityRichard Hall
Slides for my presentation at the CAMRI Research Seminar on 25 March 2015 [see: http://www.westminster.ac.uk/camri/research-seminars/richard-hall-against-educational-technology-in-the-neoliberal-university]
Similar to Building the future of cities - Stefan Niederhafner - Futures Space & Betahaus Workshop on Futures of Cities (20)
THE NIGHT OF THE FUTURES
Futures Space presents an evening workshop on Futures of Cities - a journey into alternative futures of how people will live and thrive in Cities. How will we adapt to check changing landscape and interact with the new and the old infrastructure? Are we creating technology that adapts to our daily lives or are we humans adapting to new developments instead?
About The Night of the Futures
This event is part of a monthly event series called The Night of the Futures. Every month, for one night, we meet to discuss a different future topic. The workshop works as a kick-off for an exploration phase in the prosecuting weeks, where we want to invite you to participate, define and discuss the discovered challenges for each topic in detail with the goal to create a cross-industry innovation project that works on pushing towards the desired solution through collaboration.
THE NIGHT OF THE FUTURES
Futures Space presents an evening event on Futures of Mobility - a journey into alternative futures of how we will move, connect and travel in times of unlimited flexibility and connectivity. During the evening, we will discover future technologies, behavioural changes and long-term impacts of mobility trends.
About The Night of the Futures
This event is part of a monthly event series called The Night of the Futures. Every month, for one night, we meet to discuss a different future topic. The workshop works as a kick-off for an exploration phase in the prosecuting weeks, where we want to invite you to participate, define and discuss the discovered challenges for each topic in detail with the goal to create a cross-industry innovation project that works on pushing towards the desired solution through collaboration.
Futures Space presents an evening workshop on Futures of Smart Home - an exploration of multiple futures on how we will live and interact with technologies in our home. In this workshop, we will explore human interactions with machines, how they are developing in the future and its implications for life at home.
Futures Space presents an evening workshop on Futures of Food - an exploration of multiple futures of how and what we will eat. In this workshop, we will explore food systems; we will discuss food security, production, food service, and innovations, what this means for our health & wellness and much more.
With the changes in the environment such as extreme weather, resource depletion, and the rise in population, where will we source our produce from? Are we jumping from global to local? What alternatives to animal products are arising? What role is technology playing in food innovation? An emphasis on health & wellness and the so-called superfoods are changing the way we think about nutrition. What does personalized nutrition actually mean?
We will also tap into human behaviour and consumer habits, as well as the way in which organizations and individuals are managing food waste. And this is only the beginning! Join us and explore the future challenges in our workspace with Futurists and Forward Thinkers and ask the questions no one has an answer to, yet.
About The Night of the Futures
This event is part of a monthly event series called The Night of the Futures. Every month, for one night, we meet to discuss a different future topic. The workshop works as a kick-off for an exploration phase in the prosecuting weeks, where we want to invite you to participate, define and discuss the discovered challenges for each topic in detail with the goal to create a cross-industry innovation project that works on pushing towards the desired solution through collaboration.
Introducing FUTURE SPACE - Futures Space is a collaborative network of Futurists and Forward Thinkers ready to tackle the future together with organizations.
Introducing FUTURE SPACE - Futures Space is a collaborative network of Futurists and Forward Thinkers ready to tackle the future together with organizations.
More from Futures Space a venture of Tanja Schindler (14)
This presentation by Morris Kleiner (University of Minnesota), was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found out at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
0x01 - Newton's Third Law: Static vs. Dynamic AbusersOWASP Beja
f you offer a service on the web, odds are that someone will abuse it. Be it an API, a SaaS, a PaaS, or even a static website, someone somewhere will try to figure out a way to use it to their own needs. In this talk we'll compare measures that are effective against static attackers and how to battle a dynamic attacker who adapts to your counter-measures.
About the Speaker
===============
Diogo Sousa, Engineering Manager @ Canonical
An opinionated individual with an interest in cryptography and its intersection with secure software development.
Acorn Recovery: Restore IT infra within minutesIP ServerOne
Introducing Acorn Recovery as a Service, a simple, fast, and secure managed disaster recovery (DRaaS) by IP ServerOne. A DR solution that helps restore your IT infra within minutes.
This presentation, created by Syed Faiz ul Hassan, explores the profound influence of media on public perception and behavior. It delves into the evolution of media from oral traditions to modern digital and social media platforms. Key topics include the role of media in information propagation, socialization, crisis awareness, globalization, and education. The presentation also examines media influence through agenda setting, propaganda, and manipulative techniques used by advertisers and marketers. Furthermore, it highlights the impact of surveillance enabled by media technologies on personal behavior and preferences. Through this comprehensive overview, the presentation aims to shed light on how media shapes collective consciousness and public opinion.