Sept. 6 (PIA Research Team).– Almost every part of our everyday lives is closely connected to the internet – we depend on it for communication, entertainment, information, running our households, even running our cars.
Not everyone in the world has access to the same features and content on the internet, though, with some governments imposing restrictions on what you can do online. This severely limits internet freedom and, with it, the quality of life and other rights of the affected users.
Se estima que pasan de 4 millones los pedidos introducidos en Google en forma de palabras o frases en todos los idiomas y los resultados que ofrece ese medio es uno de los que mayor influencia tiene en el mundo en cuestiones económicas, comerciales y políticas. Los resultados se basan en "algoritmos" (instrucciones secuenciales de programación para resolver un problema o dar una respuesta).
Aunque los ejecutivos dicen que el programa no está sometido a influencia humana, lo cierto es que es confeccionado por humanos y que Google ha rediseñado e interferido cada vez más con los resultados de búsqueda en un grado mucho mayor de lo que reconoce la empresa. Por eso, la NBC, que ciertamente NO es un medio conservador, ha afirmado que: «Google isn't necessarily focused on giving users the most trustworthy or balanced information» y recoge palabras de Safiya U. Noble, una notable experta en comunicaciones, que señala: «What shows up on the first page of search is typically highly optimized advertising-related content, because its clients are paying Google for placement on the first page either through direct engagement with Google's AdWords program or through a gray market of search engine optimization products.»
Around the world, thousands of companies and institutions must verify if they are using a trick version of the software of the Texas company SolarWinds, at the heart of a cyberattack against several American government agencies.
Paris, Dec. 19.– A large-scale cyberattack had struck several government departments in the United States for several months, without the authorities realizing it. Until this week. Given its duration and the institutions affected, the attack represents a "serious risk" and the measures to thwart it will be "extremely complex and difficult" , warned the US agency in charge of cybersecurity and infrastructure security. (Cisa).
The event will be part of the largest global citizens’ dialogue ever held.
Sept. 10.– The Centre for Trusted Internet and Community (CTIC) at the National University of Singapore (NUS) will be organising the Singapore leg of the first- ever “We, the Internet” Global Citizens’ Dialogue on Saturday, 10 October, to discuss the topic of “The Future of the Internet”. Led by Dr Natalie Pang, CTIC Principal Investigator and Senior Lecturer from the Department of Communications and New Media at the NUS Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, this event is part of the largest global citizens’ dialogue ever held.
Initiated by Missions Publiques – an independent company whose mission is to integrate citizens’ voices into decision-making – the “We, the Internet” Global Citizens’ Dialogue aims to give rise to a citizen’s voice on the development of the Internet through a process of citizen deliberation and participatory democracy on a global scale.
Aug.19.– TikTok, the short-video app used by millions of mostly young Americans, can’t be trusted, due to its links to the Chinese regime and should be banned, cybersecurity experts warned.
The app, owned by Beijing-based internet giant Bytedance Technology Co., has come under intense scrutiny after the Trump administration confirmed that it was mulling a ban on TikTok and other Chinese apps’ U.S. operations on security grounds. Critics warn that the app could be used as a spying tool for the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), and users’ content could be censored if the Party deems them politically sensitive.