The End of Globalization

The 2016 U.S. presidential elections triggered emotions I had not felt for years. In 1998, Venezuela, where I’m from, elected a populist president who, like U.S. President Donald Trump, ran a campaign based on anti-establishment sentiments. Countries like Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, and Nicaragua followed suit, and I began to wonder about the extent to which …

Nadaljuj z branjem The End of Globalization

Parlameter za dobro informirano javnost

Ekipa Parlameter, ki deluje v okviru inštituta Danes je nov dan, je zagnala spletno orodje Parlameter, ki z analizo glasovanj in transkriptov lajša spremljanje dogajanja v Državnem zboru. Orodje je namenjeno splošni javnosti, novinarjem in medijskim hišam, raziskovalcem in razvijalcem ter vsem, ki jih zanima delo Državnega zbora. Parlameter analizirane podatke vizualizira in predstavlja v …

Nadaljuj z branjem Parlameter za dobro informirano javnost

Zakaj bi morali prepovedati robote ubijalce: Toby Walsh

Profesor umetne inteligence z Univerze Novega južnega Walesa Toby Walsh pojasnjuje, zakaj bi morali prepovedati robote, ki lahko kot avtonomno orožje locirajo, sledijo in uničijo tarčo. V svojem prispevku obravnava in ovrže pet tez, ki se običajno pojavljajo v prid argumentom razvoja takih robotov. Skupaj s svojimi kolegi je Walsh podpisnik odprtega pisma, v katerem pozivajo …

Nadaljuj z branjem Zakaj bi morali prepovedati robote ubijalce: Toby Walsh

Pregled dogajanj v EU – od begunske krize do parlamentarnih selitev

Na vrhu šefov držav in vlad EU v Bruslju so se prejšnji teden uspeli dogovoriti o nadaljnjih ukrepih pri spopadanju z begunsko krizo v Evropi (sodelovanje s Turčijo, povečanje pristojnosti in nalog agencije EU za zunanje meje Frontex). O prihodnosti Velike Britanije v EU niso razpravljali, ker britanski premier Cameron za zdaj še ni predstavil svojih zahtev, zato bodo o …

Nadaljuj z branjem Pregled dogajanj v EU – od begunske krize do parlamentarnih selitev

On the Difference Between ‘Technical’ and ‘Tactical’ Spies | Longreads

O tehnično in taktično podkovanih vohunih.

Longreads

In a recent piece for the New York Review of BooksFreeman Dyson reviewed Half-Life, a biography of Bruno Pontecorvo, a brilliant nuclear physicist and possible spy. Pontecorvo spent six years working on nuclear reactors in Canada, where he may or may not have passed information on to Soviet contacts. However, according to Dyson—who is himself a world-renowned mathematical physicist— even if Pontecorvo had been a spy, the overall effect of his information wouldn’t have been hugely important. Perhaps some of it might have been useful to Soviet bomb designers, but it wouldn’t have been a game changer. Furthermore, the Soviets already had two technical spies (Klaus Fuchs and Ted Hall) relaying information from Los Alamos.

This is where Dyson brings up an interesting distinction: that between technical and tactical spies. As a layperson, I’d always presumed a spy is a spy; however, in Dyson’s view, technical and tactical spies belong in entirely different categories. He…

View original post 373 more words