Anton Kolokin Two years into our last review on state of the artt in the area of artificial intelligence, there has been a widening gap between the seeming omnipotence of neural network models based on “deep learning”, which are offered by market leaders, and the demand for an …
Read More »Global Trends & New Revolutions of Small Medium Business Economies in 2022
When Godzilla dances on ant colonies: With no further proof required, across the world, nation-by-nation, the biggest tax-contributors and new jobs creators are really the small medium business sectors. Yet at the same time, despite lesser contributions to national taxes and low on new job creations the big business sectors …
Read More »A Case Study of Japanification: Reverse Wrestle with Inflation
Syed Rizvi Japan has been an intriguing case study in the scope of macroeconomic policymaking. Since the burst of Japan’s economic bubble in the early 1990s, inflation has been frustratingly low, and growth has been modest at best. In 2021, Japan’s inflation rate stood at -0.174%. In the …
Read More »The Problem With Sanctions
Colum Lynch From the White House to Turtle Bay, sanctions have never been more popular. But why are they so hard to make work? Foreign Policy illustration/Getty Images Sanctions have never been more popular in Washington and at the United Nations, but the system for enforcing them is …
Read More »Elections to Watch in 2022
Allison Meakem Next year’s contests are set to bring populist reckonings, parliamentary headaches, and a possible democratic crisis or two. Jon Benedict illustration for Foreign Policy/Getty Images In the United States, where campaigns are temporally unbounded and election season seems constant, politicians and observers alike are already fixated …
Read More »Five Major Diplomatic Disputes That Could Spell More Trouble in 2022
Robbie Gramer From the AUKUS fracas to China’s bullying tactics in Europe, here are some of the top diplomatic spats from the past year that could haunt us in the next. U.S. President Joe Biden gestures as he meets with Chinese President Xi Jinping during a virtual summit …
Read More »Ethical aspects relating to cyberspace: utilitarianism and deontology
Giancarlo Valori Obviously, web ethics must primarily be behavioural in nature. Its task is to serve as a tool for making decisions in morally difficult situations. However, as long as web ethics is seen only as one of the mechanisms of the Internet normative self-regulation, based on the …
Read More »Omicron Is Pushing America Into Soft Lockdown
Sarah Zhang “I do not see a scenario for any kind of shutdown,” New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio declared this week, as parts of New York were in fact shutting down all around him. Broadway canceled show after show. Restaurants closed their kitchens. De Blasio’s successor, …
Read More »Boosting Transatlantic Technology Cooperation
Robert Atkinson During the era of the Cold War, the United States and Europe cooperated militarily, but competed economically. At the time, the Soviet Union posed a military, not an economic, threat to the West. Today, in what could become a second Cold War, this time with China, …
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