domingo, 28 de janeiro de 2018

Davos: Medos e Esperanças da Elite Globalista

Davos tornou-se a missa anual da elite globalista. Tal como ninguém vai à missa apenas por “ir à missa”, também ninguém vai a Davos apenas por Davos. Assim, além da realidade visível, há a invisível... Por enquanto, a “missa” corre bem e é um big business, para a organização, mas um dia ouvir-se-à o equivalente ao que as mães dizem, por vezes, às filhas casadoiras: “Ai, filha, nunca mais arranjas noivo... tens que mudar de igreja!”. Este ano, em Davos não reina a felicidade (ao contrário de anos anteriores) e há ‘frissons’ de ansiedade pelos corredores e salas. Sente-se por lá o sopro gelado de um preocupante e muito desagradável vento “populista”...



Na parte visível da “missa”, a equipa do Quartz detecta medos e esperanças. Dos medos, destaca a inteligência artificial e a questão climática, enquanto as esperanças são colocadas na blockchain e nas... mulheres (a “operação Hollywood Horror Show” também por lá se faz sentir...). Sintese:

AI and climate will ruin us, but blockchain and women are going to save us

Quartz Daily Brief | 27 Jan. 2018

In Davos this week, 3,000 world leaders and business bosses attended hundreds of talks, workshops, dinners, and other get-togethers. The takeaway: Artificial intelligence and climate change are going to ruin us, but blockchain and women are going to save us.

While advances in AI are undoubtedly significant for humanity—Google CEO Sundar Pichai compared AI to the invention of fire—the potential for job losses and instability as industries adjust (or not), is tremendous. “At the end of the day, we have to fire a lot of people,” said Ursula Burns, chairman of the supervisory board at telecom group VEON. The angst of these losses could even lead to wars, warned Alibaba’s Jack Ma. “Each technology revolution has made the world unbalanced,” he said.

Meanwhile, tech giants like Facebook, feted as world-changing innovators last year, faced pointed criticism and calls for heavy regulation in areas like data privacy and fake news. Even tech executives—from Salesforce’s Marc Benioff to PayPal’s Dan Schulman—joined the chorus.

And then there are the truly existential threats, such as climate change and pandemics. When not talking about Trump’s intentions, Macron’s ambitions, or which party to go to, delegates were stunned into silence by scientists with apocalyptic environmental projections and frightening simulations of how outbreaks spread in our increasingly connected world.

On the plus side, it seemed that there was no problem too daunting that couldn’t be solved with blockchain technology. Multinational CEOs talked about how distributed ledgers could streamline supply chains and cut accounting costs. The younger, rowdier crowd at crypto-themed fringe venues that sprang up around Davos for the first time considered applications for mining space minerals and establishing no less than a “new base layer of our reality.” Although certainly fueled by cryptocurrency froth, the blockchain banter represented a genuinely novel topic of conversation that attracted fresh faces to an event where the same people often repeat their spiels about the same subjects year after year.

And finally, gender equality has been a Davos agenda item for years, but this time around there were signs of tangible action. Amid the raw, sweeping force of #MeToo, the debates on everything from sexual harassment to making financial markets more equitable took on palpable momentum. The physical manifestation of this was the perpetually oversubscribed Equality Lounge. The long-overlooked economic opportunity that comes from closing the gender gap, measured in the tens of trillions of dollars, is at last being recognized by a crowd supposedly obsessed with the bottom line.

Jenny Anderson, Kevin J. Delaney, Jason Karaian, Eshe Nelson, and Heather Timmons

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