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The fifth iteration of the Global Technology Summit addressed the balkanization of the internet, digital sovereignty, data localization, the future of data, and the changing nature of technology and geopolitics.
How do Tehran and Jerusalem intend to approach the new administration; what priorities, calculations, and attitudes will shift? And how will the Biden foreign policy team deal with the complex challenge of reentering and/or renegotiating the Iran nuclear accord?
The conference will consist of six virtual discussions that will provide a look ahead to 2021, focusing on what Carnegie scholars and other experts believe will be the most significant and challenging issues facing the Middle East and North Africa in their interaction with international actors.
Geopolitical relationships between countries have begun to impact their technological relations as well. This session assessed the potential economic and geopolitical ramifications of such maneuverings as well as their impact on the technology sector in India.
Vaccine development is a long and complex process that often takes many years of work by both public and private researchers. This workshop assessed the changes in the vaccine development process as well as the challenges of proper deployment.
As work continues on India’s Personal Data Protection Bill, the Indian government has taken steps to attempt to regulate the use of Non-Personal Data. This workshop covered the basic features of the proposed regulations and the implications of the regulation of this space.
In recent years, free and open-source software and hardware have gathered increasing interest, both from the business and academic community. This session explored the architecture behind open-source development, open-source business models, and potential regulations.
As the Fintech sector grows so does the need for up-to-date cybersecurity. This workshop explored the various cybersecurity challenges the sector faces while also assessing potential opportunities to address them.
A global nuclear arms race is underway, and the threat of nuclear war is growing. Drivers of escalation—ballistic missile defense, nonstrategic nuclear weapons, and China’s nuclear modernization—cannot be easily managed through treaties, so what can be done to mitigate the real risks of the nuclear contest?
What are the challenges to Putin’s system? How stable is the Putin majority? What do the domestic protests mean? What signals do the protests in Belarus send to Russia’s elites and civil society? What impact will the attempted assassination of Alexei Navalny have? A seminar held by Carnegie Moscow Center and the Embassy of Finland in Russia addressed these questions and much more.