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1 |
ID:
107252
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2 |
ID:
099124
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3 |
ID:
142347
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4 |
ID:
181365
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Summary/Abstract |
THE YEAR 2021 is a significant one for the Communications Administration of the Russian Federation: We are chairing the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) Forum for the first time. That decision was made in late 2020, after which we immediately set out to make this a truly substantive event.
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5 |
ID:
182913
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Summary/Abstract |
TODAY, information and communication technologies (ICTs) have the same decisive impact on national and global development and determine the status of states in the international arena and the degree of their sovereignty as did nuclear technologies in the 1940s and rocket and space technologies in the 1950s and 1970s...
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6 |
ID:
189785
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Summary/Abstract |
INFORMATION and communications technology (ICT) is of paramount importance in the modern world. This statement is taking on new significance today. The fact is that, until very recently, humans were regarded as the primary source and consumer of information. With the advent of digital transformation mechanisms and use of the Internet of Things, most connections and the bulk of information are generated and consumed not by humans but by inanimate objects. And the distortion of information in this new space leads to threats that are more global than activities aimed at deception. By creating a world without borders through the total "connection of the unconnected," humanity is becoming more vulnerable than ever. In this era of rapid data proliferation and the extreme vulnerability of individuals and entire nations to the dangers of information warfare, not only must we concentrate our efforts on providing truthful information to people, but we must protect against potential technogenic challenges.
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7 |
ID:
146420
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Summary/Abstract |
Henry Stimson spoke those now famous words to explain his reason for eliminating the Cipher Bureau, the code breaking organization that had been operating under joint State Department—Department of War sponsorship since the end of World War I. The Cipher Bureau, a legacy organization of the U.S. Army's Cryptologic Service, had distinguished itself during the war in providing important intelligence obtained by breaking foreign diplomatic and military codes and ciphers. During the interwar years, the Cipher Bureau was able to break the diplomatic codes of several nations. Incidentally, that ability to intercept foreign communications was possible only through the secret and illegal cooperation of the entire American cable industry, which operated the transoceanic underwater cables that constituted the leading edge long-range communications technology of that era.
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8 |
ID:
107249
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9 |
ID:
105697
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