
The Fourth Industrial Revolution represents a fundamental change in the way we live, work and relate to one another. It is a new chapter in human development, enabled by extraordinary technology advances commensurate with those of the first, second and third industrial revolutions. These advances are merging the physical, digital and biological worlds in ways that create both huge promise and potential peril. The speed, breadth and depth of this revolution is forcing us to rethink how countries develop, how organisations create value and even what it means to be human. The Fourth Industrial Revolution is about more than just technology-driven change; it is an opportunity to help everyone, including leaders, policy-makers and people from all income groups and nations, to harness converging technologies in order to create an inclusive, human-centred future. The real opportunity is to look beyond technology, and find ways to give the greatest number of people the ability to positively impact their families, organisations and communities.
Faster and cheaper to build and more sustainable, too – could this technology be a solution to meeting the world’s housing needs? Three countries show the way.
Technology means doctors are able to carry out online consultations with people in India, to take the strain off the workforce and offer support through COVID-19.
By analyzing attacks in terms of safety scenarios, cybersecurity teams can both make their responses more robust and more easily communicate threats across an organization
Each day on Earth we generate 500 million tweets, 294 billion emails and 4 million gigabytes of Facebook data, which is only a small portion of all data.
New quantum algorithms will soon be capable of cracking current public-key cryptography – so government, academia and industry must prepare now
How we tackle privacy and safety will shape how we solve the biggest social issues of our time.
There are inefficiencies, challenges and risks associated with what underlies capital markets: key question is whether DLT is the tech to address them.
Research, published in the Public Library of Science, is the first to reveal some long-term trends in how businesses compete in the age of the web.
Space junk is rapidly proliferating, which imperils space exploration. Here's how we can clean up existing debris and prevent future generation of it.
Is the state of technology governance ready for digital contact tracing technologies? Here's how governments build public trust for use beyond COVID-19.
There has been a shift toward digital payments during the COVID-19 pandemic, and central bank digital currencies (CBDC) and stablecoins are growing in use.
This India-based social enterprise is using cloud-based web and mobile applications to track waste and promote recycling.






