
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.
COVID-19 has accelerated new technology – but not without risk. Here's how we can continue to drive innovation while ensuring tech is responsible and fair.
We need to go back to basics as we navigate the hype to make AI fair, and this means applying fairness to the entire AI development lifecycle – immense as it is.
Investors still do not have the information they need to take sustainability into account when making investment decisions.
Satellite images can support industrial growth, environment protection, healthcare and education. New estimates reveal the potential opportunity.
As businesses of the future evolve to be more digital and more shared, the need to prepare to avert a cyber pandemic – with potential even more than the coronavirus to upend our lives – h...
As AI provides an increasing number of recommendations to human decision-makers, it becomes imperative that we uncover all stones to make sure we can trust it.
APIs – Application Programme Interfaces, bits of codes that help different systems interact with each other – could be the key to combating misinformation, fraud and abuse online.
Sir Tim Berners-Lee is designing a web, where people have a single sign-on for any service and personal data is stored in “pods” controlled by the user.
AI algorithms cannot explain the thought processes behind their decisions, yet if they could, humans might learn from their intelligent problem-solving.
Educational technology like AR, VR and AI has become increasingly important after the COVID-19 pandemic closed classrooms across the world.
With large amounts of data at their disposal, government agencies are beginning to see the potential for AI to increase efficiency and improve security.
Automated fintech could help solve the looming pensions timebomb worldwide, as populations age and employment becomes less stable







