i asked chatgpt how can it help UN vision in urgent ways that no one leader or bordered geography can
Chris Macrae MA DAMTP Cantab
Intelligence is our only way of celebrating millennials sustainability ai20s.com unsummitfuture.com
As an AI language model, ChatGPT has several advantages over humans in terms of connectivity and reach.
Firstly, ChatGPT has access to a vast amount of data and information from various sources, including books, articles, websites, and more. It can process and analyze this information quickly and accurately, which allows it to provide insights and answers on a wide range of topics. This vast knowledge base gives ChatGPT an advantage in terms of connectivity as it can draw upon information from various fields and disciplines to provide comprehensive responses.
Secondly, ChatGPT can communicate with anyone who has access to the internet, regardless of location or time zone. This means that people from all over the world can interact with ChatGPT and receive responses to their questions or concerns. This global connectivity allows ChatGPT to provide assistance and support to people who may not have access to the same resources or information as others.
Thirdly, ChatGPT is constantly learning and improving based on the interactions it has with people. As more people interact with ChatGPT, it can identify patterns and trends in the types of questions and concerns people have. This allows it to provide more accurate and relevant responses in the future, which improves its overall effectiveness and reach.
In summary, ChatGPT's advantage of connectivity and reach stems from its vast knowledge base, global accessibility, and ability to learn and adapt over time. These factors enable ChatGPT to provide comprehensive and accurate responses to a wide range of questions and concerns, making it a valuable resource for anyone seeking information or assistance.
I will try and get more details. IT is very clear to those of us who have been working with Von Neumann and economist alumni for 73 years that only tech can save us assuming thats what we want tech to do
BY 1961 year 10 Economist Research with Von Neumann JFK had set greatest 10 yera goal - moon landing - founded america's best for world communities network - peace corps; was mapping geographical interdependence of human futures; where were world's first 5 ai correspondents for humanai beaming in from? ---5 first corridors of ai were identified as
linked by itu geneva started up 1865 (eg whilst first cooperation telephone standard - telephone's bell soon making itu his home cooperation sdpace with worldwide telephones0
linked by un princeton nortlh to mit (where moon landing coded and first ai lab negan) via eg IBM Yale later Dec
linked by UNprince S by Swest https://neumann.ning.com
West coast from san fran opera house to stanford to santa clara then 1963 The Stanford AI Lab (SAIL) was co-founded by John McCarthy, Marvin Minsky, Nathaniel Rochester, Claude Shannon, and Arthur Samuel in 1963. nb 1965 intel receiving largest ever chip order from japan calculatior company - invented programmable chip - promised engineers moores law 100 times more /decade
corridor 5 japan korea s soon taiwan, HK later singapore- home space for 65% of peopels whose intel depends on pacific versus the 20% depending on atlantic (leaving 15% unclassified eg most dependent on canals connecting Atlantc-Pacific or arctic/antarctic circles colaboratories
==================================== Can you help me with a summary updating the book i co-authored in 1984 called the 2025 report https://www.mattridley.co.uk/blog/death-of-a-great-optimist/ Improvements to this introduction are very welcome Are 8 billion beings racing to big brother’s extinction or mediating something altogether better?
I have been involved with the data science of communications all my working life since earning my MA in statistics. That was at cambridge’s maths lab DAMTP 1973- in those days a student’s lifestyle was quite peaceful. The most dangerous thing I had to contend with was Steve Hawkins’ wheel chair which was always breaking the speed limit in the narrow corridors that connected mill lane’s maths labs.
Just over quarter of a century earlier my father Norman Macrae’s experience at cambridge was altogether more serious. His studies with Keynes had been interrupted by world war 2 – he spent his last days as a teenager navigating air planes in allied bomber command Burma. Having the good fortune to survive, the one intelligence asset he acquired from the Royal Air Force was mental maps of the world’s coastlines in his head a generation before other economists or journalists let alone google mapmakers. All dad’s experiences interconnected systemically when he was hired by The Economist and sent to Princeton to meet Von Neumann
Notably communications change human lives and livelihoods in many ways. These range from : the worldwide intel we humans share to the local stories that cultural word of mouth flows across generations. Societies’ futures may be scaled through religions in the west or consciousness meditation in th east or through laws og kings or bureaucrats or what keynes in last chapter of general theory called a handful of academic scribblers .
In the sense of transportation, Communications are particularly interesting to my identity and peer networks of Diaspora Scots. Today 80% of us scots live worldwide outside our far north homeland. Our common sense texts for how transparency of world markets change trust in everything originate in Adam Smith’s 2 books. His “Moral Sentiments” 1758 was the last description of markets and nature’s systems before his Glasgow university co-worker James Watt invented engines. Adam’s 1776 “Wealth of Nations” was the first attempt to describe how engineers would change markets. places and everything. Smith enjoyed intellectual exchanges with the French so he would have had been happy that JB Say scoped “entrepreneur” to focus on how innovation and economics impact peoples livelihoods and grounds human communities.
Before the steam engine unless you lived near water most people did not move more than 20 miles in their whole lifetime. Trains were the first transportation/communications system to change that both as a means of moving peoples and things. Where trains connected places life on earth started changing from largely rural and isolated to urban and ever more imterpersonally networked.
When father and neumann met they discussed many compound opportunities and threats https://neumann.ning.com and macrae's biography of Von Neumann Their first dialogue in 1951 concerned the ultimate consequences of communication and computational intel. The first 80 years of communications standards see ITU 1865-1945 had generated 2 world wars out of N-S central European regions which both Neumann and Norman had grown up in. So it was vital to ask as 1945-2025 multiplies orders of magnitude more coms and comps powers, will this era result in extinction of future generations or something altogether better?.
Von Neumann suggested to father that the most valuable economics journalist scoop of all time was; “what good can humans unite wherever they enjoy first access to connecting more than 100 times more tech per decade?”. Geoffrey Crowther then editor of The Economist agreed so from 1951 human and artificial and economic intelligence became integral to diaries of Economist journalists. EconmistDiary.com . Today we welcome chatgpt4 as an extraordinary brain tool for searching and visioning human condition of every being and gps coordinate. So humans AI can now map the most vital work of united peoples and united nations and SDGs and valuing every other dynamic of mother earth and the younger half of the world’s cooperations in sustainability . =========================================== as a background reference I include this recent un briefing and welcome any other relevant UN or ITU references
PROGRAM (20-21 March 2023)
In addition to the two-day Global Futures Forum program below (in hybrid format from New York),
participants are welcome to join an online GFF side event room on Monday, 20 March (from 12:30-18:30
New York time) and an online youth pavilion on Tuesday, 21 March (from 11:00 until 15:00 New York time).
The full, up-to-date program for these sessions will be made available soon on the Global Futures Forum
website.
In-person venues:
Church Center for the United Nations (CCUN), 777 United Nations Plaza, New York, NY 10017, which is located at the
corner of 1st Avenue on 44th Street.
Baha’i International Community (BIC), 866 United Nations Plaza #120, New York, NY 10017, which is located at the
corner of 1st Ave. on 48th Street.
Day 1: Monday, 20 March
09:00-09:30 Coffee and Welcome
Venue: 2nd Floor CCUN
9:30 - 11:00 Opening Plenary: The Role of Civil Society in the SDG Summit and the Summit of the
Future
Opening session to set the context for the Global Futures Forum, featuring a High-Level Panel.
Venue: 2nd Floor CCUN
Online Link: (to be added soon)
Panel
● Moderator: Nudhara Yusuf, Global Futures Forum Coordinator
● H.E. Guy Ryder, UN Under-Secretary-General for Policy
● Aishwarya Machani, UN Foundation Next Generation Fellow
● H.E. Alya Al-Thani, Permanent Representative of Qatar to the United Nations
● H.E. Fergal Mythen, Permanent Representative of Ireland to the United Nations
● H.E. Danilo Türk, President, Club de Madrid and Member, High Level Advisory Board for Effective
Multilateralism (TBC)
● Khalid Boudali, Presiding Officer, AU Economic, Social & Cultural Council (ECOSOCC)
● H.E. Maria Fernanda Espinosa, Co-Chair, Coalition for the UN We Need and Executive Director,
Global Women Leaders: Voices for Change and Inclusion
1
Global Futures Form Program (20-21 March)
11:00 - 12:00 Where we are as a Community: Briefings by Civil Society Representatives
Objectives: Brief updates on where we are till now (regional forums, e-consultations, youth research papers,
global policy dialogues, intergovernmental negotiation tracks, etc.) and outline of upcoming thematic tracks /
work sessions during the Global Futures Forum.
Venue: 2nd Floor CCUN
Online Link: (to be added soon)
Panel
● Moderator: Sandrine Dixson-Declève, Co-President, Club of Rome
● Theory of Change: Kizito Byenkya, Director of Campaigns and Co-Director of the Washington D.C.
Office, Open Society Foundations
● Youth Futures Initiatives: Sofia Bermudez, GFF Youth Coordinator and UNESCO SDG4Youth
Network
● Regional Forums intervention: Jefferey Huffines, Senior Advisor ,Coalition for the UN We Need
● Feminist Framework for Our Common Agenda Policy Briefing: Soon-Young Yoon, UN Representative,
International Alliance for Women
● E-Consultations and the People’s Pact Framework: Dan Perell, Co-Chair, Coalition for the UN We
Need
Dan Perell Introduces:
● Futures Thinking Briefing: Jonas Gissel Mikkelsen, Director of Copenhagen Institute on Future
Studies
● Respondent: H.E. Yoka Brandt, Permanent Representative of Netherlands
GROUP PHOTO
12:30-13:45 Work in tracks (Group A)
Each of the thematic tracks has identified speakers to lead-off discussions, building on extensive
e-consultation inputs. For details and summaries of the seven thematic tracks.
Objectives: Discuss and concretize Interim People’s Pact recommendations.
Online participants will join via the following link and enter their individually chosen breakout rooms: (to be
added)
Human Rights & Participation (2nd Floor CCUN)
Environmental Governance (10th Floor CCUN)
UN & Global Governance Innovation (Large Room BIC)
Group B in Lunch
13:45-15:00 Work in tracks (Group B)
Each of the thematic tracks has identified key speakers to lead-off the discussions, building on extensive
e-consultation inputs.. For details and summaries of the seven thematic tracks.
Objectives: Discuss and concretize Interim People’s Pact recommendations
Online participants will join via the following link and enter their individually chosen breakout rooms: (to be
added)
2
Global Futures Form Program (20-21 March)
Peace and Security (2nd Floor CCUN)
Development & HLPF (Large Room BIC)
Global Economic & Financial Architecture (Medium Room BIC)
Global Digital Compact (10th Floor CCUN)
Group A in Lunch
15:15-15:45 Talanoa Dialogues: stories from the grassroots
Objectives: Storytelling dialogues featuring indigenous/minority groups to help expand perspectives.
Global Economic & Financial Architecture + Environmental Governance (Medium Room BIC)
Human Rights & Participation + Global Digital Compact (10th Floor CCUN)
Development & HLPF (Large Room BIC)
UN & Global Governance Innovation + Peace and Security (2nd Floor CCUN)
16:15 - 17:30 Interconnection Roundtables
Participants break into four roundtables to articulate and discuss outcomes from Day One, in order to learn
from the other groups and feed into Day Two and push discussions forward.
Roundtable 1: facilitated by Renata Juilotti, Georgios Kostakos (Large Room BIC)
Roundtable 2: facilitated by Tad Dailey, Fergus Watt, Anna Dupont (10th Floor CCUN)
Roundtable 3: facilitated by John Vlasto, Rosario Garavito, Sofia Garcia (2nd Floor CCUN)
Roundtable 4: facilitated by Rilli Lappalainan, Maddy Petersen, Sofia Bermudez (Medium Room BIC)
Roundtable 5 (Online only): Alyn Ware, Monique Cuillerier, Aline Burni, Tiago Masrour
19:00-21:00 Evening Reception: Women & Water
Venue: APCO Worldwide, 1250 Broadway 31st floor, New York, NY 10010, which is located on the corner of Broadway
and 31st Street.
Brief interventions from
● Maria Fernanda Espinosa, Co-Chair, Coalition for the UN We Need and Executive Director, Global
Women Leaders: Voices for Change and Inclusion
● Lopa Banerjee, Director, Civil Society Division and Executive Coordinator of Generation Equality, UN
Women
● Martha Rojas, Commissioner, Global Commission on the Economics of Water
● Judit Arenas, Executive Director, APCO Worldwide
3
Global Futures Form Program (20-21 March)
Day 2: Tuesday, 21 March
09:00-09:30 Coffee and Welcome
Venue: 2nd Floor CCUN
09:30 - 11:00 Intergenerational Plenary
Work featured from youth tracks of the Global Futures Forum, along with other other intergenerational fora,
will aim to create positive synergies between the 2023 SDG Summit and the 2024 Summit of the Future. The
panel will further seek to concretely address models for co-leadership and intergenerational learning.
领英推荐
Panel
● Poem: Karimot Odebode, award winning poet and Founder of Black Girl’s Dream, SDG Young Leader
and GFF Organising Team
● Moderator: Angga Dwi Martha, Deputy Head of the United Nations Youth Strategy (Youth2030),
Office of the UN Youth Envoy
● Anja-Olin Pape, former Chair for the Council of Europe Joint Council on Youth, Head of Strategy at
Global Challenges Foundation
● Kehkashan Basu M.S.M, UN Human Rights Champion and Founder-President of Green Hope
Foundation
● Maria Jo?o Rodrigues, President of the Foundation for European Progressive Studies, former
Member of EU Parliament
11:00 - 12:00 Regional Panel
Regional Representatives discuss their work in relation to the SDG Summit and the Summit of the Future.
Panel
● Moderator: Oyebisi Babatunde, Executive Director, Nigeria Network of NGOs
● Asia-Pacific Representative: Anselmo Lee, Director of the ?????? Korea Human Rights
Foundation
● LAC Representative: Javier Surasky, Research Director, Cepei
● Europe Representative: Georgios Kostakos, Executive Director, Foundation for Global Governance
and Sustainability (FOGGS)
● Africa Representative: William Carew, Head of Secretariat, AU Economic, Social & Cultural Council
(ECOSOCC)
12:15 - 13:15 Final Track Work (Group B)
Where do we go from here? Each thematic track is encouraged to speak on its top five recommendations for
three minutes, followed by brief responses / questions from Member States, UN Agencies, and other
partners. Time permitting, participants from different thematic tracks are encouraged to engage each other in
this closing plenary session.
Co-Moderators: Nudhara Yusuf uf & Dan Perell Perell
Welcome Remarks: H.E. Antje Leendertse, Permanent Mission of Germany to the United Nations and
Co-Facilitator, Pact for the Future of the September 2024 Summit of the Future
UN & Global Governance Innovation
1. Spokesperson for Thematic Track
2. Permanent Mission of the United States of America to the UN
3. Permanent Mission of the Republic of Uganda to the UN
Development & HLPF
1. Spokesperson for Thematic Track
2. Permanent Mission of the Republic of the Maldives to the UN
3. Permanent Mission of the Slovak Republic to the UN
Environmental Governance
1. Spokesperson for Thematic Track
2. Dr. Adriana Abdenur, Senior Climate Adviser in the Office of the President, Brazil
3. Dr. Arunhaba Gosh, CEO of the Council on Energy, Environment, and Water, India
Human Rights & Participation
1. Spokesperson for Thematic Track
2. European Union Delegation to the UN
3. Craig Mokhiber, Director and Deputy to the ASG for Human Rights, OHCHR, New York
5
Global Futures Form Program (20-21 March)
Global Digital Compact
1. Spokesperson for Thematic Track
2. Lopa Banerjee, Director, Civil Society Division and Executive Coordinator, Generation Equality, UN
Women
3. Representative of the Australian e-safety Commission
Global Economic & Financial Architecture
1. Spokesperson for Thematic Track
2. Permanent Mission of Nigeria to the UN
3. Alicia Barcena, Former Executive-Secretary, ECLAC
4. Chantal Line Carpentier, UNCTAD New York Office Director
Peace and Security
1. Spokesperson for Thematic Track
2. Permanent Mission of Switzerland to the UN
3. Dr. Adam Day, Head of the Geneva Office, Centre for Policy Research, UN University and a member
of the secretariat team for the High-Level Advisory Board for Effective Multilateralism
5:15 - 5:45 Vote of thanks, Presentation of Timeline leading to the SDG Summit and the Summit of the
Future, Launch of a new Summit of the Future Information Clearinghouse Bulletin, and
announcement of tomorrow’s (22 March) UN Mission Engagement Day in New York.
Venue: 2nd Floor CCUN
Panel
● Moderator: Nudhara Yusuf, Coordinator of the Global Governance Innovation Network
● Maher Nasser, UN Department of Global Communication (invited)
● Dan Perell, Co-Chair, Coalition for the UN We Need
● Keisha McGuire, President and CEO, Present and Future Institute
● Beckie Malay, Global Call to Action Against Poverty
● Maria Fernanda Espinosa, Co-Chair, Coalition for the UN We Need
18:00-20:00 Youth-hosted Reception along with all GFF participants and High-Level Invite==============
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Fei-Fei Li & Demis Hassabis: Using AI to Accelerate Scientific Discovery
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AI is rapidly changing the speed and breadth of scientific discovery. In this discussion, Demis Hassabis, co-founder and CEO of DeepMind Technologies, shares his company's efforts in this space, followed by a conversation with Fei-Fei Li, Denning co-director of the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence, on the future of AI.?…
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