— Alisdair Faulkner, a founder of ThreatMetrix, which makes fraud detection software for large merchants and financial companies
Banks and Retailers Are Tracking How You Type, Swipe and Tap nyti.ms/2KNWrZd
We all mostly communicate with people and organizations that share our views
— Alisdair Faulkner, a founder of ThreatMetrix, which makes fraud detection software for large merchants and financial companies
Banks and Retailers Are Tracking How You Type, Swipe and Tap nyti.ms/2KNWrZd
1 big thing: How tech fuels authoritarians
www.axios.com/newsletters/axios-am-985d513a-6987-45b3-977d-b7c80f3dd84d.html?chunk=0&utm_term=emshare#story0
We always assumed technology and the naked transparency of social media would feed people’s taste for freedom and thirst for democracy.
Ian Bremmer — political scientist, president and founder of Eurasia Group, and author of "Us vs. Them: The Failure of Globalism" — recently unpacked this issue in a letter to clients, and he was kind enough to give me permission to share it.
Bremmer says changing technology makes him think differently about political stability in China:
Be smart: Bremmer’s takeaway isn’t that authoritarianism wins. But more growing economies "will end up economically and politically (and eventually, militarily) aligning" with China — strengthening America’s biggest rival.