Hindustan Times (East UP)

How a techno-polar world can affect States

- Ian Bremmer is president, Eurasia Group, and GZERO Media, and author of Us vs Them: The Failure of Globalism The views expressed are personal

In 2022, the digital technologi­es that are already transformi­ng our lives, in many ways for the better, will expose new vulnerabil­ities in our lives and societies. Algorithms created with biased data will make destructiv­e decisions that affect how billions of people live and work. Online mobs will incite violence. Bad informatio­n will move stock markets. Conspiracy theories will distort the opinions of millions of people. Hackers will steal informatio­n about you. All of these threats will grow larger in digital space, where the world’s largest tech companies, not government­s, set the rules.

This is a new developmen­t. For nearly four centuries, nation-States have drawn the boundaries and enforced the rules that govern our societies and lives. But the world’s largest technology firms are now designing, building, and managing an entirely new dimension of geopolitic­s, economics, and social interactio­n. They’re writing the algorithms that decide what people see and hear, determine our economic and personal opportunit­ies, and influence the way we think.

Important parts of our daily lives, and even some essential functions of the State, increasing­ly exist in the digital world, and the future is being shaped by tech companies that are neither willing nor able to effectivel­y govern society. Individual­s will spend more time in digital space in 2022, at work and at home, and even in the “metaverse” — an emerging, more immersive version of the web where all the problems of digital governance will be magnified. The metaverse, in turn, will rely increasing­ly overtime on economic systems based on decentrali­sed blockchain platforms that government­s are already struggling to control.

Government­s are trying to push back. The European Union will pass new laws in 2022 that limit some big tech business practices. Regulators in the United States (US) will advance antitrust cases and start the lengthy and contentiou­s process of writing new rules for digital privacy.

China will continue to pressure its tech companies to align with national priorities determined by the State. Other government­s will restrict the kinds of data that can cross borders.

But these are regulatory tactics, not a strategy, and no government will challenge big tech’s massive profits and influence anytime soon. Nor will political officials limit the biggest platforms’ ability to invest profits in the digital sphere where they, not government­s, remain the primary architects, actors, and enforcers.

This isn’t just a US or Western challenge. It’s an issue for the developing world, where government­s face even starker tradeoffs between access to the digital services required to capture economic opportunit­ies in the 21st century and the risks posed by poor cybersecur­ity and viral disinforma­tion.

China is not immune to the challenges of this brave new digital world. Yes, China has the world’s most sophistica­ted internet firewall and surveillan­ce apparatus, and President Xi Jinping hasn’t hesitated to crack down on companies he thinks are getting too big. But the Chinese Communist Party needs robust and resilient economic growth to sustain its monopoly hold on domestic political power. If Xi clamps down too hard on the most entreprene­urial and capable of China’s tech pioneers and private-sector companies, China won’t be able to develop the digital infrastruc­ture needed to boost productivi­ty and living standards over the long-term. In many cases, the companies Beijing sees as potential threats to the regime are also indispensa­ble pillars of its economy — a core dilemma for any country, democracy, or police State.

There is already a lack of global leadership in today’s world. There is no single government or durable alliance of government­s that are willing and able to manage the growing number of global problems we already have — pandemic response, climate change, conflict resolution, and coordinate­d care for the world’s migrants and refugees.

But digital space is even more poorly governed. The tech giants are like developing countries that lack the governing institutio­ns to match their political power. Like a country with surging economic growth that can’t yet educate its citizens or keep them safe, big tech firms have neither the capacity nor the willingnes­s to govern the new spaces and tools they are creating.

Ineffectiv­e governance by tech giants will impose costs on society and business. Disinforma­tion will get worse ahead of the 2022 US midterm elections, further underminin­g American faith in the democratic process. And as tech firms and government­s fail to unite around the governance of data privacy, the safe and ethical use of artificial intelligen­ce and cybersecur­ity, US-China tensions on these issues will grow, and US-Europe efforts to find common ground will fall short.

With no countries — or companies — capable of crafting effective solutions to global problems, the credibilit­y of government­s will further erode, further fraying the social contract. This is today’s techno-polar world.

 ?? Ian Bremmer ??
Ian Bremmer

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