Integrating Offensive Cyber Capabilities: Meaning, Dilemmas, and Assessment

Submitted by joby.mullens on

Across the world, states are establishing military cyber commands or similar units to develop offensive cyber capabilities. One of the key dilemmas faced by these states is whether (and how) to integrate their intelligence and military capabilities to develop a meaningful offensive cyber capacity. This topic, however, has received little theoretical treatment.

Voter reactions to incumbent opportunism

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on
Opportunistic incumbent behavior to gain electoral advantage flies in the face of democratic accountability and should elicit voter disapproval. Yet incumbents routinely behave opportunistically. This observation is puzzling. We address this puzzle by offering the first systematic, individual-level analysis of voter reactions to opportunism. We combine four original surveys with embedded experiments and focus on a common form of opportunism in parliamentary systems—opportunistic election timing to favorable economic conditions.

Artificial Intelligence, Authoritarianism and the Future of Political Systems

Submitted by joby.mullens on

In February 2017 Scientific American featured a special issue, which revolved around the question: "will democracy survive big data and artificial intelligence." According to the issue, humanity is undergoing a profound technological transformation, and the advent of large-scale social and behavioral automation would change how human societies will be organized and managed.

Promoting International Cooperation in the Age of Global Space Governance: A Study on On-orbit Servicing Operations

Submitted by joby.mullens on

Dr Nikita Chiu is Research Fellow in Robotics at the Centre for Technology and Global Affairs at University of Oxford with an additional focus on space sustainability. She is also Research Affiliate at the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk at University of Cambridge. Her article on international cooperation and on-orbit servicing operations appears in Acta Astronautica.

Abstract:

Digital Open Source Intelligence and International Security: A Primer

Submitted by joby.mullens on

Akin Unver argues that intelligence is a key and continually changing the practice of statecraft. While this practice has historically been dominated by the states, merchants, and the clergy, the late-20thcentury has witnessed the privatization of intelligence and surveillance equipment and broadening of the concept of intelligence.

Rethinking the epistemic case against epistocracy

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In this article, I focus on arguments which suggest that disenfranchising persons on the grounds of incompetence is likely to produce epistemically sub-optimal decisions. I suggest three ways in which such arguments can be strengthened. First, I argue that they can be untethered from the controversial ‘best judge’ principle, according to which each person is the best judge of his or her own interests. Second, I suggest that epistemic arguments against epistocracy are currently insensitive to the nature of the groups that would be excluded on the grounds of incompetence.

Workshop on Applied Artificial Intelligence: Privacy Ethics & Organizational Yield

Submitted by joby.mullens on

On March 16th, 2018, Oxford University’s Centre for Technology and Global Affairs held a workshop on Applied Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. In attendance were academic and industry experts, business managers, and government representatives from the U.S. and Europe. r4 Technologies and Palantir – two industry leaders in the deployment of AI technology and data analytics respectively – co-organized the event with the Centre.

The main goals of the workshop were to: 

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