Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    warfare
    /ˈwɔːfɛː/

    noun

    • 1. engagement in or the activities involved in war or conflict: "guerrilla warfare"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Apr 14, 2022 · Information warfare - then to now. During the Cold War, Soviet “ active measures ” included manipulating the media – for example, by tampering with the making of an otherwise legitimate documentary in West Germany to aggravate tensions over the country's Nazi past. The US and its allies countered with their own unsavory efforts.

  3. Dec 3, 2015 · Information warfare combines electronic warfare, cyberwarfare and psy-ops (psychological operations) into a single fighting organisation, and this will be central to all warfare in the future. The anatomy of information warfare. The free flow of information within and between nation states is essential to business, international relations and ...

  4. Sep 26, 2018 · The good news is that when the Group of Governmental Experts charged with examining autonomous weapon systems met in April this year in Geneva, Switzerland, there was broad agreement that human control must be retained over weapon systems. In a sense, though, that’s the easy part. At their next meeting in late August, governments must now ...

  5. Apr 8, 2022 · And then the third stage is what we could call economic warfare. And then the strategic aim changes a bit because then it's [no longer] about trying to have the target state refrain from doing something, then it's all-out warfare, in the sense of trying to weaken the target state and weaken its economy and decouple it from other economic flows.

  6. Jan 11, 2024 · Cyber inequity usually means those forming the supply chains and partners of more equipped organizations are most vulnerable, causing insecurity within the whole ecosystem. Cyber inequity is usually driven by a lack of prioritization, experience, regulation and connectivity, as well as the costs of cybersecurity.

  7. Feb 25, 2019 · It spans intimidation, harassment and internment to terrorism and outright warfare. Usually it arises when the core beliefs that define a group’s identity are fundamentally challenged. It is ratcheted-up by ‘in-group’ communities against other ‘out-group’ communities, often with the help of fundamentalist religious leaders.

  8. Jan 11, 2023 · As 2023 begins, the world is facing a set of risks that feel both wholly new and eerily familiar. We have seen a return of “older” risks – inflation, cost-of-living crises, trade wars, capital outflows from emerging markets, widespread social unrest, geopolitical confrontation and the spectre of nuclear warfare – which few of this generation’s business leaders and public policy-makers have experienced.

  9. Feb 26, 2015 · These are the questions that the Global Agenda Council on Geo-economics will be grappling with over the next two years. Here are five early thoughts. 1. States must develop their rules of the road for economic warfare. When governments use the infrastructure of the global economy to pursue political goals, they challenge the universality of the ...

  10. May 10, 2024 · Rising militarization, new economic fault lines, and escalating cyber warfare are causing increased tension in international diplomacy and undermining multilateral cooperation. As the world faces up to the prospect of a multipolar reality, governments, companies, and nonprofits must prioritize collaboration and common ground between countries.

  11. Mar 17, 2016 · From the collapse of ancient Rome to the fall of the Mayan empire, evidence from archaeology suggests that five factors have almost invariably been involved in the loss of civilizations: uncontrollable population movements; new epidemic diseases; failing states leading to increased warfare; collapse of trade routes leading to famine; and climate change.