grazie mille!
e auguri
Giovanni

Il giorno mer 29 dic 2021 alle ore 21:18 Diego.Latella <
[email protected]> ha scritto:

> Buona sera
>
> Ho appena finito di leggere
>
> Cyber Threats and Nuclear Weapons
> https://www.sup.org/books/title/?id=34611
>
> di Herbert Lin; pubblicato dalla Stanford University Press.
>
> Il libro e' stato pubblicato alcune settimane fa; e' molto aggiornato;
> sebbene focalizzato esclusivamente sulla situazione USA, coglie gli aspetti
> principali del problema del collegamento fra cyberwar e complesso
> nucleare---NC3 incluso, ma anche altro---e i rischi di escalation nucleare
> causata o collegata ad attività nel cyberspace.
>
> Ne suggerisco la lettura. In particolare, ne raccomando la lettura a chi
> si occupa di armamenti e/o disarmo nucleare e vuole capire la relazione fra
> questi sistemi di arma e le armi informatiche, ma anche agli informatici
> che vogliono approfondire questioni legate all'impatto, perfino
> esistenziale, della tecnologia di loro competenza.
>
> L'autore (https://cisac.fsi.stanford.edu/people/herbert_lin ) e' Senior
> Research Scholar at the Center for International Security and Cooperation
> (CISAC) della Stanford University e Hank J. Holland Fellow in Cyber Policy
> and Security, Hoover Institution.
> Collabora con il Bulletin of Atomic Scientists (
> https://thebulletin.org/biography/herbert-lin/ ).
>
> Buona lettura e Buon Anno
>
> Diego
> --
> Dott. Diego Latella - Senior Researcher CNR/ISTI, Via Moruzzi 1, 56124
> Pisa, Italy  (http:www.isti.cnr.it)
> FM&&T Lab. (http://fmt.isti.cnr.it)
> CNR/GI-STS (http://gists.pi.cnr.it)
> https://www.isti.cnr.it/People/D.Latella - ph: +390506212982, fax:
> +390506212040
> ===================
> --
> Dott. Diego Latella - Senior Researcher CNR/ISTI, Via Moruzzi 1, 56124
> Pisa, Italy  (http:www.isti.cnr.it)
> FM&&T Lab. (http://fmt.isti.cnr.it)
> CNR/GI-STS (http://gists.pi.cnr.it)
> https://www.isti.cnr.it/People/D.Latella - ph: +390506212982, fax:
> +390506212040
> ===================
> The quest for a war-free world has a basic purpose: survival. But if in
> the process we learn  how to achieve it by love rather than by fear, by
> kindness rather than compulsion; if in the process we learn how to combine
> the essential with the enjoyable, the expedient with the benevolent, the
> practical with the beautiful, this will be an extra incentive to embark on
> this great task.
> Above all, remember your humanity.
> -- Sir Joseph Rotblat
>
> I don't quite know whether it is especially computer science or its
> subdiscipline Artificial Intelligence that has such an enormous affection
> for euphemism. We speak so spectacularly and so readily of computer systems
> that understand, that see, decide, make judgments, and so on, without
> ourselves recognizing our own superficiality and immeasurable naivete with
> respect to these concepts. And, in the process of so speaking, we
> anesthetise our ability to evaluate the quality of our work and, what is
> more important, to identify and become conscious of its end use.  […] One
> can't escape this state without asking, again and again: "What do I
> actually do? What is the final application and use of the products of my
> work?" and ultimately, "am I content or ashamed to have contributed to this
> use?"
> -- Prof. Joseph Weizenbaum ["Not without us", ACM SIGCAS 16(2-3) 2--7 -
> Aug. 1986]
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