"Mr Branding" is a blog based on RSS for everything related to website branding and website design, it collects its posts from many sites in order to facilitate the updating to the latest technology.
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Saturday, April 26, 2025
AI Adoption Reshapes Expectations for Future Job Markets Worldwide
The survey found that people in China think that AI is going to create more jobs in the country. 77% respondents from China think that it is likely that AI will create new jobs in the future, while 20% say that it is unlikely. The reason why Chinese are so optimistic about AI adoption is because of government initiatives and exponential growth in the AI sector, which is also leading to AI based academic research. The second country with the most optimistic approach towards AI is Indonesia, with 74% of the respondents saying that AI will create a lot of jobs and 23% think that it is unlikely. Thailand is the third top country saying that AI will create more jobs in the country with 71% thinking that it is likely and 24% saying that it is unlikely.
If we look at the top ten countries with the most optimistic approach towards AI, none of European countries are present. It is because people from European countries do not think that AI will have any positive impact on the labor market. People from Poland, Germany and Hungary are the least optimistic about AI creating jobs in their countries. If we look at the data overall, 43% of the people from countries surveyed think it is likely that AI will create jobs on average, while 46% on average think that it is unlikely that AI is going to create more jobs.
Read next: No Wi-Fi, No Worries: Uncovering the World's Best Digital Detox Locations
by Arooj Ahmed via Digital Information World
Friday, April 25, 2025
No Wi-Fi, No Worries: Uncovering the World's Best Digital Detox Locations
The second-best country for digital detoxing is Uzbekistan, with a digital detox index of 69.75. There are 50.47% internet users in Uzbekistan, and it is best when you want to escape technology and travel in nature a bit. It is followed by Nigeria, which has a digital detox score of 61.79, and you can go to places like hot springs at Yankari National Park or Obudu Mountain Resort to take your mind off the digital world. With a digital detox score of 59.41, South Africa is the third-best country where you can experience local culture as well as explore beaches.
Indonesia also offers you disconnect from the digital world with no Wi-Fi and talking, as it has a digital detox score of 50.50. 77.59% of the population in Indonesia uses the internet, but there are still many areas where you can be free of any digital devices. Brazil is in sixth place as the country best for digital detox, followed by India as seventh. Brazil has a detox score of 49.22, while India has 49.06 on the digital detox index.
Poland is the first European and eighth overall country for digital detox, even though 90.58% of its population is connected online. It's just that the country offers several opportunities for people who want to do a digital detox in the form of lakes, parks, and mountains. The Netherlands scored 47.47 on the digital detox index, making it the ninth-best country for digital detox. At tenth place is Mexico, a North American country, with a 46.00 digital detox score, and it has several beaches, mountains, and jungle retreats to escape this digital world.
The index was compiled using 4 factors, each standardized on a 0-10 scale for accurate comparison. Factors with a negative impact were inverted. Weightings were assigned as follows: Total cell towers (25%), Terrestrial protected areas (% of land area) (25%), Average internet speed (Mbps) (25%), and % of internet users (25%). The final score was calculated out of 100 based on these weighted factors.
Sources: OpenCellID, World Bank, DataPandas, 2024 Depression Study (PMC).
Read next: The Hidden Health Cost of Convenience: Are Delivery Apps Sabotaging Your BMI?
by Arooj Ahmed via Digital Information World
AI Disrupts SaaS Growth: 39% of Mid-Sized Software Firms Struggle to Keep Up in 2024
Most of the AI used for enterprise software includes tools like Zendesk’s Answer Bot and CoPilot, but AlixPartners reports that it's just a start, and generative AI for software is going to evolve more in the coming years. AI models are also becoming the apps themselves in addition to helping within the apps and are being used for a number of reasons, like analyzing reports, scheduling meetings, and writing code. There aren't even any complex interfaces needed to handle these AI systems because they are able to work with different types of data without any heavy preparation.
AlixPartners looked at 122 public enterprise software companies with less than $10 billion in yearly revenue and found that their growth is slowing down. In 2023, 53% of the companies analyzed were said to be growing fast, but this dropped to 39% of companies in 2024 and is expected to fall to 27% this year. Customer loyalty is also weakening, with net-dollar retention rate declining to 108% in Q3 2023 from 120% in 2021. Many big tech companies are also trying to squeeze AI into their existing products, which is replacing these software enterprises with AI.
Traditional SaaS models also rely heavily on structured data workflows, user interface, and seat-based pricing, but AI agents do not need all of that, and that's why they are challenging the foundations of SaaS models. Companies like ServiceNow and Salesforce are now charging result-based pricing instead of charging per user. There is also pressure on profit margins because AI agents are costly to run, and many companies are focusing more on profits instead of growth through streamlining product lines, prioritizing AI as a growth area, cutting costs, and shifting their infrastructure strategies.
Read next: Creator Economy Evolves: 59% Now Identify as Entrepreneurs, Surpassing Social Media Reliance
by Arooj Ahmed via Digital Information World
Thursday, April 24, 2025
Cybercrime Losses Reach $16.6B in 2024, Seniors Lose $4.8B, FBI Gets 860K Complaints, Crypto Tops $9.3B
The highest number of complaints (147,000) was filed by people above 60, and $4.8 billion was lost. This amounts to a loss of $32,600 per person, which is higher than the overall loss of $19,300 per complaint. These findings are alarming because the FBI has taken more serious measures to control cyber crimes in 2024 and also targeted major threats like LockBit. Other major cybercrime threats targeted by the FBI were illicit online markets and botnets, scam call centers, and laundering rings, and it also arrested hundreds of cybercriminals involved.
- Also read: Creator Economy Evolves: 59% Now Identify as Entrepreneurs, Surpassing Social Media Reliance
The cybercrime which the second most brunt in losses was Business Email Compromise (BEC) scams, which caused $2.9 billion in losses with 21,489 complaints, which equals to loss of $135,000 per complaint. Even though ransomware is also getting common, there were only 3,156 reported cases of it, with losses of $12.5 million. Some other big losses came through personal data breaches, tech support scams, government impersonation scams, and romance scams.
Read next: Big Tech Giants Google, Microsoft, Apple, and Meta Drained 132 Million Cubic Meters of Water, Filling 52,938 Olympic Pools!
by Arooj Ahmed via Digital Information World
Creator Economy Evolves: 59% Now Identify as Entrepreneurs, Surpassing Social Media Reliance
These Entrepreneurial Creators are using social media to build their audience and invest in their own platforms through coaching, memberships, newsletters, and digital products. TikTok’s disappearance in January 2025 was the biggest turning point for many content creators turning into entrepreneurs, because they cannot risk relying on a single platform. Entrepreneurial Creators are earning 25% more than creators who are relying on social media platforms only, and are choosing ownership over instability.
This shift from being creators over social media platforms to being entrepreneurs isn't only boosting the earnings of creators but is also improving their lives. Entrepreneurial Creators reported having better personal and professional outcomes than Social-First Creators. 58% of Entrepreneurial Creators reported having more control over their content as compared to 36% of Social-First Creators. Similarly, 49% of Entrepreneurial Creators, as compared to 28% of Social-First Creators, enjoy more creative freedom, while 42% also reported having a stronger work-life balance as compared to 28% of Social-First Creators.
Creator economy is evolving at a rapid speed, and now it's an era to choose ownership over algorithms. 55% of the Entrepreneurial Creators say that it is important to have direct audience ownership. It is also important to have niche expertise, which can help monetize the content, and diversifying revenue streams can also help in stabilizing the income.
Image: DIW-Aigen
Read next: Which Tech Giants Are Leading with the Toughest Interviews and Earning Candidates' Praise?
by Arooj Ahmed via Digital Information World
Tariffs Threaten PC Demand but Apple’s Momentum Shows No Signs of Slowing
Before the tariff rush, there were also some other PC makers that saw growth. 11% growth was seen by Lenovo, after Apple’s 17% growth. Other companies that saw a rise in global PC shipments in Q1 2025 were Asus (9%), HP (6%), and Dell (4%). Overall, the leading PC maker in 2024 was Lenovo, with 25% of market share, followed by HP (21%) and Dell (16%). One of the biggest issues many PC makers are experiencing is that a lot of PCs are manufactured in China, which is the country facing the most US tariff threats.
Apple has also announced a $500 billion investment that it is going to open a 250,000 square foot facility in Houston, which will have servers for Apple Intelligence over the next four years. Many of the US assembled machines also import many parts like GPUs, CPUs, and motherboards, and shifting production to other countries isn't an option as well either. These uncertainties about tariffs can make new devices even more costly which will discourage purchases and slow down growth.
Read next: IEA Report: AI Won't Worsen Climate Change, But Data Center Energy Usage Must Be Managed
by Arooj Ahmed via Digital Information World
Wednesday, April 23, 2025
Government Data Networks Evolve into Stealth Surveillance Engine
These seemingly unrelated events are examples of recent developments in the transformation of the structure and purpose of federal government data repositories. I am a researcher who studies the intersection of migration, data governance and digital technologies. I’m tracking how data that people provide to U.S. government agencies for public services such as tax filing, health care enrollment, unemployment assistance and education support is increasingly being redirected toward surveillance and law enforcement.
Originally collected to facilitate health care, eligibility for services and the administration of public services, this information is now shared across government agencies and with private companies, reshaping the infrastructure of public services into a mechanism of control. Once confined to separate bureaucracies, data now flows freely through a network of interagency agreements, outsourcing contracts and commercial partnerships built up in recent decades.
These data-sharing arrangements often take place outside public scrutiny, driven by national security justifications , fraud prevention initiatives and digital modernization efforts . The result is that the structure of government is quietly transforming into an integrated surveillance apparatus, capable of monitoring, predicting and flagging behavior at an unprecedented scale.
Executive orders signed by President Donald Trump aim to remove remaining institutional and legal barriers to completing this massive surveillance system.
DOGE and the private sector
Central to this transformation is DOGE, which is tasked via an executive order to “promote inter-operability between agency networks and systems, ensure data integrity, and facilitate responsible data collection and synchronization.” An additional executive order calls for the federal government to eliminate its information silos.
Understand how AI is c
By building interoperable systems, DOGE can enable real-time, cross-agency access to sensitive information and create a centralized database on people within the U.S . These developments are framed as administrative streamlining but lay the groundwork for mass surveillance.
Key to this data repurposing are public-private partnerships. The DHS and other agencies have turned to third-party contractors and data brokers to bypass direct restrictions. These intermediaries also consolidate data from social media, utility companies, supermarkets and many other sources , enabling enforcement agencies to construct detailed digital profiles of people without explicit consent or judicial oversight.
Palantir, a private data firm and prominent federal contractor, supplies investigative platforms to agencies such as Immigration and Customs Enforcement , the Department of Defense , the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Internal Revenue Service . These platforms aggregate data from various sources – driver’s license photos , social services , financial information , educational data – and present it in centralized dashboards designed for predictive policing and algorithmic profiling. These tools extend government reach in ways that challenge existing norms of privacy and consent.
The role of AI
Artificial intelligence has further accelerated this shift.
Predictive algorithms now scan vast amounts of data to generate risk scores, detect anomalies and flag potential threats.
These systems ingest data from school enrollment records, housing applications, utility usage and even social media, all made available through contracts with data brokers and tech companies . Because these systems rely on machine learning, their inner workings are often proprietary, unexplainable and beyond meaningful public accountability.
Data privacy researcher Justin Sherman explains the astonishing amount of information data brokers have about you.
Sometimes the results are inaccurate, generated by AI hallucinations – responses AI systems produce that sound convincing but are incorrect, made up or irrelevant . Minor data discrepancies can lead to major consequences: job loss, denial of benefits and wrongful targeting in law enforcement operations. Once flagged, individuals rarely have a clear pathway to contest the system’s conclusions.
Digital profiling
Participation in civic life, applying for a loan, seeking disaster relief and requesting student aid now contribute to a person’s digital footprint. Government entities could later interpret that data in ways that allow them to deny access to assistance. Data collected under the banner of care could be mined for evidence to justify placing someone under surveillance. And with growing dependence on private contractors, the boundaries between public governance and corporate surveillance continue to erode.
Artificial intelligence , facial recognition systems and predictive profiling systems lack oversight . They also disproportionately affect low-income individuals, immigrants and people of color , who are more frequently flagged as risks .
Initially built for benefits verification or crisis response, these data systems now feed into broader surveillance networks. The implications are profound. What began as a system targeting noncitizens and fraud suspects could easily be generalized to everyone in the country.
Eyes on everyone
This is not merely a question of data privacy. It is a broader transformation in the logic of governance. Systems once designed for administration have become tools for tracking and predicting people’s behavior. In this new paradigm, oversight is sparse and accountability is minimal.
AI allows for the interpretation of behavioral patterns at scale without direct interrogation or verification. Inferences replace facts. Correlations replace testimony.
The risk extends to everyone. While these technologies are often first deployed at the margins of society – against migrants, welfare recipients or those deemed “high risk” – there’s little to limit their scope. As the infrastructure expands, so does its reach into the lives of all citizens.
With every form submitted, interaction logged and device used, a digital profile deepens, often out of sight. The infrastructure for pervasive surveillance is in place. What remains uncertain is how far it will be allowed to go.
Written by: Nicole M. Bennett Ph.D. Candidate in Geography and Assistant Director at the Center for Refugee Studies, Indiana University. Disclosure statement: Nicole Bennett is affiliated with Indiana University's Center for Refugee Studies and the Indiana University Refugee Task Force.
This article first appeared in The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
Read next:
• Trump’s Tough China Tariffs Could See Meta Take Mega $7 Billion Plunge in 2025
• Which Tech Giants Are Leading with the Toughest Interviews and Earning Candidates' Praise?
• What Countries Are Leading In Investment In AI? The 2025 Index Report Reveals!
by Web Desk via Digital Information World










