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Good news

DebunkBot and CO2-neutral shipping

The two pieces of good news this month are about a chatbot designed to combat conspiracy theories and reductions in climate-damaging emissions in international shipping.
Technology can help sharpen critical thinking.
Technology can help sharpen critical thinking.

In order to achieve the goal of net-zero greenhouse-gas emissions by 2050, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) has agreed to introduce a global carbon-pricing mechanism for shipping emissions. Expected from 2027 onwards, ships with emissions above set fuel intensity thresholds will be required to buy surplus units from more efficient ships or remedial units sold by the IMO Net-Zero Fund. Revenues from the fund will be used to reward zero-emission ships, finance research on alternative fuels and technologies and mitigate the impact of rising shipping costs on vulnerable economies.  

The agreement not only is a success for climate action but also for global governance. Even though 16 member states opposed the decision, with the US at the forefront, the 63 votes in favour were enough for the agreement to come into force – and it will be legally binding still.

Overview multilateral policymaking

Global problems require global solutions

DebunkBot promotes critical thinking

Researchers have developed a chatbot that, according to a study, reduces belief in conspiracy theories even after relatively brief interactions. May we introduce DebunkBot?

According to the research team, the approach is based on an AI system that can draw on a wide range of information to generate conversations that encourage critical thinking and provide tailored, fact-based counterarguments. The trick: The conversation with DebunkBot begins with the bot asking a few questions about what the user believes and why. This allows the AI to tailor its persuasion precisely to the individual’s worldviewGive it a try here.

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