d w. ah. i remember when the internet was fun when it was new, but remember means and cat videos and mash ups. remember when it felt like hope and change? i 1st got online in the ancient days of the last century. i've been making the internet and making movies about the internet ever since. i used to think putting the internet into people's hands was a recipe for freedom. and democracy didn't turn out that way. now the internet companies are huge and they don't act like our friends shady hackers harvested our attention, subverted democracy. and we treated the cavity yos for lots. he means the internet got old. we kind of boring. and so did i these days it feels like it's me versus the screens and the screen, our way the internet stole all of our attention. it's sneaky that way. you wake up one day with a smart tooth brush. your family's exercise has recorded in the cloud and your refrigerator is talking to your phone. how did we get here? i feel like we're living in a time or anything that isn't connected to the internet is about to be i still think the internet has a higher purpose, but it's getting harder every day to keep the faith. my name is brett and i'm on a mission to understand the new internet. the internet of everything. yes, let's get nerdy with the consumer electronics show is america's biggest gadget showcase. hello. what is it? this is an automatic absolutely. is this connected to the internet? yeah. what is it? it's a lot of it. does it connect to the internet? oh, good. did this connected diaper connect to the internet? yes, it would tell you this year's biggest trend, the connected home. what you'll see over here is our sense, a kitchen faucet and it's activated will lifelessly adapt available to manually and then now also be a void. so consumers can use apple, google or amazon, the sort of boston on and off. and then also just want to show you our new me 2 point oh toilet. so we talk a little bit about intelligence coiling. your amazon alex is actually embedded into this product. you spend time in this space, use amazon. alexa, while you're in here to set the mood to play the music, change those lights that you just saw with all the capability of like that right into the as well. usually this is not a place where i want the internet speed, right? why have you guys put the internet and none its only meant for you to have to use it while you're on the toilet. it's meant to use while you're in this space. so that's the way that you bring the microphone into that room via the toilet. lexa and the google homes have a better microphone is already, i'm is giving it to me in a more seamless experience and also kind of a use case that makes sense. can you tell from microphone to not be on? of course, you can always from the microphone offers like you can do with amazon and with sold . i get it. a microphone in my toilet is the latest example of tech companies trying to make themselves indispensable. that's why they need to make all the dumb objects inside my home, smart open can, etc, as really what you have is google and amazon going against each other with their smartest. this is trying to prove whose smartest and happiness toady, which one it can be in most devices, like billions and devices and who is really going to win out the smartest net worth is companies have a whole new vantage point here. like if it's a computer in your bedroom, it's a computer in your living room and a computer that's listening. it's a computer you talk to, it's a computer, your friends with it, why google or amazon would want to build those seems totally obvious to me. the business of google is not a search engine. the business of google is knowing as much about you as they can. now it seems like yesterday that i was surfing the web and google was just trying to help me catch a wave. now it's a mega corp, monetize my bathroom. who knows what the consequences of connecting our homes to the internet will be. but it's happening anyway. wikipedia says that by 2020 aka now. 30000000000 devices will joined what is known as the internet of the people, the delivery room. it's the inevitable result of computers getting smaller and smaller. you start with industrial computers. computers are incredibly expensive. there be one at mit that everyone would share. then computers got cheaper, people started getting them in their houses, then you got mobile phones. and that really meant that humans were for the 1st time, completely trackable online. and then the internet of things is getting all of the electrical products in your house on mind. it's if there's something that has electricity, it's going to be why fi connected that's thinks the internet of things is like a never ending. gold rush. there's limitless possibilities when you're on a mission to connect everything on earth. it's a bonanza for silicon valley. for a hint of what my fellow nerds would bring to market in the next few years, i went to an investor pitch day. we done a see ah, the most interesting stuff in the connected phases. the thing is that i'm sort of in through whatever process they're part of because of the access to data. so whether that's a health tax products that helps you understand overall patterns in your own health and other people's health, or whether it's a product that helps in an industrial manufacturing process. anything where there is kind of a trojan horse into a larger world. we find really interesting. every start up i met was connecting something to the internet for the very 1st time. one of them was aiming to collect data from inside a human body. the get the small, he goes by 5, raise a while you are exercising your cars. the kicker sensing the data about your intimate hold on your fertility. so the data is holding through our cloud. you get a fertility result, but you also can 40 that connect to the further especially. it's very cool for your vagina. hold on. has a line been crossed here? should the human body be off limits to the internet? christina startup is certainly pushing these boundaries along with a steady stream of wearables, implants, and other devices joining the internet of things. companies are measuring our heart rate, our breathing, our sleeping. we sent us data to our phones into the cloud. once in the cloud, because the resource companies can decide how they want to use it in some of them. so it data brokers is a huge industry in the united states gathering all this information and then selling it. traditionally it's being used for marketing and advertising. but now it's being used more and more in the healthcare space and, and the health insurance space. they are ranking you and scoring you based on their algorithms. definition of whether or not your lifestyle leads to healthy habits or unhealthy habits. if a woman buys plus science clothing online, they predict that she is more overweight and more likely to be depressed, and therefore more likely to have high health care costs that could lead to people paying higher rates. there's a proliferation of devices that can track our health information, but the technology has moved beyond where is elias to actually put protections in place for consumers. and so the data can be used in a lot of ways that people would never even imagine that it would be used. this is eric. he has sleep apnea and uses a seep ap machine to sleep at night that i saw or really really loudly. and i keep my wife up. so in order for that not to happen, i have this really ugly machine that i put on my face and that blows air into it. just like a horrible thing, but you do it for love. but what eric didn't know was that his insurance company was recording his snorts secretly monitoring if he was using the device properly, then they call them up. oh, it says you haven't been compliant. and i said, well, what do you mean i haven't been compliant? what does that mean? and she said, well, it looks like you've only used the mask for like 3 hours on tuesday and 4 hours on wednesday. and that's when the like record stopped for me. por eric, the insurance company used his data against him. his private american healthcare denied him coverage for a new mask because the data showed he wasn't using the machine properly. let me get this straight. the reason you're not giving it to me is because i haven't been compliant. and the reason i haven't been compliant is you're not giving me the thing that you need to give me just for it. this is the reason why we started keg kick is the only patent pending device comes human device, which is tracking vaginal environment for fertility. so the device take the fertility data and they are also looking for how to use our data for the future of the research. because as you can imagine, we are collecting also the data that we don't know. now what they could be useful for is fertility doctors are going to heat the winner over 7000 people when did data to moles our user is in all day long and all dairy health data . so we will probably try to, to celebrate over model. so we can monetize their i would try to avoid selling for 3rd party 6 possible because, you know, like what do they, they will create a crazy insurance model for women for the race. i get all over the one that say more, but he'd own create a mandate for someone in a whole system just because you have their data. electric toothbrush, it else help me or brush your feet. so it know, you know, how likely you are to get like something wrong with your teeth. weights that affects your in friends, right? this is what i'm talking about. when you have a moment, which is, which will have for adult problems in k through. what do you want her to have like hire in friends? i don't like i personally i don't living in the future is weird and confusing. i like what christina is doing, but i do wish she had some legal guard really. we don't really know the worst case scenarios with the internet until after they happen and it always seems like something that's convenient for one person turns into a nightmare for someone else on . so my name is very on the jen, and i'm a survivor of domestic violence and specifically also tech abuse my abuser. he utilized our smart home against me and used it as a means of control and harassment. everything could be controlled by these apps. so he didn't even actually have to be in my presence. he could be out of the country, thousands of miles away with the tech abuse the way that he was utilized, the house against me was really truth sleep deprivation. and that sleep deprivation really added an extra layer to the mental anguish that was going through. i would be asleep, dead asleep at 1 o'clock in the morning for instance. and all of a sudden the audio system just blares this terrific violent music. you're shocked, awake. it's scary because it's pitch black, and i would turn on the light of course, and go to the i pad and try to turn off the system. and he would then either switch the light on and off. he would flip the tv on and off. he would turn the audio on and off that would occur not for a few minutes like 4 or 56 hours. this is used as a tool to harass you, to stop you within your home. it's hard. it's hard, even with all the trauma work that i've done it's, it's triggering because it takes you back to that night. it takes you, it takes me back to the moment or i felt hopeless. i felt hopeless. we're all giving up some of our autonomy and human power to these devices. always constantly, every day. reporting on situations of domestic violence with smart home technology made me realize how bad it could get things do feel pretty bad and it's not just me. while i was making this film, our relationship to the internet and it's makers reached an all time low, even internet executives were feeling guilty. ready ready ready ready we have created tools that are ripping apart the social fabric of how society works. i would be ashamed if i read and that was a big mistake. and it was my mistake. i feel tremendous guilt. and i'm sorry, i'm sorry, i'm really the engine at a side to the breakthrough is punished by the got smog. cities will populate with sensors all joined together by the internet of your mattress will monitor your nightmares. your fridge will be from ortiz, click by click that by sac data. computer says yes, computer says no. what would it mean? pink eye determining to send back in the future to told the human race. what is going on? we're living through this painful transition caused by the internet. so and if history is any guide, things are only gonna get weirder. jeremy rifkin has studied other times of massive change. it sees a pattern in these apocalyptic times of digital disruption. what we're really talking about here is a digital revolution across all of society, around the entire planning. so we need to understand the, the full implications of what this is all about. and the best way to do that a step back and ask, how do these great technological shifts in history occur at a moment of time, 3, define and technologies will emerge over a civilization in converge 1st new communication technologies to more efficiently manage i, economic and social life as 2nd new sources of energy, more efficiently, power, economic life, social life, and governors. and 3rd, new moser, mobility, logistics, marginally gold, where we cannot make social life and government. so in those ria points in history, we're new community christian revolutions converge with new energy games and new motor mobility, logistics. it transforms the way a civilization organizes its collective life. according to rifkin, the 1st industrial revolution was caused by a new source of energy. coal, which power and new communications media, the steam powered press, and a new logistics infrastructure in the railway. locomotive medical transport of data traffic. we get to 1st major industrial urban centers, and gum i business models moved to a market capitalism. second, industrial revolution, the united states and another convergence, their communication energy, mobility. they've changed everything. the telephone try to imagine for the 1st time in history, in the late 19th century, if people are picking up this little device and their voice is traveling virtually over thousands of miles if the speed of light. and then later radio and television knows communication technologies in the u. s. converge where the new source of energy, texas oil wells, came in. and then henry ford put out their chief combustion engine powered by that . we went to meet national markets, to build out our our way in the last 2 revolutions left us, a world powered by oil. it's lead us to the largest crisis we've ever faced. the 2nd got losing its fading away. i think we kind of smell it to feel it. we are now on the cause of a 3rd industrial revolution. where 30 years into the world wide web, 3 and 1000000000 people are connected digitally, communication, bad communication. now, conducting new braces just now converging with a renewable energy in millions of people are producing their own solar and wind and what they're not using, they're sending back on and increasingly digitalized powered way. rifkin's thesis is that communications and energy are already online. and when autonomy vehicles connect to smart roads and urban infrastructure by the internet, the 3rd revolution will be complete. communication, internet, digital and renewable energy, internet, digital mobility, internet, digital to manage our economy in society. they ride on top of our platform, and that's the internet affects. we don't need to wait for self driving cars to see how the way we move. things has been changed to the city, the internet bill. anytime you order anything electronic from amazon, you set off a chain of events that would have passed through here the washer on the market. 90 percent of the world electronics come through shipping. and that's why this former fishing village went from 30000 people to 12000000 in 30 year. it's central to chinese tech companies like 10 cent alibaba. and why way this is not a shopping on stairway. it's part of the world's most advanced electronic supply chain. each one of these boots is actually the front office of factory on the outskirts of the moment. i check my order the internet and connect me to this factory. and if you're making a new device for the internet of things, there's nowhere faster than sions in. in this market, you'll find every piece necessary to build whatever you can dream of. it's why christina joined the never ending parade of startups. the competitions and prototypes came. i came to show because i can quickly, quickly, quickly prototype, for example, when you do a prototype, united states think age is to get anything order the piece to be made to be assembled. but here it can do everything in one day. really knew like for example, this subway stations year ago from here they were not open yet. they're like going super fast. china is quickly moving to become the leading nation of the 3rd industrial revolution. and this is not well known in the west, but china leadership began to realize that c, o 2 was a big problem. the chairman of the national tricity for the state grid announced a massive multi $1000000.00 effort. now operation on the new 5 year plan to digitalized that entire utility grid, put it in place, generates all energy and share what they don't need back to the grid pro like that . they're putting out millions of electric vehicles right now. millions right now, over the next few years, they're already in production. it's hard not to be impressed by trying to speed, but the implications for connecting an entire society, go beyond smart energy grants and can be well prepared. chinese cities now collect data from millions of surveillance cameras from public transit and from sensors embedded he's street lights and field data about where people are and what they're doing. if you live in hong show, you are part of an experiment and modifying the behavior of citizens no social credit. so that will match associates, elijah cleo, amanda, hong torturing high b. b mail. you get him down for monday and she can talk highly. honda joe k some time with jan taylor, i'm actually trying to function, i should say that's his elephant lenders himself and then had to see it again to mean hadn't seen sell. shall we are supposed to be closing tags or what she should have to do frankly. johan, go down to go. sheen. tell me that the additional located can choose on the name. should the man the yellow deed hunting to i see it until when too bad. yeah. not the parenting to a local me go sure who i needed to see she on south lay that tell them no, she fell back also calling about then sure she needs a diesel. wenzel not handled. gave me telling you i could see if that was in there the funds had all bash t o lee alyssa had to see bad shape. he so how black mirror is this? you get points for being good. saving carboned giving to charity and exercise. you can trade in your karma points for free stuff, but the chinese government has put 13000000 citizens on a black list using system like martin is dishonest for j walking big late on alone or anything else deemed anti social. those users can be blocked from flying, registering for insurance, or buying a house, tying it all together is a payment system created by alibaba that has completely replaced cash. it's algorithm examines your purchases to determine trustworthiness. so it's kind of like if amazon with your bank it sounds that mess this home and the nozzler in canada, once again, it's joshua and this is real simple. assistant, oh, shoot me down. there you go. trembled. pay attention when you go to an evasive. so what's the easiest thing to be, the thing that has to be done and kind of change the way they can be, what was a good idea? let's since how do we ensure that governments don't purloin? is internet of things, 3rd industrial revolution and use it to hack the electrons of other governments that's already beginning to happen. how do we ensure that internet companies will either be facebook of google or amazon, or alabama? don't buy map allies is internet for commercial purposes, to modify the lifetime value of all of our personal experiences in our data and sell them to others, and then come modify us and actually do algorithm governance actually guide our lives that's already happening. google's parents, company is called alphabet, alphabet, owns a company called sidewalk lapse in 2017 alphabets. eric schmidt travels to canada and proposed sidewalk labs built in neighborhood and toronto from the internet. wouldn't it be nice to be protect technical things that we know and apply them to cities, all of these things that we could do if someone would just give us the city and put us in charge. it's no joke. a proposed a city that aches in the internet, but try google what it will look like. and all you'll find are images that look like 19 seventies. the science fiction covered with the only thing that's clear is that the internet will be in everything that google's sisser company is full on p r . mo. can increase the green space. the density is our carano is the need to have a complete community here in the waterfront in toronto. right. and so what we're looking at here is how new technologies can try to make cities better for people. you're looking right now at a street that is the gratian for 2 lines of truck. that's probably actually too much for history of this. when you can imagine maybe on the weekend, you want to use it like a plaza. so history turns way to block up the edges of the red or maybe in the morning it becomes a white highway. so you have like a direction and a crosswalk cross. the concept that's emerging is for an adaptive city that can respond intelligently to signals collected about whether traffic and people have the city be more kind of responsive in real time, i think is really exciting and some of the data can make it happen. so do you feel like you would offer information about where you were to have the city respond to you in a way? i don't wanna be having big brother behind my back all the time. i would really like fine, how much the one for you all the way that leads to any data that we would ever collect is only for the intent of actually making the place better for people and being very thoughtful from the beginning of how do we really preserve everyone's privacy throughout the entire process, collecting well, it'll vary based on any of the types of things that we're talking. the magician wants you to look at their hands, but what's going on over there? the hands right now is like, let's talk about buildings or gadgets, orse or autonomy vehicles or whatever out what's going on. you know, where no one's looking for the most part is that there's an, there's an enabling infrastructure being built for everything, for the physical spaces, for the home, for all of it. i mean it, it basically puts the, the entire world it blanket set in, in what, what, what enables the big tech companies, business models, cities are going to collect more and more data about us. and there's nothing necessarily wrong with that. data can make our cities better. in the 1800s, a scientist named john snow stopped an outbreak of cholera by putting a data point on a map every time someone died of the disease. combining data with the map showed that contaminated water pumps were the culprit. the fight over data in our cities isn't just about privacy. it's about privatization. in the same way that tech companies found a way to monetize our bathrooms, connecting our cities to the internet, opens up even more possibilities for business. imagine the next goober wants to pay more for the curbs, where the most people are standing or a new startup wants to direct you to the next free park bench in exchange for ads and your location data course is process has always been framed of how to make a test bed in the port lands. the question should be, wanted to get in the door, lou, people want to be having her chest in a neighbourhood where people will live. is at a concept that anybody here in the room remember signing off on. look at the state of the internet. there has been a massive centralization of both fits infrastructure and then the companies that are basically the backbone of the internet. so to take those things and replicate them in the physical world to me, it's like you are going the wrong way. oh, we privatizing municipal infrastructure services up helping assets. and no one has answered to me. it's all we working on it. we're working on. it seems to me before we talk about what they billed on the site, these are the questions that should have been answered in day. why not? you know, technology and computer science, nothing about those things is inherently capitalist, right? governments can empower themselves with those tools and they can have a public service that knows how to use these tools and build that capacity up in government. even with all the pushback sidewalk labs plan seemed inevitable. are there only 2 choices for the city of the future? a surveillance state or corporate experiment? barcelona is navigating middle path, becoming a leader in the design of smart cities, rejecting corporate control of data and making the state accountable to citizens foot. our data is like canada. public infrastructure like water, like electricity, like roads, like the air we breathe. and so these data needs to be a common good for our citizens. we want to move away from civilians, capitalism and enter it in a digital economy where days the common good. and we can as collect his actions where people are aware i will happens when their data and how they can maximize the benefit of the digital society. in barcelona data serves the people they come to take the smart citizen initiative. it's a simple sensor that's 3 d printed locally and distributed freely. sensors were installed around the city to collect data about c, o 2 emissions, pollution and noise. citizens then pressured city council to enforce quiet zones. what to do is let the man with your number he will be that he had pulled out of the money hotly. smart citizen is a project of fab lab, barcelona writers. the machines in the people here turn information into things, bits into ada. once we bagwell but instead of just writing a white paper about how we think that this marcy to could be, we said ok, let's make a project out of it. let's make an experiment. let's build something where a problem we know how to build things. so we can think about idea, but also build them and test them will make tools for data collection will mates for data sharing. i will see how we get people into that. if you can make one was anything in a sub lab, then you can make the scenes that make almost anything enough of that, right? so you can make machines that big machines, that big machines can, instead of keeping it, you know, a smartphone from china. you can actually made them locally in every city that you can design something in barcelona and it made me made anywhere in the world. so you don't have to move materials. do more information in 2014 parcel on a made an audacious pledge. everything the city needed would be produced locally within 40 years, clothes, cars, phones every i want to buy sad to be the leading, the city and the new industrial revolution. what we're doing in the foxy, the project, which is, you know, have these large mission on making cities to produce, look at what they consume by 2054. is trying to align these problems as a bag, one kind of resource in order to get started. the transition to local production and cds, but at the same time operate in his assa distributed and open network well wide. so we'd right now have 28 cities that have pledged to the challenge that we start with launched in barcelona. 2014. the machine is very clear and its try to make sure that we can leave this planet without compromising our future. anyone can join the fab lab network online. their belief is that by producing locally, they'll produce the waste and carbon cost of shipping materials around the world. it's an urgent mission. anastasia joined to invent new materials that can be created sustainably. so, there's different materials. and if you want to do one of them, you just follow the recipe. and these are the ones with the food ways. so these ones are with coffee grains. the and these one was orange. pete can is replaced plastic. yet, in 20 years, what do you want this to change? everybody talks about fast fashion. so why don't we make super fast flash and it's even faster, you know? like, because people, they want to be consumer. so you say ok then if you want to consume, maybe there is a vending machine that is selling. you buy a plastic t shirt. you can always buy a plastic t shirts like cinderella. and then you can just throw it, but not feel so guilty about it, then at least make it so that this something that is not harming the planet. with to realize the fab city vision for cities to be self sufficient for 40 years. we're going to need to figure out how to make food and have a new relationship with nature. the green fab lab was set up in barcelona as central park to get started going from how to make almost anything to how to grow most any self sufficiency and materials in production. in food production, energy, and water. it's about understanding what we can consume and what we produce for the problem, so wonderful places to create and to have the power of production in your hands. so when i came here i saw the problem, barcelona level. this is the place for me because it allows me to, to engage in my own projects and to do so in quite an advanced level. building on smart citizen, jonathan and friends created an open source beehives from the buzzing sounds inside the hive software translates this data. so beekeepers and monitor the health of the b. so you can download all of the files and you can put that on to a c and c machine of make one yourself a little bit like an ikea kids. and you can about to yourself know screws smugglers just bang it together. visa, losing their habitat ends. they managed, highly managed and so it's kind of interesting to just let them do what they would want to do. observe them not try and maximize their production, but work with them in a little bit more in a slow away. when i set out to discover how the internet was evolving, i don't think i imagined i'd be squatting in the dirt looking at a beehive. it's crazy, but it's probably less crazy than the internet of things would seem to anyone alive 30 years ago. we are at the beginning of something. so we look at this beautiful place in the mountains middle of barcelona. they would say that's too small to power an entire city. is this a hint of what it looks like in the future and how this part of the transformations that we, i believe we are part of it not to envision the next 50 years or the next 40 years . in the case of our city, it's actually what happens in the next 2 years, like how, how do we start? how does that look like? we have been only using oil and they can be infinite, but right? so yes, we can envision of future. we don't always, the problem is to start to building it now. and i think that doesn't mean challenge . so we need to be that transition, not enough of building like visions of a future and frameworks and pledges and race. and i think that that's enough. he's just an excuse to have a timeline, but now it's about being the and sometimes i listen to my cell phone and it's a good, so knife knicker. what are you saying? but just like the same time as you, but what, what other tenants you might have mentioned helping them in the early days of the internet? there were no business model, no users to capture no data to mind. the purpose of the web was written right across its 1st logo. just the words. let's share what we know me, what i saw in marshall. lona was the 1st step towards people using that invitation to share knowledge, to solve the biggest problems before us. un panel on climate change says we now have 11 years to transfer the entire were in a disaster. mold, severe on it. anyone to believe this is the age of progress as history. this is the age of resilience. can we do this in a few years? we laid out the entire 1st industrial revolution in 30 years. it can be done in 20th, but we now have to wake up and ask with this digital revolution will help if christina stays true to her mission, she has the power to change millions of women's lives for the better. and her promised to do right by their data could actually be more profitable than selling them out. entering mass production and china, she gave something to keep her honest, that she didn't half before. users like egg. ha, i'm going to have the kick opera here. this is my graph. i think christie will succeed because the world is comprised of 51 percent of women and they're so little investment in our house chronologist oper, right? i don't have time to wait or out. erica gets pregnant. gotten those when i'm already 39. i haven't got time to waste. christina launched a crowd funding campaign that sold out in less than 2 days. she had enough orders to bypass amazon and sell directly to the women who needed her product. when, who has made their reservations on our weight, unless it's around 4000 people right now. wait in few weeks. so it's quite crazy yet, al, to not if you have on the market right now, it looks like this is crazy. good luck. technology is neither good nor bad, nor neutral, especially the internet. we can use it to make things in new ways, or we can make things that use us on the upside. piggly for potentially for you man. because we can now envision the whole human race connecting with each other virtually and physically, everywhere at every moment across the earth. we're bringing the human family, our generation, this moment will be looked back on as an enormous turning point for human. like now that we're all connected. now the real story starts saying we are the child of the internet. you know what i mean? they are the internet hasn't appeared in there, but we just took it somewhere else. ah, just push wishing for the internet of my youth is kind of bad parenting. because that internet isn't going to do these guys any good. it's like complaining about how cool the telegraph western all this worry about the internet really is old school. because for them, it's just life. where did you get those images on? good. you know what i would say to the person to enter the world? i would say maybe. right. but i hope you're not right. i hope so to get. maybe my internet is getting old and boring. what your internet can be, anything? ah, everything, everything, everything, everything, everything, everything, everything, everything, everything, everything, everything, everything is. ah, ah, they fled because they reject cutie. oh and his war russians in georgia. ah, more than $40000.00 russia is found refuge in neighboring georgia since the war began . they are trying to build a new life here, even though they are not to welcome you free a close up in 30 minutes on dw. welcome to the city of this future flow instead of a permanent traffic to him would instead of concrete the mobility instead of air pollution? new concept for the megan cities, tomorrow made in germany. in the 90 minutes on d w. oh, hello guys. this is the 77 percent. the platform for africa is you to defeat issues and share ideas. you know, on these channels, we are not afraid to talk to any kids. young people clearly have the solution. good future belongs to the 77 percent. every weekend on d w ah ah, this is dw news life from berlin had declared a state of emergency protest as stone, the office of the prime minister and acting president quarter by yo rodge apache, explained the country. his resignation later is said to be coming to date as the war in ukraine continues. hopes for a breakthrough on easing global food supplies. ukraine says it's negotiate is a close.