Do humans even deserve advance Technology?

Every once in a while, every nation re-model their economies and shift their growth direction. India has, beyond a shadow of a doubt, made the biggest innovative forward leap of any country in living memory. India is presently the most alluring significant venture opportunity on the planet. 

Bangalore is viewed as the technical capital of India. IT, Biotechnology, Aerospace, Nuclear science, manufacturing technology, automobile engineering, chemical engineering, ship building, space science, electronics, computer science and other medical science related research and development are happening for an enormous scope in the nation. The southern region of India is liable for most of innovation and headways the nation has made. Its brilliant triangle of IT and innovation (Hyderabad, Bangalore and Chennai) frames the backbone of Indian manufacturing, R&D, science and innovation. In 2017, India turned into a partner individual from European Organization for Nuclear Research.


Here I am listing significant advancements in technology that occurred in India:

The Aadhaar Act

Banking Adoption

Building Out a Mobile Infrastructure

UPI – A New Transaction System

Artificial Intelligence (AI)

5G networks

Biometrics

Certainly, today there are incredible innovations occurring with regards to technology. It is commendable. However, have you ever considered how is this innovation influencing people or we can say mankind? I concur that innovation is making work easier and yet, we can't deny that it is intensifying humankind as well. 

On the off chance that there are acceptable innovations occurring, at that point a few people are leaving their mankind with the use of innovation. The number of online threats, online frauds, web-based media mishandling that is increasing step by step itself is a case of how antagonistically it is influencing humans.

Internet-empowered crimes and scams give no indications of easing up, as per information delivered by the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) in its 2019 Internet Crime Report. The last calendar year saw both the most elevated number of grumblings and the most noteworthy dollar losses reported since the center was set up in May 2000. IC3 got 467,361 grievances in 2019— an average of almost 1,300 daily—and recorded more than $3.5 billion in losses to individual and business casualties. The most often reported complaints were phishing and phishing ploys, non-payment/non-delivery scams, and extortion. The most monetarily expensive grumblings included business email bargain, sentiment or confidence fraud, and spoofing, or mimicking the account of a person or vendor known to the victim to gather personal or money related information.


Examples of online frauds are as follows:

  • Social Media Fraud- Individuals will in general disclose more close to home data about themselves (for example birthday, email, address, hometown and relationship status) in their social media profiles. This by and by recognizable data could be utilized by fraudsters to take clients' characters, and posting this data on social media makes it significantly simpler for fraudsters to take control of it.
  • Credit Card Fraud- Credit Card extortion is a comprehensive term for misrepresentation committed utilizing a payment card, for example, a Visa or debit card. The reason might be to get merchandise or benefits, or to make payment to another bank account which is constrained by a criminal. The Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) is the information security standard made to assist organizations with preparing card installments safely and diminish card misrepresentation.
  • Forex Fraud- Foreign exchange misrepresentation is any exchanging plan used to swindle dealers by persuading them that they can hope to gain a high benefit by exchanging in the foreign trade market. Currency trading turned into a typical type of extortion in mid 2008. Cheats may incorporate stirring of client accounts for the reason of generating commissions, selling programming that should direct the client to huge benefits, bogus publicizing, and outright extortion.
  • Email Fraud- Email misrepresentation (or email scam) is purposeful misdirection for either personal benefit or to harm another person by methods for email. Nearly when email turned out to be generally utilized, it started to be utilized as a way to swindle individuals. Email extortion can appear as a "con game", or trick. Email misrepresentation, likewise with other 'bunco plans,' for the most part targets innocent people who put their trust in plans to get rich rapidly. These include 'unrealistic' investments or offers to sell well known things at 'outlandishly low' costs. Numerous individuals have lost their life reserve funds because of email extortion.
  • Sick Baby Hoax- A sick baby hoax is a certainty stunt where an individual claims, frequently on a site, that they have an ill child and are battling to pay for its clinical expenses. A few forms of the deception request that individuals make a money related contribution, while others urge individuals to share the story. Online media, for example, Facebook, encourage the accompanying type of this trick.


In any case, my question is, is there any approach to stop the abuse of technology? Or on the other hand How to stop the person who is abusing the technology? Indeed, there are numerous approaches to stop this here: 

1. Quit sending fake content. 

2. Attempt to discover the reliability of the content that you receive. 

3. In the event that you discover something inappropriate, request the one to stop spreading it to other people. 

4. If that you run over the person who is been harassed, at that point stand for them regardless of whether you don't have any relation with them. 

5. Attempt to spread positive messages.

6. Be aware and make people aware. 

 However, there are a lot more ways.



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