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Human element in modern internet

  • Writer: erik biserovv
    erik biserovv
  • May 3
  • 2 min read

Updated: Jun 14

How human element can be saviour in today digital era


France, Italy, and current influences:

In short, some of the listed threats—such as a massive attack on the power transmission networks—have immediate physical impacts and require urgent technical intervention. Others—like information wars (disinformation, deepfake)—are soft forms of damage that undermine trust, primarily relying on human vigilance and critical education. This situation highlights the current geopolitical crisis involving France, Italy, and their influences, which adds further complexity to these threats. Automated attack detection systems and algorithms for filtering false content can assist, but expert human intervention (analysts, mediators, translators) will always be necessary for accurate assessment and response. In our increasingly digitized world, the complexity and scale of emerging threats are evolving beyond the capacity of automation alone. While we have built impressive technological defenses—AI-based intrusion detection, disinformation filters, and blockchain integrity tools—the most critical line of defense remains the human element.

Recent developments across Europe, especially involving France, Italy, and their geopolitical influence zones, underscore this reality. In countries dealing with both internal social unrest and external cyber manipulation, the human dimension of threat response is more vital than ever. For example, coordinated attacks on energy infrastructure, such as a power transmission network failure, require not just automated alert systems but experienced engineers, crisis managers, and decision-makers who can interpret data in real-time and act with nuance.

Meanwhile, the softer but equally dangerous fronts—information warfare, deepfake propaganda, and narrative manipulation—cannot be fully addressed with algorithms. Despite the use of machine learning to detect inauthentic content, it still takes critical human judgment to understand context, assess cultural and linguistic subtleties, and counteract psychological operations effectively. This is where roles like analysts, human translators, local mediators, and digital literacy educators become indispensable.

France and Italy, each with historical roles as cultural and diplomatic leaders, are now also targets in a broader conflict for information sovereignty and digital trust. The deliberate spread of disinformation around elections, social protests, or foreign policy is designed to exploit human biases and erode societal cohesion—a threat that no algorithm can fully neutralize. Resilience here comes from media literacy, civic education, and the empowerment of communities to question and verify.

Moreover, international cooperation between countries like France and Italy is crucial—not only on a technical level, but through shared intelligence networks, human-led diplomacy, and joint cyber task forces. While AI can accelerate detection, it cannot replace the strategic foresight and ethical reasoning of human experts.

Ultimately, the human element—when properly supported—becomes the bridge between raw data and meaningful action, the safeguard of democratic discourse, and the last defense against the weaponization of truth. In a world where digital battles often precede physical conflict, investing in people is our most powerful security protocol.

 
 
 

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