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02:08şarkı konusundan bir ciddiyiz çok önemli.
02:14Çünkü bu ciddiyiz için bu ciddiyiz çok yaklaşık bir yaşayla.
02:17Bu ciddiyiz için bu ciddiyiz için çok yaklaşık bir ciddiyiz.
02:23İçinde, bir çok kilometre sonra, Hocala Genocide'i haberdi.
02:30Bu ciddiyiz için de değil, bu ciddiyiz için çok yaklaşık bir yoruluşu.
02:35ve küçük bir çoğunluşturmuzlu konusunda
02:47And our third Shusha Global Forum, its yet another uniqueness, is in a dialogue and interaction with Mr. President.
02:55Ladies and gentlemen, our third Shusha Media Forum also takes place while Azerbaycan people are celebrating 150th anniversary of Azerbaycan's media.
03:07In 1875, first Azerbaycan's newspaper, Akinti, in translation it means cultivator, emerged.
03:17And Azerbaycan scholar Hasan Beyzardabi has created the first Azerbaycan's newspaper in Azerbaycan language.
03:26And its name was in a cultivator.
03:29Some thought that under the censorship of that time, it was in a Russian Empire's time,
03:34it will write about agriculture, about economic and social issues.
03:40Yes, indeed, it wrote about economic, social, agricultural issues.
03:44But it was more than just a cultivator.
03:47It was a cultivator of the political thinking, enlightenment in an Azerbaycan society and in a wider region at large.
03:55I time by time compare it with Nelson Mandela's life to the Economist newspaper.
04:01But when Nelson Mandela was reading about the Economist, people thought that he is reading about the Economist, economic affairs.
04:09But he was reading more than that during the time of apartheid.
04:14Therefore, Akinti was not only about the agriculture, Akinti was about the political thought.
04:21And as a result of the Akinti, new newspapers, magazines and intellectuals emerged in Azerbaijan's social, political life.
04:29And it also gave to the emergence of the many more journals, magazines and Azerbaijan's political life, end of the 19th century and early 20th century.
04:40And in 1918, when Azerbaijan got its independence and established the first democratic republic in the entire Muslim world,
04:47and new magazines and newspapers of Azerbaijan has emerged.
04:51But they have short-lived it.
04:53And also yet another particular feature in the history of Azerbaijan's media, I would like to highlight, is satire and sarcasm.
05:00That particular type of journalism emerged in the early 20th century.
05:06Mullah Nasreddin's journal was published in Baku, was spread to the entire Muslim world and was readable in every and each part of the world.
05:14This is a satire.
05:15And it was a courageous journal to challenge dogmatic principles, bigotry of that time, including ignorance, non-education and many other challenging spheres.
05:26During the Soviet time, that was in yet another stage of Azerbaijan's journalism and media.
05:32In that realities, it preserved the uniqueness of Azerbaijan's language and enriched it.
05:39And with that, philosophy enters a new stage of Azerbaijan's media with the independence of Azerbaijan.
05:45And Azerbaijan's media's development in the independence of Azerbaijan, it was an uphill struggle,
05:51because we have been surrounded with a massive wave of the disinformation and manipulative acts,
05:56including the psychological warfare against an Azerbaijan, against an Azerbaijan society.
06:01It is in a culmination, it was in a 44 days of war, that we have seen massive misinformation and disinformation campaigns against Azerbaijan.
06:10But Azerbaijan journalists and Azerbaijan's media were on the fight, not only providing facts and figures,
06:18but trying also to destroy the system of the lies against Azerbaijan and against an Azerbaijan people.
06:25But I'm sure that, I'm glad to say that we have succeeded with a cooperation and interaction.
06:31Now there are discussions about artificial intelligence, which is a challenge and opportunity.
06:37I don't like the particular thoughts that are encouraging to fight against a technology.
06:43Fighting against a technology and innovation and development is like fighting against a windmill.
06:49I also time by time compare it with the ones who were fighting against Giordano-Bruno's sinking,
06:57or Kaepernickson's sinking.
07:00I also, let's also don't be in a challenge that upcoming generations will also condemn us,
07:07like the ones who made the decision about the auto dafe for Giordano-Bruno or some other singers.
07:14But in the meantime, let's also think creatively that future generations will not also condemn us,
07:20creating something that we cannot control, and will create a lot of uncertainties for our world of the uncertainties.
07:28For artificial intelligence is changing a lot of things.
07:32Before, seeing was believing that our religious souls are also providing.
07:37But seeing is not any longer believing.
07:40Truth is distorted.
07:42Truth is a rare commodity that we are fighting to prove.
07:45And here we are talking to the professional journalists.
07:49Professional journalists get used to facts, figures, and arguments.
07:54Facts, figures, arguments are any longer not a particular advantage or illustration or description or decoration of the media articles.
08:07People search for their beliefs, sentiments, not any longer facts and figures.
08:14That makes the life of the journalist.
08:16But let's also be frank.
08:18When we are talking about the disinformation, misinformation, we always, professional journalists and media outlets,
08:24we blame others, not ourselves.
08:26But professional media outlets and journalists are also engaged in a professional disinformation access role.
08:34It's always good to speak on behalf of your country, on the experience of your country.
08:38In my country, we have been subject to the disinformation campaign in a very massive way.
08:43Some of them are still active.
08:45I can name even leading Western or European media outlets are conducting in a professional manner such as disinformation against my country.
08:54Ladies and gentlemen, as a humanity, we lost one challenge, one battle.
08:59When we lost regulating of the social media.
09:03Social media now is operating beyond our regulation.
09:08When somebody talks about such a regulation, immediately freedom of speech or censorship, such counterarguments are emerging.
09:16But while talking about the disinformation, not everybody is happy about the current situation.
09:22It's in the chaos that we have created and we should live with that.
09:27Now artificial intelligence is emerging.
09:29Nobody is seriously taking this matter about regulating artificial intelligence.
09:35We don't see real international cooperation and collaboration on artificial intelligence.
09:40Maybe it's in a time for the international institutions to start when it's too late about certain elements of the regulation,
09:48including the ethical aspect of artificial intelligence.
09:51Ladies and gentlemen, certain our media activities are called already media legacy.
09:58Print media, radios, TVs are called media legacy.
10:04Technology is affecting everything.
10:07Now we are talking about digitalized and tech-savvy the media.
10:11That also applies us to change our thinking and our outreach to our auditorium.
10:18And as a professional journalist, we get used only one way of the street of the battle.
10:24In a sense, let's also accept the fact that it was a little bit easier part of the job.
10:28You are taking the information and providing to the auditorium.
10:32It's not any longer the case.
10:34Journalism is changing.
10:36It's an interaction.
10:37It's in a two-way street.
10:38And are we ready to such a challenge?
10:40And we are also fighting against the machines.
10:44And I like Yuval Harari's thinking.
10:46Sometimes you may agree or disagree.
10:48But one of his recent Nexus book, and he says,
10:51For the first time, humanity has managed to create yet another thinking platform.
10:57It's not any longer agent.
10:59It's thinking like us.
11:01It's learning far better, far speedier ways than we are.
11:05Are we ready to such a challenge?
11:07It's always easy to pose a question.
11:10But other questions, I also don't have an answer.
11:13But at least we have an experience of my country.
11:15First, international cooperation, international collaboration.
11:19It's in a two-way street.
11:21Therefore, we also have expectations from our distinguished auditorium, from yourselves,
11:25from the experience of your countries, from the experience of the professional journalists.
11:29We should to sing and to work.
11:59Right across the world.
12:00Yes.
12:01And obviously, we've got it.
12:02And it is titled, Innovative Approaches, Media Literacy in the Digital Age.
12:11And it really is my pleasure to introduce these four remarkable panelists.
12:27So my ideal, my ideal is this.
12:31It causes a fear of humanity.
12:35Anyone, regardless of where they come from, can understand the limited time that they have.
12:42In the sense that we don't feel any urge after viewing.
12:47That's the fear of humanity.
12:48I always move into this room.
12:49I hope you goalie these days.
12:50I always miss.
12:51No, my ideal is to have an advantage.
12:52No, my ideal is to do that.
12:53It is so great to work.
12:54I hope for some of you, my failed, my ideal is to be.
12:56I have to try out my right.
12:57I want to go out my right now.
12:58Well, I hope I love you.
12:59I will be a good guy.
13:00I will be a happy guy.
13:01I am not learning.
13:02Water in the middle.
13:03But there isяти, sir.
13:04Can you ever go out my right hand?
13:05Let's go out my right.
13:07Here at the bottom line.
13:09Then let's see.
13:10I am going out my right, my leg over him.

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