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"This generation being born now... is the last free generation. You are born and either immediately or within say a year you are known globally. Your identity in one form or another - coming as a result of your idiotic parents plastering your name and photos all over Facebook or as a result of insurance applications or passport applications - is known to all major world powers."

"A small child now in some sense has to negotiate its relationship with all the major world powers... It puts us in a very different position. Very few technically capable people are able to live apart, to choose to live apart, to choose to go their own way," he added. "It smells a bit like totalitarianism - in some way."

"Look at what Google and Baidu and Tencent and Amazon and Facebook are doing. They are basically open-cut harvesting the knowledge of humankind as we express it, when we communicate with each other... This classical model, which people in academia call 'surveillance capitalism'... has changed now.



"It's a really very important and severe economic change. Which is to take the surveillance capitalism model and transform it instead into a model that does not yet have a name, an 'AI model'. Which is to use this vast reservoir to train Artificial Intelligences of different kinds. This would replace not only intermediary sectors - most things you do on the internet is in a sense more efficient intermediation - but to take over the transport sector, or create whole new sectors."

"There is no border [online]. It's 220 milliseconds from New York to Nairobi. Why would there ever be peace in such a scenario?" he said.



"[Entities online] are creating their own borders using cryptography. But the size of the attack surface for any decent-sized organization, the number of people, different types of software and hardware it has to pull inside itself means that it is very hard to establish.



"I don't think it's really possible to come up with borders that are predictable enough and stable enough to eliminate conflict. Therefore, there will be more conflict."

Before his links to the world was cut by his Ecuadorian hosts,The interview was provided to RT by organizers of the World Ethical Data Forum in Barcelona. Assange, who is currently stranded in the Ecuadorean embassy in London with no outside communication except with his legal team, has a pretty grim outlook on where humanity is going.The capacity to collect and process information about people has been growing exponentially and will continue to grow fast, he stated. With advancements in applying Artificial Intelligence (AI) to big data, the next logical step is coming.