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Territory and creating virtual analogues of them.

Posted: Sat Feb 22, 2025 6:23 am
by Shishirgano9
Culture – the ability of Tuvaluans to interact with each other in ways that preserve their common language, norms and customs, wherever they are. sovereignty – if there were to be a loss of the land surface over which the Tuvalu government has sovereignty (a tragedy beyond imagination, but one they have begun to imagine) then could they have sovereignty over the virtual surface instead? Can this be achieved? If Tuvalu's proposal is, in fact, a literal and not just symbolic proposal of the dangers of climate change, what might that look like? Technologically, it is already relatively easy to create beautiful, immersive, and richly rendered recreations of Tuvalu's territory.


Moreover, thousands of different online communities guatemala cell phone number list and 3D worlds (such as Second Life ) demonstrate that it is possible to have fully virtual interactive spaces that can retain their own culture. The idea of ​​combining these technological capabilities with governance features for a ' digital twin ' of Tuvalu is feasible. There have been previous experiences of governments using services based on their


For example, Estonia's e-residency is an online-only form of residency that non-Estonians can obtain to access services such as company registration. Another example. countries are creating virtual embassies on the online platform Second Life . Yet bringing together and digitizing the elements that define an entire nation poses significant technological and social challenges . Tuvalu has only about 12,000 citizens, but getting so many people to interact in real time in an immersive virtual world is a technical challenge.