Thank you very much. I placed him on a lot of vitamins. I think that’s good for your immunity in your body system. [inaudible 21:48] is our next questionnaire. I’m a certified public accountant. Thank you very much, Minister Tang. You argue that in order to live in a digital ...
People in Taiwan think that they can trust the government and I wonder how people have nurtured such a trust based relationship. However, based on the specific examples that you cited, they are able to learn that government can be trusted based on such specific cases. May I understand in ...
Though, that in the high assistance, the question, he said the diplomacy, defense, and public security, maybe they are not very good for transparency purposes. They should be sometimes excluded for those limitations.
Thank you very much. Yes, in the responses you’ve given just now, that people and contact tracing system within that framework. People trust the system with their own information and information will not be conveyed any further beyond a necessary boundary. It is not used for police or other purposes ...
In some cases, there may be occasions where government will conduct surveillance of people in order to protect them. How does Taiwan handle the issue of this limitation to transparency? How do you obtain the consent of people with regards to this limitation and secure trust of the people towards ...
I’m a certified public accountant. I would like to ask about radical transparency that is at the foundation of Taiwan’s initiatives. Government functions include diplomacy, defense and policy that cannot be made public.
What do you do to make it join a real function, the system in Taiwan? If you can give us any advice for Japan I’ll be grateful. Thank you very much.
In Japan the voter turnout is declining, and the young people are disengaged from politics. I wonder where the system like Taiwan’s drawing would work well in Japan, or introduction of such a system here in Taiwan would help raise public awareness for the need for participation in democracy.
If you want to have people really reflected more directly in politics, utilizing digital technology, we support that active participation of each citizen is a prerequisite. I wonder if you agree on that point.
Thank you. I’m working at the manufacturer mainly doing business in healthcare sector. My name is Shu Do. Thank you for your valuable time. Without further ado, let me ask you a question.
Thank you for your answers.
The third is, is there additional follow-up questions that, in addition to join.g0v.tw, are there other places for us to direct our questions or our interviews to?
The second is, how does it make it cool for young people to work for the government and for public policy in general?
Three questions. The first is about digital competence and how it connects to civic education?
Would you like to repeat the last part about the Join platform?
All this relies on public participation. Are there any statistics of who is more likely to participate for the public good by sharing voluntarily their energy and time into collective policymaking and fact-finding?
How do you deal with disinformation and fake news, while preserving press freedom?
When you say ledger, do you mean blockchain?
How did the trust come about? Please explain without using the old, which is very much not really a useful trope, of Confucianism.
People voluntarily forming data collaboratives and governing it alongside the government, allowing government to use people’s data in a creative way. This obviously requires a deep trust from the citizenship to the capability of the government, and also to the unlikelihood for the government to use it for invasive or ...
What is your data strategy, and how it applies around contact-tracing in the COVID?
How to empower citizens so that they have the skill to be active democratic participants? How to digitally transform the government so that people can participate beyond elections?
When you go to the cinema to mix candy, they’re always there. It’s a really essential candy.
I love them and I like a lot of things, too. It’s in every store.
I don’t know if you like them or not.
Because it’s something the Danish really like. It’s a licorice. They call it salty fish.
We also have something for you from Denmark.
Can we take the picture?
Would you like it to not be like this?
Yeah, but it’s a dog.
It’s cute, fun and all, but aren’t you afraid that people won’t take it serious?
The dog on the Minister’s Facebook page.
In Denmark, you would never see things like this.
Can I just ask you one question, the last?
That’s very cool.
The next generation of Japanese will be…
When you are saying that you are going to move to become more English speaking, are you looking at places like Singapore, with a lot of international coming in?
Do you know what your approval ratings are?
No, no.
It could be dangerous. I have no idea.
When you’re in a country where you’re, literally understand nothing and something is happening, I think Korea has something similar with broadcasting messages. I went there and every time I got the message completely in Korean, I freaked out because my phone said [sound effects] and you looked at it ...
Do you do both in Mandarin and in English or only in Mandarin?
Would we also get it even though we are Danish from…
Do you have numbers on how many inhabitants in Taiwan who’s got the message?
There’s nobody who’s saying like, “No, I’m not that,” because some people are wearing the mask and some are not?
When they get this clear communication, how the people react to the communication? Do you they like, “We’re gonna follow this. That’s how we do it here.”?
There seems to be like a very clear communication about the virus here. I’m just curious. Is it about 30 or something that got the virus here?
But it’s the Taiwan…
Yes, something like that.
When we arrived here, went and opened our Facebook apps on our telephones, we saw that you have these small things saying something about the virus. Do you have anything to do with that, or is it…?