Are Algorithms in Charge?

19

October

2017

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Are Algorithms in Charge?

On 19 October, thirty years ago, the stock markets experienced a crash that is still known as the worst trading day ever. The EOE-index, the predecessor of the AEX-index, went down with 12%. That was nothing compared to Wall Street. The Dow Jones lost that day 22,6%.

Stock markets at the moment can’t be compared with the stock markets in 1987. Thirty years ago, there were brokers on the trading floor who wrote down the orders of buyers and sellers. Nowadays, all the trading goes through the Euronext-data center near London. With the knowledge of today, the crash in 1987 looks a lot like a “ flash crash in slow motion”: a very rapid, deep, and volatile fall and recovery in security prices occurring within an extremely short period. Because the trading time was slower in 1987, the ‘flash crash’ was over a period of two days. On may 6th, in 2010, a $4.1 billion trade on the New York Stock Exchange resulted in a loss to the Dow Jones of over 1000 points and then rise to approximately previous value, all over about fifteen minutes.

‘A snowball effect’ set off both flash crashes, in 1987 and 2010. The big differences between the flash crashes are the traders and automated trading systems. When there is bad news on the Internet, algorithms directly sell stocks that are related to the bad news. Eventually, if the bad news turns out to be fake news, algorithms will buy stocks again. With these algorithms it is possible to have a ‘flash crash’ within only a few minutes instead of two days. The flash crash of Ethereum, last year, was only in a period of five minutes. Do you think ‘flash crashes’ will be faster in the future? Could it maybe happen within one minute or seconds?

Erik Van Rijn, Joost Bobber (2017) https://fd.nl/beurs/1223235/nu-steken-handelaren-elkaar-niet-aan-maar-algoritmes

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How far would you go with smart home devices?

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October

2017

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Imagine that you are lying on the sofa on Sunday afternoon after a rough Saturday night. You don’t want to talk to anyone or leave the sofa, but you need something to eat. Ten years ago this would be a mission impossible. However, times have changed and they change very quickly. Nowadays, it is possible to order food online. When the delivery guy arrives, you will open the door through an application on your smartphone and tell him to walk to the living room. If you don’t believe that the delivery guy has left the building, it is possible to watch the webcam at the front door from your mobile device. All these actions are possible, without even moving from the sofa once… But these actions can also be done by someone else if they have access to your smartphone.

Smart homes filled with connected products are loaded with possibilities to make our lives easier, more convenient and more comfortable. BI Intelligence, Business Insider’s premium research service, expect the number of smart home devices shipped will grow from 83 million in 2015 to 193 million in 2020. So we can conclude that these smart home devices will increase popularity in the near future. This includes all smart appliances, smart home safety and security systems and smart home energy equipment. (Business Insider, 2016)
These devices can help reduce costs and conserve energy, but can be more expensive and vulnerable for hackers.

This is not only the case for residential real estate, but also for commercial real estate. New developed buildings are full with smart devices, to conserve energy and reduce costs. These devices are all part of the ‘new working space’. The interconnectedness of real estate owners’ systems and tenant IT systems form a potential cyber risk for both parties. These commercial real estate firms recognize that not just their own office infrastructure but also the buildings they develop are effectively now IT assets instead of only brick and mortar. (Donkers et al.,2017)

Would you spend money to make you building/house smarter, but also a lot more vulnerable for cyber-attacks? Or would you be more careful with these smart devices?

Meola A., Internet of things smart home automation, http://www.businessinsider.com/ (19/12/16)
Donkers et al. , 2017, ‘ Rising cyber risk in real estate through the rise of smart buildings.’ Deloitte.

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