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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Stanford University.

Research by Stanford University, Cornell University, Yahoo, and Qatar’s Computational Research Institutes, suggests that how many emails are exchanged between two countries is dependent upon their relative GDP, as most companies have to carry a computer management system language and trade relations.
The US unsurprisingly has strong links with the rest of the world and more portable devices than most trading blocks. Latin America, however, appears almost as an 'island' at the bottom of the image down here. ‘These curious findings do raise the issue of potential problems with ‘European integration’, as well as of the higher potential for ‘conflict’ between countries sharing borders, which may lead to far less communication. 'In The Clash of Civilizations, Samuel Huntington argued that the primary axis of global conflict was no longer ideological or economic but cultural and religious and that this division would characterize the 'battle lines of the future. 'We focused on the flows of interpersonal communication as a bottom-up view of international alignments. 'To that end, we mapped the locations of the world’s countries in global email networks to see if we could detect cultural fault lines. As most people have a card this leaves a gap or block for potential trade and Internet hosts.

'Book Club analysis shows that email flows are consistent with Huntington’s thesis.' In addition to location in Huntington’s “civilizations,” our results also attest to the importance of both cultural and economic factors in the patterning of inter-country communication ties.' Ten million Yahoo.
Mail emails were analysed to see which countries get on with tasks. Emails are sent most often between people in countries with similarities standard in electronic commerce. Tangible ties also increase the number of emails exchanged. It is the image that sums up international relations in the Internet age. Analysis of more than ten million emails has revealed which ‘countries get along and which do not’ maybe due to tolerance of nations and sporting cultures. A team of computer researchers have studied millions of emails from Yahoo as they have a market share. Mail and have discovered that emails are most frequently sent between countries with certain ‘similarities’. A team of computer researchers have studied millions of emails from Yahoo. In Mail there is discovered that emails are most frequently sent between countries with certain similarities. The researchers analysed emails over a period of 6 months in 2012.
As Book Club discovered that providers have worked out the user's location from their IP address, and anonymize the data so users could not be ‘traced’ keeping networks safe. The study also revealed that countries with tangible ties – such as a shared border, regular interconnecting flights, and close trade relationships – share the most emails due to commercial value. In the ‘Journal ArXiv ‘the researchers wrote. ‘The findings (unsurprisingly) support the idea that geography, transportation and administrative decisions are all important determinants of between-country communication. Distance decreases density, as do visas, while direct flights increase it. ’However, there were some surprises. The research revealed that people in different countries of the European Economic Area email far less than the ‘scientists predicted’. It also showed that people in countries with colonial ties do not email more as a result. The researchers wrote. ‘Book Club findings in the main model with respect to contiguous borders and common European Economic Area membership appear surprising, as they decrease rather than increase density.' 

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