Recently, the boundaries between the public and private, professional and personal spheres have become increasingly blurred.
Digital tools are now available in abundance and are being used at an increasing rate by individuals, both for personal and professional reasons.
Social media were originally designed to foster community exchanges between individuals sharing a common interest.
As many countries have begun their deconfinement in theory of a hypothetical exit from the crisis, citizens around the world begin to question the management of the pandemic.
Accurate information is of the essence in a crisis. Be it war, terrorist attack or a global pandemic, the wrong information costs lives.
Whether economic and financial, societal or health, these crises are testing the limits of our systems. This is particularly true for our political systems and governance models.