Ghosts in the algorithm India's financial system has digitised its ledgers but not its prejudices. A millennium-old caste hierarchy is proving remarkably adept at corrupting the code designed to replace it. Nagesh Bhushan Microfinance was once sold as a revolution. Its evangelists promised precision-targeted capital delivered to the "bottom of the pyramid" — a phrase that, in the optimism of the 2000s, seemed to imply the pyramid might eventually be flattened. A generation later, the pyramid stands largely intact. India has digitised its banking infrastructure with genuine speed and ambition. What it has not managed to digitise away is caste. The persistence of caste-based financial exclusion in an era of algorithmic lending is not merely an irony. It is an indictment — of institutions that have adopted the aesthetics of modernity while preserving its oldest hierarchies, of regulators who have measured financial inclusion by the number of accounts opened rather than t...
Espionage is often portrayed in movies as a world of flawless gadgets, perfect disguises, and unerring intuition. In reality, intelligence work is fraught with human error, bureaucratic blunders, technological failures, and sheer bad luck. History is littered with spies who were caught not because their cover was blown by a master detective, but because they forgot to change their socks, sent a message at the wrong time, or trusted the wrong person. Here is a list of common spy mistakes and real-life examples where these errors led to catastrophic failures. 1. Operational Security (OPSEC) Failures The most common mistake is failing to maintain basic operational security. Spies often become complacent, treating their dangerous profession like a routine job. · The Mistake: Using unsecured communication channels, predictable routines, or failing to "burn" (destroy) incriminating documents. · Real-Life...