问答题It is tempting to regard the different responses to these tragedies as proof that a more advanced society will respond more constructively to adversity; the simpler truth is that disasters can quickly transform a nation--for better, or for worse.
问答题面向基层
问答题anti-dumping
问答题We’ re at the beginning of some critical debates about the future of the Internet: the proper role of law enforcement, the character of ubiquitous surveillance, the collection and retention of our entire life’ s history, how automatic algorithms should judge us, government control over the Internet, cyber war rules of engagement, national sovereignty on the Internet, limitations on the power of corporations over our data, the ramifications of information consumerism, and so on. Data is the pollution problem of the information age. All computer processes produce it. It stays around. How we deal with it -- how we reuse and recycle it, who has access to it, how we dispose of it, and what laws regulate it -- is central to how the information age functions. And I believe that just as we look back at the early decades of the industrial age and wonder how society could ignore pollution in their rash to build an industrial world, our grandchildren will look back at us during these early decades of the information age and judge us on how we dealt with the rebalancing of power resulting from all this new data. This won’ t be an easy period for us as we try to work these issues out. Historically, no shift in power has ever been easy. Corporations have turned our personal data into an enormous revenue generator, and they’ re not going to back down. Neither will governments, who have harnessed that same data for their own purposes. But we have a duty to tackle this problem.
问答题modem
问答题英国广播公司
问答题GRE
问答题第二次世界大战
问答题state-owned enterprise
问答题Federal Reserve System
问答题ideological difference
问答题抽气泵
问答题载人航天飞行
问答题Sulphur dioxide
问答题CERNET
问答题合法权益
问答题公共关系
问答题Global Positioning System
问答题资本外逃
问答题austerity measures