首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Anyone making long drives this summer will notice a new dimension to contemporary inequality: a widening gap between the users o
Anyone making long drives this summer will notice a new dimension to contemporary inequality: a widening gap between the users o
admin
2010-01-18
68
问题
Anyone making long drives this summer will notice a new dimension to contemporary inequality: a widening gap between the users of automatic toil-paying devices and those who pay cash. The E-ZPass system, as it is called on the East Coast, seemed like idle gadgetry when it was introduced a decade ago. Drivers who acquired the passes had to nose their way across traffic to reach specially equipped tollbooths—and slow to a crawl while the machinery worked its magic. But now the sensors are sophisticated enough for you to whiz past them. As more lanes are dedicated to E-ZPass, lines lengthen for the saps paying cash.
E-ZPass is one of many innovations that give you the option of trading a bit of privacy for a load of convenience. You can get deep discounts by ordering your books from Amazon.com or joining a supermarket "club." In return, you surrender information about your purchasing habits. Some people see a bait-and-switch here. Over time, the data you are required to hand over become more and more personal, and such handovers cease to be optional. Neato data gathering is making society less free and less human. The people who issue such warnings—whether you call them paranoids or libertarians—are among those you see stuck in the rippling heat, 73 cars away from the "Cash Only" sign at the Tappan Zee Bridge.
Paying your tolls electronically raises two worries. The first is that personal information will be used illegitimately. The computer system to which you have surrendered your payment information also records data about your movements and habits. It can be hacked into. Earlier this year, as many as half a million customers had their identities "compromised" by cyber-break-ins at Seisint and ChoicePoint, two companies that gather consumer records.
The second worry is that personal information will be used legitimately—that the government will expand its reach into your life without passing any law, and without even meaning you any harm. Recent debate in Britain over a proposed "national road-charging scheme"—which was a national preoccupation until the London Tube bombings—shows how this might work. Alistair Darling, the transport secretary, wants to ease traffic and substitute user fees for excise and gas taxes. Excellent goals, all. But Darling plans to achieve them by tracking, to the last meter, every journey made by every car in the country. It seems that this can readily be done by marrying global positioning systems (with which many new cars are fitted) with tollbooth scanners. The potential applications multiply: what if state policemen in the United States rigged E-ZPass machines to calculate average highway speeds between toll plazas—something easily doable with today’s machinery—and to automatically ticket cars that exceed 65 m.p.h.?
There is a case to be made that only a citizenry of spoiled brats would fret over such things. Come on, this argument runs, anyone who owns an anti-car-theft device—Lo Jack in the United States or NavTrak in Britain—is using radio tracking to make a privileged claim on government services. If your LoJack-equipped Porsche is stolen, you can call the local police department and say, in effect, "Go fetch." Stolen cars with such devices are almost always recovered. Car theft has fallen precipitously, which benefits us all.
For some time, the United States has required commercial trucks to register their mileage and routes. Last year, Germany initiated a new, more efficient G.P.S.-based truck-tracking system that seems intrusion-proof. Authorities dis card the records after three months, which means they can’t use them to arrest criminal truckers or dun deadbeat ones. Can such forbearance last?
In Germany, where history makes lax surveillance seem the lesser evil. yes. But not in the United States. Since the Warren Court, voters have. again and again, risen up against any libertarian trammeling of government in its fight against crime. People waver on whether to trade privacy for convenience, but they’re pretty untroubled about trading privacy for security. On occasion, E-ZPass records have been used to track down criminal suspects.
When such crime-fighting aids are available, people clamor for them. In October, the F.D.A. approved, for medical use, the VeriChip, a device the size of a grain of rice. It can be implanted under a patient’s skin and activated to permit emergency personnel to gain access to personal medical records. It’s extremely useful when patients are unconscious, but there is a suspicion that the real application lies elsewhere. Similar devices can easily be fitted with other types of trans mitters. "Active" implants are already being put to other uses: to trace livestock and lost pets and. in Latin America, to discourage kidnappings. Those who can put two and two together will find this VeriUnsettling. Monitoring can quickly change from convenience to need. Would you support a chip-based security system for nuclear power plant employees? If you were in the Army Special Forces, wouldn’t you want a transmitter embedded in you?
In more and more walks of life, if what you want to do is not trackable, you can’t do it. Most consumers have had the experience of trying to buy something negligible—a pack of gum, say—and being told by a cashier that it’s impossible because "the computer is down." It now seems quaint that after the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995. Congress argued over whether "taggants" should be required in explosives to make them traceable. Today everything is traceable. Altered plant DNA is embedded in textiles to identify them as American. Man-made particles with spectroscopic "signatures" can be used, for example, as "security tags" for jewels. The information collected about consumers is the most sophisticated and confusing taggant of all. It is a marvelous tool, a real timesaver and a kind of electronic bracelet that turns the entire world into a place where we are living under house arrest.
If you always purchase good through internet, what will happen?
选项
A、You become dependent of it
B、You can’t get goods which make you feel satisfactory
C、Your privacy is faced with danger
D、Your will make your personal data completely public
答案
C
解析
第三段和第四段讲述了使用电子付款的两大隐忧,集中体现为个人信息的外泄和被非法使用。故选C。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/R8vO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Itlooksunlikelythatmedicalsciencewillabolishtheprocessofageing.Butitnolongerlooksimpossible."Inthelongr
ManypeoplewillhaveheardoftheAlexandertechniquebuthaveonlyavagueideawhatitisabout.Untilearlierthisyear,Id
Americanshavefourprimaryavenuesformakingfriends:atwork,atschool,throughahobbyora【C1】______suchasvolunteerwork
Americanshavefourprimaryavenuesformakingfriends:atwork,atschool,throughahobbyora【C1】______suchasvolunteerwork
WhyMenExplodeAlthoughwomengetangryjustasoftenasmen,rageremainstheprototypicalmaleemotion."Mykidsstillta
A、Tohelpthestudentsfromthesamecountriesovercometheirhomesicknessandotherproblems.B、Tosetupboothsdecoratedwith
A、Thecustomermustpaycashforhisinsurance.B、Thecustomermustpayforhisinsurancebycreditcard.C、Thecustomermustge
A、Residentialpropertyhaslongbeenasourceofprivatewealth.B、Thewealthyneedmoreparkingspacefortheirlimousines.C、P
A、Heansweredallherquestionscorrectly.B、Hereceivedagoodgradeincookingclass.C、Shelikeswhathehasjustcooked.D、S
A、Henry’searisabigproblemforhim.B、Henrykilledtheoldmanandgotmuchmoney.C、Henrywishedthathisfatherwouldleav
随机试题
下列各项中,不属于三阴交穴主治病证的是
为了城市建设需要。某县人民政府成立隶属于其办公室的某公司,并决定由该公司将某地区的旧房拆除新建市场。郭某因与某公司达不成协议而拒不搬迁,某县人民政府对其住房强制拆迁。郭某对强制拆迁行为不服,向县人民法院提出行政诉讼。县人民法院受理后认定此纠纷为民事纠纷,驳
我国某商业银行在某发达国家新设一家分行,获准开办所有的金融业务。该发达国家有发达的金融市场,能够进行所有的传统金融交易和现代金融衍生产品交易。(2009年真题)该分行在将所获利润汇回国内时,承受的金融风险是()。
导游人员有下列行为的,根据《导游人员管理条例》相关规定,由旅游行政管理部门责令改正,暂扣导游证3至6个月;情节严重的由省、自治区、直辖市人民政府旅游行政部门吊销导游证并予以公告()。
忠诚于人民教育事业,志存高远,勤恳敬业,甘为人梯,乐于奉献。对工作高度负责,认真备课上课,认真批改作业,认真辅导学生。不得敷衍塞责。这体现了新时期教师职业道德规范内容中的()。
隋唐时期,我国书法艺术步入又一个高峰,名家辈出。继王羲之之后,我国书法史上最有成就的书法家是()
中国瓷器是从陶器发展演变而成的,原始瓷器起源于3000多年前。至宋代时,名瓷名窑已遍及大半个中国,是瓷业最为繁荣的时期。下列选项中不属于宋代五大名窑的是()。
现代社会,技术进步会导致相互间信任感减弱,但能实现公众信息___________和甄别能力的提升,也让公众开始___________甚至怀疑一贯坚持的传统。填入画横线部分最恰当的一项是:
新石器时代的主要特征是什么?我国新石器时代有哪几种文化类型?其分布情况如何?
“八年研究”主要涉及四个方面问题,其中不是“八年研究”的议题的是
最新回复
(
0
)