题目内容

On all the highest pillars in the great cities of the world, we find

A. the figure of the same conqueror or general or soldier.
B. the figure of some conqueror or general or soldier.
C. a figure reprsenting the number of conquerors, generals or soldiers in that country.
D. the figure of a person who helped civilization forward.

查看答案
更多问题

According to paragraph 2, which of the following is true?

A. ChoicePoint is an agency that is responsible for the information leakage.
B. ChoicePoint is an agency where Social Security numbers are kept.
C. Personal information is most unsafe with Bank of America.
D. The loss of data tapes in Bank of America is a case of identity theft.

What the people really ignore in the debate is that

A. the effects of the modern pollutants on the living organisms.
B. the present situation is remarkedly different from the past.
C. the stress of progress of science to the neglect of environmental protection.
D. the serious consequence followed by the development of science.

As used in the second sentence of the first paragraph, the phrase "in depth" means

A. fully and thoroughly.
B. distantly and remotely.
C. seriously and extent.
D. strongly and unpleasantly.

After two recent, big privacy disasters, people and politicians are calling for action. In February, ChoicePoint, a large data-collection agency, began sending out letters warning 145,000 Americans that it had wrongly provided fraudsters with their personal details, including Social Security numbers. Around 750 people have already spotted fraudulent activity. And on February 25th, Bank of America revealed that it lost data tapes that contain personal information on over lm government employees, including some Senators. Although accident and not illegality is suspected, all must take precautions against identity theft.
Faced with such incidents, state and national lawmakers are calling for new regulations, including over companies that collect and sell personal information. As an industry, the firms—such as ChoicePoint, Acxiom, LexisNexis and Westlaw—are largely unregulated. They have also grown enormous. For example, ChoicePoint was founded in 1997 and has acquired nearly 60 firms to amass databases with 19 billion records on people. It is used by insurance firms, landlords and even police agencies.
California is the only state, with a law requiring companies to notify individuals when their personal information has been compromised—which made ChoicePoint reveal the fraud (albeit five months after it was noticed, and after its top two bosses exercised stock options). Legislation to make the requirement a federal law is under consideration. Moreover, lawmakers say they will propose that rules governing credit bureaus and medical companies are extended to data-collection firms. And alongside legislation, there is always litigation. Already, ChoicePoint has been sued for failing to safeguard individuals' data.
Yet the legal remedies would still be far looser than in Europe, where identity theft is also a menace, though less frequent and costly. The European Data Protection Directive, implemented in 1998, gives people the right to access their information, change inaccuracies, and deny permission for it to be shared. Moreover, it places the cost of mistakes on the companies that collect the data, not on individuals. When the law was put in force, American policymakers groaned that it was bad for business. But now they seem to be reconsidering it.
Plato and St. Augustine are mentioned in the text to

A. raise philosophical questions.
B. show an obvious contrast.
C. introduce the criminals,
D. pave the way for the main topic.

答案查题题库