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Technology in Action: Computer Love?

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Everyday I sent down at my desk to type, I wish I had a new computer, I wish that it was faster, but am thankful for what I do have. Not so long ago, everything was written by had. Then this hidden treasure opened, and many  searched into it, and had a thirst for the knowledge of it, as for silver. They ran to and fro, to enquire out copies of it, collated them, and wanted them to be true and authentic. They read it over and over their files, and meditate upon it their pictures and music, and ran it over in their minds.

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The growth of computers has been phenomenal. The first experimental computers were developed in the 1940s, and primitive computers were used in business in the early 1950s. The first serious business applications for computers were put to use in the mid-1960s. From the time of their invention in the 1940s up to the 1980s, there were approximately one million computer systems of all kinds. By the middle of the 1990s, there were 250 million personal computers in use. The personal computer use in the World hit one billion in 2008.

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As of 2015, there are currently there are 2 billion computers being used Worldwide, 500 million photos being uploaded and shared every day, and 81% of Internet users are outside of the United States of America. Between 2008 and 2014, China added 264 million Internet users, which is equal to 83 percent of the United States of America’s population. “You know I have been searching for someone, who can share this special love with me, and your eyes have that glow, could it be your face I see on my computer screen? Need a special girl to share my computer World. I no longer need s strategy thanks to modern technology,” Zap and Roger.

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Everything is done online these days, people look for jobs, love, houses, cars, and shop. The future of computers is amazing. Many computers operate by transistors, microchips, CDs, wires and electricity. However, future computers might use atoms, fibers and light. These are the types of computers that could be everywhere, but never seen. Nano sized bio-computers that could target specific areas inside your body, which would help doctors pin point areas that are bothering you and receiver data about the injury, without you having to describe it to them, and that will better help them treat you.

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Giant networks of computers might be embedded in your body, your clothing, your house, your car, and this will help to keep you safe and healthy. These advanced computers will be entrenched in almost every aspect of our lives and yet we may never give them a single thought. The future could end up being a lot like that TV show “Minority Report,” which airs Monday night on FOX at 9pm.

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By 2020, it predicts there will be 50 billion devices connected to the internet, as smart sensors become more present. Also, there is a renewed focus on customer service, people are no longer going to put up with being treated like a problem, and they will expect respect for their hard earned money. In the future, it will be less about controlling people and technology, but enabling them to make life easier. There will be interactive lap tops and three dimensional printers in every classroom and office.

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The internet is a relatively new frontier, a digital Wild West, with its own forms of lawlessness. By some estimates, the annual cost to the global economy from cybercrime is more than $445 billion, including the gains to criminals and the costs to companies for recovery and defense. A conservative estimate would be $375 billion in losses, while the maximum could be as much as $575 billion.

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Cybercrime is taken very seriously. Recently a journalist called Matthew Keys, age 26, was arrested because he shared Tribune Company server logins to the Anonymous group of hackers in 2010, and according to authorities, the hackers used the information to sabotage part of the Los Angeles Times’ website.

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Mathew Keys now faces up to ten years in prison. He is charged in the Eastern District of California with conspiracy to transmit information to damage a protected computer, transmitting information to damage a protected computer, and attempted transmission of information to damage a protected computer. The case was investigated by the FBI. As commerce and business expands on the Internet, such thievery is not likely to stop. Digital socialism rules the Net, not copyright capitalism.

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Cybercrime includes the effect of hundreds of millions of people having their personal information stolen. One estimate acknowledges the total to be at more than 800 million individual records in 2013. This alone could cost as much as $160 billion per year. The constant reports of companies being hacked contribute to a growing sense that cybercrime is out of control. Cybercrime hurts companies, individuals, and national economies.

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Hundreds of companies are being hacked. In the U.S. alone, in one year, 3,000 companies were hacked. Two banks in the Persian Gulf lost $45 million, a British company reported to have lost $1.3 billion. And Losses from cybercrime for four largest economies in the World (America, China, Japan, and Germany) reached $200 billion. Cybercrime could cause the United States to lose 200,000 jobs, and European Union 150,000 jobs.

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Not only that, but other concerns of Internet safety are mounting as Russian submarines and spy ships are bellicosely operating near vital undersea cables that carry almost all global Internet communications, raising concerns among some American military and intelligence officials that the Russians might be planning to attack those lines in times of tension or conflict.

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American officials fear that the ultimate Russian hack could involve cutting their fiber optic cables at some of the hardest to reach locations, which would stop the instant communications on which the American governments, economies, and citizens have grown dependent on. In September of 2015, the Russian spy ship Yantar, equipped with two self-propelled deep sea submersible craft, cruised slowly off the East Coast of the United States on its way to Cuba, where one major cable lands near the American naval station at Guantanamo Bay.

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Navy officials said that the Yantar and the submersible vehicles it can drop off its decks have the capability to cut cables miles down in the sea. The cables are not really secret because they follow the similar paths since they were laid in the 1860s. Sometimes they are cut by anchors from ships, during storms, but those are easy to repair because they are not that deep. Other cables would be hard to reach, in event they were damaged. “Behold, they are one people, and they have all one language, and this is only the beginning of what they will do. And nothing that they propose to do will now be impossible for them.” Genesis 11:6

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