Computers and Society
Computers and Society | Computer Haves and Have-Nots: An Overview
An unintended consequence of the information revolution, according to many observers, is the widening gap between the information haves and have-nots. It has been dubbed “the civil rights and economic rights issue of the 21st century,” “information apartheid” and “electronic redlining.”
Computer Haves and Have-Nots
Currently [as of 1995] only 10 percent of Americans have the know-how and $1,000-plus worth of equipment—computer, modem, telephone connection and gateway software—needed to cruise the information superhighway. A survey by PC World...
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- Introduction
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Chapter 1: How Will Computers Transform Society?
- Computers and Society: An Overview
- Computers Will Significantly Transform Society
- Personal Computers Will Transform the Home
- Computers Will Not Significantly Transform Society
- Future Societal Transformations Cannot Be Predicted
- Computers Will Create Unemployment
- Software as Career Threat
- Computers Do Not Create Unemployment
- Computer Technology Reduces Worker Productivity
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Chapter 2: How Will Computer Technology Affect the Right to Privacy?
- Chapter 2 Preface
- Computer Technology Violates People’s Right to Privacy
- Computer Technology Can Reveal People’s Personal Information
- Computer Technology Will Eliminate Privacy
- Computer Crimes Will Increasingly Invade People’s Privacy
- Strong Encryption Is Needed to Protect Privacy
- Computer Technology Will Not Necessarily Jeopardize Privacy
- Chapter 3: Should Computer Content Be Censored?
- Chapter 4: Should Universal Access to Computer Technology Be Guaranteed?
- Chapter 5: Will Computers Transform Education?
- Organizations to Contact
- Bibliography
- Copyright
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