Monday, February 2, 2009

Thomas Kinkade The Heart of San Francisco

Thomas Kinkade The Heart of San FranciscoThomas Kinkade The Good LifeThomas Kinkade Sunset on Lamplight Lane
able to search and use the vast information stored online without leaving trails of personal cookie crumbs scattered across the Net? How will Business transactions be taxed, and in what jurisdictions will disputed electronic transactions be resolved? How will intellectual property be protected? How will we prove that contracts were signed on a certain date, or that their terms and conditions have not been electronically altered? There , in the face of Internet-wide virus attacks, is the realization that we will depend in larger and larger measure on the network's functioning reliably. Making this system of millions of robust and resilient is a challenge for the present generation of Internet engineers. Failure could portend an increasingly fragile future. But I am an optimist. I believe we are going to live in a world abundant with information and with the tools needed to use it wisely. are technical answers for many of these questions, but some will require international agreements before they can be resolved.Perhaps even more daunting

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