Digital
in sentence
2581 examples of Digital in a sentence
At the beginning of this
digital
century, it really moved to corporations and that in the future, it would move to individuals.
We have a system of cooperation and governance that really needs to be created right now so that companies, governments and the citizenry can agree how this new
digital
world is going to advance.
BF: So what gives a
digital
company any incentive?
So when an adult like Brad Smith, the president of Microsoft, said a few months ago, "We need a new set of Geneva Conventions to manage the security of the
digital
space," many of the senior leaders in Silicon Valley actually spoke against his words.
FC: My biggest hope is that we will become each stewards of this new
digital
world.
How is each of us actually taking the responsibility to be a steward of the
digital
space we live in?
They talked to every country that made nuclear weapons and asked them, "Which
digital '
weapon' would you take off the table against somebody else's schools or hospitals?"
That's what I'm worried about ... The weaponization of the
digital
space, and the race to get there.
In this new era, your natural human capabilities are going to be augmented by computational systems that help you think, robotic systems that help you make, and a
digital
nervous system that connects you to the world far beyond your natural senses.
The good news is, we're working on
digital
nervous systems that connect us to the things we design.
Except a human did design this, but it was a human that was augmented by a generative-design AI, a
digital
nervous system and robots that can actually fabricate something like this.
And instead of worrying about sexting, what I think we need to do is think a lot more about
digital
privacy.
And we can do the same thing with
digital
privacy.
Right now, if someone violates your privacy, whether that's an individual or a company or the NSA, you can try filing a lawsuit, though you may not be successful because many courts assume that
digital
privacy is just impossible.
I still hear people asking me all the time, isn't a
digital
image somehow blurring the line between public and private because it's digital, right?
No! No! Everything
digital
is not just automatically public.
As NYU legal scholar Helen Nissenbaum tells us, we have laws and policies and norms that protect all kinds of information that's private, and it doesn't make a difference if it's
digital
or not.
All of your financial information is held in
digital
databases, but your credit card company can't just post your purchase history online.
If we don't think more about
digital
privacy and consent, there can be serious consequences.
And when we assume that privacy is impossible in
digital
media, we completely write off and excuse her boyfriend's bad, bad behavior.
Because the problem is not sexting, the issue is
digital
privacy.
So the next time a victim of a privacy violation comes up to you, instead of blaming them, let's do this instead: let's shift our ideas about
digital
privacy, and let's respond with compassion.
They were the
digital
version of the screaming hordes I'd been seeing at protests since I was a kid.
But in the midst of that
digital
brawl, a strange pattern developed.
People often lament that
digital
communication makes us less civil, but this is one advantage that online conversations have over in-person ones.
Well, when I'm not fighting the coded gaze as a poet of code, I'm a graduate student at the MIT Media Lab, and there I have the opportunity to work on all sorts of whimsical projects, including the Aspire Mirror, a project I did so I could project
digital
masks onto my reflection.
They take primary data from CT scans and MRIs, translate it into
digital
information, animate it, put it together into the components of the child itself, surface-scan elements of the child that have been casted as needed, depending on the surgery itself, and then take this
digital
data and be able to output it on state-of-the-art, three-dimensional printing devices that allow us to print the components exactly to the micron detail of what the child's anatomy will look like.
Because everybody has a
digital
camera or cell phone camera, they took pictures of everything, more than 1,000.
We clearly use different standards to measure physical and
digital
things.
Brookings says that 70 percent of jobs today in the US require at least mid-level
digital
skills.
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