Information
in sentence
6149 examples of Information in a sentence
But look at how non-computable this
information
is.
So as long as some people like to share as their form of control, we can build a commons, as long as we can get the
information
out.
If we have a lot of shared genotypes, and a lot of shared outcomes, and a lot of shared lifestyle choices, and a lot of shared environmental information, we can start to tease out the correlations between subtle variations in people, the choices they make and the health that they create as a result of those choices, and there's open-source infrastructure to do all of this.
We provided bags, bags of information, and I had quite a few tradies say to me in the first year, "Aw, this is a load of you-know-what," but those tradies I know still have those bags in their Ute or in their shed.
We give the tradies bags of
information
from local and national support services.
The brain takes meaningless
information
and makes meaning out of it, which means we never see what's there, we never see information, we only ever see what was useful to see in the past.
It's getting
information.
Your brain cannot deal with the uncertainty of that information, and it gets ill.
It does not tell the traveler where she's going until the very last minute, and
information
is provided just in time.
I'm going to talk a little bit about one kind of
information
flow, one kind of flow of people, one kind of flow of capital, and, of course, trade in products and services.
So we are moving to this democratization of information, and I've been in this field for quite a while.
I think that was a pretty good indication about my future career as an investigative journalist, and what I've seen from being in this access to
information
field for so long is that it used to be quite a niche interest, and it's gone mainstream.
It's this democratization of
information
that I think is an
information
enlightenment, and it has many of the same principles of the first Enlightenment.
That strips all the physical mass out of information, so now it's almost zero cost to copy and share
information.
And if we're thinking about a finance system, we need a lot of
information
to take in.
It's just not possible for one person to take in the amount, the volume of information, and analyze it to make good decisions.
So that's why we're seeing increasingly this demand for access to
information.
And how is it possible that the volume of
information
can be processed that needs to in this system?
So we're still having to rely on illegitimate ways of getting information, through leaks.
So when the Guardian did this investigation about the Afghan War, you know, they can't walk into the Department of Defense and ask for all the
information.
It is, I believe, to embody within the rule of law rights to
information.
So that means it's a crime, people are punished, quite severely in a lot of cases, for publishing or giving away official
information.
Now wouldn't it be amazing, and really, this is what I want all of you to think about, if we had an Official Disclosure Act where officials were punished if they were found to have suppressed or hidden
information
that was in the public interest?
If we set about saying, for example, torture is wrong because it doesn't extract good information, or we say, you need women's rights because it stimulates economic growth by doubling the size of the work force, you leave yourself open to the position where the government of North Korea can turn around and say, "Well actually, we're having a lot of success extracting good
information
with our torture at the moment," or the government of Saudi Arabia to say, "Well, our economic growth's okay, thank you very much, considerably better than yours, so maybe we don't need to go ahead with this program on women's rights."
This sound wave comes out and it reflects and echoes back off objects in their environment, and the bats then hear these echoes and they turn this
information
into an acoustic image.
So if we are to capitalize on all of this new molecular data and personalized genomic
information
that is coming online that we will be able to have in the next few years, we have to be able to differentiate between the two.
For instance, there's eBird, where amateur birdwatchers can upload
information
about their bird sightings.
In contrast, the people that wrote the reviews that were actually there, their bodies actually entered the physical space, they talked a lot more about spatial
information.
The greatest danger that now faces liberal democracy is that the revolution in
information
technology will make dictatorships more efficient than democracies.
With the rise of artificial intelligence and machine learning, it might become feasible to process enormous amounts of
information
very efficiently in one place, to take all the decisions in one place, and then centralized data processing will be more efficient than distributed data processing.
Back
Next
Related words
About
Their
Which
People
There
Technology
Would
Other
Could
Access
World
Where
Government
Through
Public
Should
Health
Really
Power
Share