Growing Up Digital: The Rise of the Net Generation (1997) Who Knows: Safeguarding Your Privacy in a Networked World (2024)

Related Papers

Technological Forecasting and Social Change

How Blockchain can impact financial services – The overview, challenges and recommendations from expert interviewees

2020 •

Mitra Arami

View PDF

Iaeme Publication

View PDF

The Blockchain Revolution: Insights from Top-Management

Chrysostomos Filippou

This is an exploration of Blockchain technology that is growing in popularity and it seems to be able to disrupt a plethora of industries. A research is being conducted to examine Blockchain's potential to be adopted by enterprises from different sectors as well as the parameters that could affect its adoption. Mostly known as the technology that underpins Bitcoin, this concept raised a significant interest within various markets. Blockchain offers a new approach to valued information management and sharing and it is introduced as a solution against the inefficiencies that affect the industry. Experts, infrastructure providers and banks can now work on this technology and explore its uses. This is a new technology journey with obstacles that will need to be overcome and it can not be clear yet what will eventually arise. Professionals from around the world express their views on the adoption of Blockchain by organisations and how these plan to support its deployment. Thoughts are shared in terms of the required budget and the parameters that can impact its adoption. There is a great interest in Blockchain technology and its revolutionary potential to modernize the world economy and this is only the beginning.

View PDF

Encyclopedia of Business and Professional Ethics

Blockchain and Cryptocurrencies, the Relevance for Business Ethics

Claus Dierksmeier

View PDF

Taking Blockchain Seriously

Robert Herian

In the present techno-political moment it is clear that ignoring or dismissing the hype surrounding blockchain is unwise, and certainly for regulatory authorities and governments who must keep a grip on the technology and those promoting it, in order to ensure democratic accountability and regulatory legitimacy within the blockchain ecosystem and beyond. Blockchain is telling (and showing) us something very important about the evolution of capital and neoliberal economic reason, and the likely impact in the near future on forms and patterns of work, social organization, and, crucially, on communities and individuals who lack influence over the technologies and data that increasingly shape and control their lives. In this short essay I introduce some of the problems in the regulation of blockchain and offer counter-narratives aimed at cutting through the hype fuelling the ascendency of this most contemporary of technologies.

View PDF

Artists Re:Thinking the Blockchain. Eds. Ruth Catlow et al. London: Torque & Furtherfield

Everything You’ve Always Wanted to Know About the Blockchain* (*But Were Afraid to Ask Mel Ramsden)

2017 •

Martin Zeilinger

This short chapter reflects critically on the potentials and pitfalls that arise when art is moved onto/into decentralised and dematerialised contexts (such as the blockchain); the discussion considers this development in the context of the financialisation and hyper-commodification experienced by conceptual artists in the 1960s and onwards. Please consider buying the full book at https://liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/products/100826.

View PDF

Eureka

2017 •

Thomas Zweifel, Theodore Chartier-Rueg

The Internet provided the world with interconnection. But it did not provide trust. Trust is lacking everywhere in our society and is the reason for the existence of powerful intermediaries aggregating power. This has consequences for organizations: They are inefficient because time, energy, and money are wasted on verifying, monitoring and policing contracts and transactions. Managers play the role of intermediaries: They connect experts with each other and instruct them what to do. As a result, people engagement is low because no one is there to inspire and empower them. In other words, our society faces an unprecedented lack of leadership. Given these shortcomings, this article explores the potential repercussions, especially in the context of management, of implementing a Blockchain infrastructure in any type of organization. Blockchain technology seems to be able to remedy to those issues, for this distributed and immutable ledger provides security, decentralization and transparency. In the context of a blockchain economy, the findings show that value creation will be rearranged, with experts directly collaborating with each other and hierarchy being eliminated. This could, in turn, render managers obsolete, as a blockchain infrastructure will automate most of the tasks. As a result, only strong, action-oriented leadership would maintain alignment in the organization. This Leadership-In-Action would consist in building strategy alignment; empowering people to take action; and coaching members of the organization to maximize innovation and productivity.

View PDF

IAEME PUBLICATION

BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY: THE NEW AVATAR IN THE WORLD OF BANKING AND FINANCE

2020 •

IAEME Publication

Financial technology often abbreviated as fintech relates to the adaption of technological advancement and innovation in the delivery of financial services. AI’s application is seldom restricted to a few domains and is slowly capturing every process under its gamut. It is firmly implanted and entwined inthe personal lives of individuals by encompassing the functions of customer relationship and service, finance management, sales and marketing as well as administrative and technical domains. AI and blockchain are the two major disruptive technologies which dominate the world of business in this millennia. The real challenge of fintech adoption is the ecosystem required for its implementation and use. The conceptual paper is an attempt to explore the existing data with respect to the present scenario, the future prospects, the roadblocks and the path ahead for blockchain in banking and financial services

View PDF

Blockchain - A Disruptive Technology In Financial Assets - IRE Journals

2019 •

Betty Jepkemei

View PDF

Inside the Black Blocks: A policymaker’s introduction to blockchain, distributed ledger technology and the “Internet of Value”

Michael C Urban

When Bitcoin was in the news earlier this year, little attention was paid to the blockchain technology that underpins it. This is unfortunate as blockchain’s emergence has important implications far beyond cryptocurrency. Our new report cuts through the hype to take an in-depth look at this technology, and analyze its promises and perils for Canadian governments.

View PDF
Growing Up Digital: The Rise of the Net Generation (1997) Who Knows: Safeguarding Your Privacy in a Networked World (2024)

FAQs

Who is considered to be digital natives? ›

A digital native is a person who grew up with the presence of digital technology or in the information age. Having grown up in IT's presence, digital natives are comfortable with and fluent in technology.

What is the digital generation? ›

A generation of people born in the digital era that has grown up with access to digital information and the abilities to navigate the new communication technologies.

Who called Gen Z digital natives? ›

The term 'digital native' was first used in 2001 by Marc Prensky, an American writer and speaker who also coined the term 'digital immigrant'.

Who is considered a digital citizen? ›

noun. a person who develops the skills and knowledge to effectively use the internet and other digital technology, especially in order to participate responsibly in social and civic activities: We're teaching students how to become good digital citizens.

What generation is the most digital? ›

Generation Z comprises people born between 1996 and 2010. This generation's identity has been shaped by the digital age, climate anxiety, a shifting financial landscape, and COVID-19.

Are millennials the first digital generation? ›

They are considered digital natives, the first fully digital generation, since they were born into constantly evolving digital ocean.

Which generation uses the most technology? ›

Millennials, or members of Generation Y (ages 18-34), rely heavily on use of technological tools. Baby boomers (ages 51-69) may not be as familiar with certain technologies and simply may not have a desire to use them.

Which consumers are considered digital natives? ›

While there is no strict age limit, digital natives are often considered to be people born in the mid-1990s onwards. This age range corresponds with the widespread adoption and availability of personal computers, the internet, and later smartphones and social media platforms.

Who are considered to be digital natives in Quizlet? ›

Digital Natives: Individuals who have trouble adjusted to the fast-moving pace of technology and the digital era in comparison to those who were born into the technological evolution.

What makes you a digital native? ›

Digital natives have grown up with internet access, depend heavily on mobile devices, heavilly consume social networking services, consider speed to be among the most important characteristics of digital products and services, and multitask across devices and between work and entertainment.

Who is considered a digital immigrant? ›

What Is a Digital Immigrant? A digital immigrant is a person who was raised prior to the digital age. These individuals, often in the Generation-X/Xennial generations and older, did not grow up with ubiquitous computing or the internet, and so have had to adapt to the new language and practice of digital technologies.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Foster Heidenreich CPA

Last Updated:

Views: 6080

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (76 voted)

Reviews: 83% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Foster Heidenreich CPA

Birthday: 1995-01-14

Address: 55021 Usha Garden, North Larisa, DE 19209

Phone: +6812240846623

Job: Corporate Healthcare Strategist

Hobby: Singing, Listening to music, Rafting, LARPing, Gardening, Quilting, Rappelling

Introduction: My name is Foster Heidenreich CPA, I am a delightful, quaint, glorious, quaint, faithful, enchanting, fine person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.