Verifying claims (like organic) and tracking in the supply gain, but not explanation of how or how you trust the people who made the claims.
Original source: Walmart’s Blockchain Program May Transform the Way We Use Data
Link: Walmart's Blockchain Program May Transform the Way We Use Data
Verifying claims (like organic) and tracking in the supply gain, but not explanation of how or how you trust the people who made the claims.
Original source: Walmart’s Blockchain Program May Transform the Way We Use Data
Link: Is the internet good or bad for society? Americans are having a tougher time deciding.
“The percentage of people who think the internet is good for society is shrinking. Roughly 70 percent of American adults who use the internet believe it’s mostly good for society, down from 76 percent in 2014, Pew found.”
And:
“About 64 percent of online adults over 65 say the internet has been “a mostly good thing for society,” Pew wrote. In 2014, that number was 78 percent."
Original source: Is the internet good or bad for society?
Link: Is the internet good or bad for society? Americans are having a tougher time deciding.
“The percentage of people who think the internet is good for society is shrinking. Roughly 70 percent of American adults who use the internet believe it’s mostly good for society, down from 76 percent in 2014, Pew found.”
And:
“About 64 percent of online adults over 65 say the internet has been “a mostly good thing for society,” Pew wrote. In 2014, that number was 78 percent."
Original source: Is the internet good or bad for society?
Link: Is the internet good or bad for society? Americans are having a tougher time deciding.
“The percentage of people who think the internet is good for society is shrinking. Roughly 70 percent of American adults who use the internet believe it’s mostly good for society, down from 76 percent in 2014, Pew found.”
And:
“About 64 percent of online adults over 65 say the internet has been “a mostly good thing for society,” Pew wrote. In 2014, that number was 78 percent."
Original source: Is the internet good or bad for society?
Link: Digital transformation in power generation and delivery
“Over the next decade, the electricity industry is predicted to unlock approximately $1.3 trillion in value through development and digitization of infrastructure, including platforms, devices, as well as cloud and advanced analytics.”
With the “greatest opportunities are predicted at the retail (8.5% EBIT improvement) and generation (6.6%) levels."
Original source: Digital transformation in power generation and delivery
Link: Digital transformation in power generation and delivery
“Over the next decade, the electricity industry is predicted to unlock approximately $1.3 trillion in value through development and digitization of infrastructure, including platforms, devices, as well as cloud and advanced analytics.”
With the “greatest opportunities are predicted at the retail (8.5% EBIT improvement) and generation (6.6%) levels."
Original source: Digital transformation in power generation and delivery
Link: Digital transformation in power generation and delivery
“Over the next decade, the electricity industry is predicted to unlock approximately $1.3 trillion in value through development and digitization of infrastructure, including platforms, devices, as well as cloud and advanced analytics.”
With the “greatest opportunities are predicted at the retail (8.5% EBIT improvement) and generation (6.6%) levels."
Original source: Digital transformation in power generation and delivery
Link: Post-Authenticity and the Ironic Truths of Meme Culture
‘What is changing, I argue, are the cultural formats people are using for discussion — the carrier waves for this signal. This is where “authenticity” isn’t a useful claim any more, having been wholly co-opted and commodified into its opposite. Culture and the way we communicate — shaped by media affordances — have become more complex, ironic, and multi-layered than that.
‘It turns out, even people who share fake news stories are trying to tell a kind of truth too.
Link: Post-Authenticity and the Ironic Truths of Meme Culture
‘What is changing, I argue, are the cultural formats people are using for discussion — the carrier waves for this signal. This is where “authenticity” isn’t a useful claim any more, having been wholly co-opted and commodified into its opposite. Culture and the way we communicate — shaped by media affordances — have become more complex, ironic, and multi-layered than that.
‘It turns out, even people who share fake news stories are trying to tell a kind of truth too.