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... KALYSIS es portada del Nilson Report?
Issue 814, July 2004
... la patente 2.186.534 de Kalysis es la base de la aplicación del DNI Digital o de la firma electrónica en tarjeta inteligente?
... el "token USB" es un invento español patentado presentado publicamente en Bruselas?
...Los beneficios de pagos móviles crecerán drásticamente a USD20,000 millones en todo el mundo, de acuerdo con un nuevo informe estratégico de ARC Group. Esta cifra representa un crecimiento anual del 100%, y se deriva principalmente de nuevos tipos de transacción como prepago desde cajeros automáticos y otros innovadores ATMs. |
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Kalysis GRUPO
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KALYSIS Iberia, SL Plaza de Uncibay 3 Primera Planta 29008 Málaga ESPAÑA
952 60 81 93 686 500 726
CENTRO DE INVESTIGACIÓN BIC Euronova - Centro Europeo de Empresas e Innovación (CEEI) Parque Tecnológico de Andalucía (PTA) Málaga, ES 29590
ESPAÑA
INTERNACIONAL Voz
+34 952 608193
ANID - National Association of Researchers in Educational Methodology Camino de las Aguas, 48 37003 Salamanca España
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116 Northeast 3rd Avenue Miami, Florida 33132 USA
+1 260 KALY-202
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Km 5½ Carretera Norte Managua NICARAGUA
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Avda. Gestido, M-26, S-17, Sangrila
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CRA 46 No 56-63 OFIC. 109 Edificio Argental Medellín COLOMBIA
INTERNACIONAL Voz
+34 952 608193
Distribuidores EMEA Austria, Alemania, Suiza, Dinamarca, Suecia, Noruega, Finlandia, Polonia, República Checa, Eslovaquia, Hungría, Eslovenia, Croacia, Latvia, Estonia y LituaniaRelaciones con la prensa y medios de comunicación
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In Internet we trust...
Publicado por: Redacción
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According to a new survey, 52.8% of Internet users believe that most or all of the information online is "reliable and accurate."
Other highlights from the report issued by the UCLA Center for Communication Policy: About 61% find the Net "very" or "extremely" important as an information source, and Internet use is cutting into television time with Internet users watching about 4.8 fewer hours of television each week than nonusers. Among Internet users, 60.5% consider it to be a "very" or "extremely" important source of information. Just 25% consider it to be an important source of entertainment. The percentage of Americans who use the Internet actually fell, the survey says, from 72.3% to 71.1%, but the average time spent online was up substantially, to 11.1 hours per week.
That people are gravitating from the television to the Internet, especially for information, is, of course, extremely good news--at least for us. But while they are coming more, they are believing less: Last year the UCLA survey indicated that 58% of Internet users believed that most of what they read online was "reliable and accurate."
We were especially concerned about the decline in reliability, especially since our editors keep telling us we should be 100% accurate--which we are, at least most of the time.
What does it all mean? We figure it's one of three things. It could mean that the information online became roughly 5% worse between 2001 and 2002. That prospect may be too frightening to even consider. Gladly, there are other possible explanations for the 5% dropoff. It could mean that people started surfing in different places, with some folks reading, say, The New York Times less and The National Enquirer more. Or it could mean they're reading the same things and believing them less.
We delved deeper into the survey--available online, by the way--to find answers. The folks at UCLA don't supply any.
One possibility is that the overall quantity of information available keeps growing. While the amount of good stuff may be constant, or even increasing, it could be becoming overwhelmed by the bad stuff.
The users keep changing too. Among nonusers responding to the survey of the Internet, just 33.3% thought that "most" or "all" of the information on the Internet was reliable and accurate. But if they really are nonusers, how would they know?
The authors of the survey write that the number of users who believe in the reliability of information on the Internet "continues to decline." But they have only conducted the survey for three years. Their data show that, between 2000 and 2001, what might be called the believability/reliability index grew from 55% to the high-water mark 58% in 2001. How did the information get better, then suddenly worse? They don't say.
The survey also indicates that in 2002, 2.2% of Internet users--and an even more amazing 4.7% of nonusers--believe "all" of the information on the Internet is reliable and accurate. My goodness! We don't even believe that--and we work here.
Who are these people? Are they members of Al Qaeda? In any event they sound dangerous and UCLA should give their names to the FBI forthwith.
In fact, the idea of information that is "on the Internet" is itself nonsense. The survey itself reports that e-mail and instant messaging is the most popular use of the Internet by far (88% of users, compared to the 52% who use it for reading news.) A still popular question among instant messagers--the survey doesn't say this, but you can trust us--is "what are you wearing?" We happen to know that the vast majority of the answers to this question are lies. Those lies alone could contribute mightily to skepticism about information on the Internet.
For people who read news on the Internet, most probably know that the information on a newspaper Web site is the same information as that printed in the newspaper. Some Web sites have "original content" that appears nowhere else. Others--such as Kalysis Community--combine original and "repurposed" content. Is the original stuff less "reliable" or "accurate" or "reliable and accurate" (as UCLA puts it) than the stuff that also appears in print or on TV? That's a hard question. We think the answer is no, but we're only 53% sure.
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