试题查看

首页 > 考研 > 试题查看
【单选题】

Plato asked "What is man " and StAugustine asked "Who am I "

A、new breed of criminals has a novel answer: "I am you!"Although impostors have existed for ages, the growing frequency and cost of identity theft is worrisome.Around 10mAmericans are victims annually, and it is the leading consumer-fraud complaint over the past five years. The cost to businesses was almost $ 50 billion, and to consumers $ 5 billion, in 2002, the most recent year thatAmerica’s Federal TradeCommission collected figures.
After two recent, big privacy disasters, people and politicians are calling for action. In February,ChoicePoint, a large data-collection agency, began sending out letters warning 145,000Americans that it had wrongly provided fraudsters with their personal details, including Social Security numbers.Around 750 people have already spotted fraudulent activity.And on February 25th,Bank ofAmerica revealed that it lost data tapes that contain personal information on over 1m government employees, including some Senators.Although accident and not illegality is suspected, all must take precautions against identity theft.
Faced with such incidents, state and national lawmakers are calling for new regulations, including over companies that collect and sell personal information.As an industry, the firms—such asChoicePoint,Acxiom, LexisNexis and Westlaw—are largely unregulateD、They have also grown enormous. For example,ChoicePoint was founded in 1997 and has acquired nearly 60 firms to amass databases with 19 billion records on people. It is used by insurance firms, landlords and even police agencies.
California is the only state with a law requiring companies to notify individuals when their personal information has been compromised—which madeChoicePoint reveal the fraud (albeit five months after it was noticed, and after its top two bosses exercised stock options). Legislation to make the requirement a federal law is under consideration. Moreover, lawmakers say they will propose that rules governing credit bureaus and medical companies are extended to data-collection firms.And alongside legislation, there is always litigation.Already,ChoicePoint has been sued for failing to safeguard individuals’ dat
A、
Yet the legal remedies would still be far looser than inEurope, where identity theft is also a menace, though less frequent and costly. TheEuropeanData ProtectionDirective, implemented in 1998, gives people the right to access theft information, change inaccuracies, and deny permission for it to be shareD、Moreover, it places the cost of mistakes on the companies that collect the data, not on individuals. When the law was put in force,American policymakers groaned that it was bad for business.But now they seem to be reconsidering it.
It can be inferred from the last paragraph that
A、identity theft is even more serious inEurope than inAmeric
A、
B.American policymakers might learn from the laws inEurope.
C.American policymakers are more concerned with individual interests.
D.the cost of identity theft is usually covered by companies in the US.
查看答案解析

参考答案:

正在加载...

答案解析

正在加载...

根据网考网移动考试中心的统计,该试题:

5%的考友选择了A选项

77%的考友选择了B选项

11%的考友选择了C选项

7%的考友选择了D选项

你可能感兴趣的试题

AfactorythatmakesuraniumfuelfornuclearreMostplantscanmaketheirownfoodfromsunlighMostofthepeoplewhoappearmostoftenandmostPlatoasked"Whatisman"andStAugustineasked(46)"Popularart"hasanumberofmeanings,impMostplantscanmaketheirownfoodfromsunligh