A naked PR plant, a half-hour television commercial with no purpose whatsoever1 other than to let L. Bob Rife2 tell his side of a particular issue. It seems that a number of Rife's programmers, the people who made his systems run, got together and formed a union -- unheard of, for hackers3 -- and filed a suit against Rife, claiming that he had placed audio and video bugs4 in their homes, in fact placed all of them under twenty-four-hour surveillance, and harassed5 and threatened some programmers who were making what he called "unacceptable lifestyle choices." For example, when one of his programmers and her husband engaged in oral sex in their own bedroom one night, the next morning she was called into Rife's office, where he called her a slut and a sodomite and told her to clean out her desk. The bad publicity6 from this so annoyed Rife that he felt the need to blow a few million on some more PR.
"I deal in information," he says to the smarmy7, toadying8 pseudojournalist who "interviews" him. He's sitting in his office in Houston, looking slicker than normal. "All television going out to Consumers throughout the world goes through me. Most of the information transmitted to and from the CIC database passes through my networks. The Metaverse -- -the entire Street -- exists by virtue9 of a network that I own and control.
"But that means, if you'll just follow my reasoning for a bit, that when I have a programmer working under me who is working with that information, he is wielding10 enormous power. Information is going into his brain. And it's staying there. It travels with him when he goes home at night. It gets all tangled11 up into his dreams, for Christ's sake. He talks to his wife about it. And, goddamn it, he doesn't have any right to that information. If I was running a car factory, I wouldn't let workers drive the cars home or borrow tools. But that's what I do at five o'clock each day, all over the world, when my hackers go home from work.
"When they used to hang rustlers in the old days, the last thing they would do is piss their pants. That was the ultimate sign, you see, that they had lost control over their own bodies, that they were about to die. See, it's the first function of any organization to control its own sphincters. We're not even doing that. So we're working on refining our management techniques so that we can control that information no matter where it is -- on our hard disks or even inside the programmers' heads. Now, I can't say more because I got competition to worry about. But it is my fervent12 hope that in five or ten years, this kind of thing won't even be an issue."
1 whatsoever | |
adv.(用于否定句中以加强语气)任何;pron.无论什么 | |
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2 rife | |
adj.(指坏事情)充斥的,流行的,普遍的 | |
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3 hackers | |
n.计算机迷( hacker的名词复数 );私自存取或篡改电脑资料者,电脑“黑客” | |
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4 bugs | |
adj.疯狂的,发疯的n.窃听器( bug的名词复数 );病菌;虫子;[计算机](制作软件程序所产生的意料不到的)错误 | |
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5 harassed | |
adj. 疲倦的,厌烦的 动词harass的过去式和过去分词 | |
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6 publicity | |
n.众所周知,闻名;宣传,广告 | |
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7 smarmy | |
adj.爱说奉承话的 | |
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8 toadying | |
v.拍马,谄媚( toady的现在分词 ) | |
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9 virtue | |
n.德行,美德;贞操;优点;功效,效力 | |
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10 wielding | |
手持着使用(武器、工具等)( wield的现在分词 ); 具有; 运用(权力); 施加(影响) | |
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11 tangled | |
adj. 纠缠的,紊乱的 动词tangle的过去式和过去分词 | |
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12 fervent | |
adj.热的,热烈的,热情的 | |
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