Passage Three Cyberspace,
data superhighways, multimedia-for those who have seen the future, the linking
of computers, television and telephones will change our lives for ever. Yet for
all the talk of a forthcoming technological utopia(乌托邦) little attention has
been given to the implications these developments for the poor. As with all new
high technology, while the West concerns itself with the "how", the question of
"for whom" is put aside once again. Economists are only now
realizing the full extent to which the communications revolution has affected
the world economy. Information technology allows the extension of trade across
geographical and industrial boundaries, and transnational corporations take full
advantage of it. Terms of trade, exchange and interest rates and money movements
are more important than the production of goods. The electronic economy made
possible by information technology allows the haves to increase their control on
global markets-with destructive impact on the have-nots. For
them the result is instability. Developing counties, which rely on the
production of a small range of goods for export, are made to feel like small
parts in the international economic machine. As future(期货) are traded on
computer screens, developing countries simply have less and less control of
their destinies. So what are the options for regaining control
One alternative is for developing countries to buy in the latest computers and
telecommunications themselves-so-called "development communications"
modernization. Yet this leads to long-term dependency and perhaps permanent
constraints on developing countries’ economies. Communications
technology is generally exported from the U.S., Europe or Japan; the patents,
skills and ability to manufacture remain in the hands of few industrialized
countries. It is also expensive, and imported products and services must
therefore be bought on credit—usually provided by the very countries whose
companies stand to gain. Furthermore, when new technology is
introduced there is often too low a level of expertise to exploit it for native
development. This means that while local elites, foreign communities and
subsidiaries of transnational corporations may benefit, those whose lives depend
on access to the information are denied it. The author’s attitude toward the communications revolution is ______.
A. positive
B. critical
C. indifferent
D. tolerant