Word: trustingly
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...Despite Google's refusal to turn over data on people's Internet use to U.S. prosecutors, the company is actually betraying its customers' trust by retaining information on every search and resultant Web-page retrieval. If phone companies logged the content of everybody's phone calls, consumers would be outraged. Perhaps Google's respecting the privacy of its customers is not congruent with the goal of Internet domination. Ed R. Bauman Santa Monica, California...
...when new sources of “content,” as the information industry likes to call creative endeavors and conversations, are flooding into our homes and offices. How can we find useful news from unfamiliar sources, for example? What—whom—can we trust? Luckily, the Daily Me is evolving into what we might think of as a “Daily We” where recommendations from the wider community supplement our own selections in a collaborative filtering process.Websites such as Kuro5hin, Digg, Newsvine and Memeorandum give us a taste of what?...
...East issues. During last summer's negotiations over a new constitution, Khalilzad took cell-phone calls from Rice in the presence of Iraqi leaders, giving her updates and assessments, according to a U.S. consultant who observed him. It showed Iraqis he had a direct line to Washington and enhanced trust that he had no hidden agenda. Hamoodi says agreement on the constitution "would have been impossible without...
...gave them baserunners, they knew what to do with them.”Harvard’s most effective mound performance during the weekend belonged to freshman Adam Cole, who started the season’s first game on Friday. The rookie from Sudbury, Mass. made good on the trust shown by the coaching staff, allowing just two runs until he was bumped during a two-run Florida sixth. He yielded just two hits and three walks overall—an “amazing” performance for a first-year player, according to captain Morgan Brown...
...said, noting that even shows with high ratings can now be taken off the air for demographic reasons. The long-time CBS News anchorman, who retired from his post last spring after more than half a century in the press, described the news as a “public trust.” He emphasized the media’s obligation to public service, which he said “has gone badly out of fashion and is in very near danger of disappearing.” He added, playfully, “In many ways CBS is better than...