The Correct Sarah Connor

If the Terminator were set in today’s world, the movie would have ended after four and a half minutes. The correct Sarah Connor would have been identified with nothing but a last name and a zip code—information leaked last year in the massive Equifax data breach. The war against the machines would have been over before it started, and no one would have ever noticed.
In cyberwar, there are no rules, by Tarah M. Wheeler, Foreign Policy News, 12 September 2018
Economics in its traditional sense is useless when it comes to addressing the urgent problems that need to be solved.
Davos 2019: the yawning gap between rhetoric and reality, by Larry Eliott, The Guardian, 27 January 2019
Damn, library Twitter rolls hard
'Twaddle': librarians respond to suggestion Amazon should replace libraries, by Kate Lyons, The Guardian, 22 July 2018; re: an infamous Forbes article

Contradictory, confusing, overlapping and innacurate

The destructive power of the press becomes even more marked when spread with new technologies. In the 1850s, the telegraph confronted Americans with a steady stream of virtually instant information: contradictory, confusing, overlapping and inaccurate, it scrambled and intensified the political climate. Today, social media is doing the same. At its heart, democracy is a continuing conversation between politicians and the public; it should come as no surprise that dramatic changes in the modes of conversation cause dramatic changes in democracies themselves.
The Violence at the Heart of Our Politics, by Joanne B. Freeman, 7 September 2018
The issue Ms. Khan’s article really brought to the fore is this: Do we trust Amazon, or any large company, to create our future?
Amazon’s Antitrust Antagonist Has a Breakthrough Idea: With a single scholarly article, Lina Khan, 29, has reframed decades of monopoly law, by David Streitfeld, New York Times, Sept. 7, 2018
The future became less a thing we create through our present-day choices or hopes for humankind than a predestined scenario we bet on with our venture capital but arrive at passively.
How tech's richest plan to save themselves after the apocalypse, by Douglas Rushkoff, The Guardian, 24 July 2018