问题 问答题

请从我省实际出发,围绕“给定资料”的主旨,自选角度,自拟标题,写一篇文章。要求:观点明确、见解独到、认识深刻;结构完整、条理清晰、内容充分;语言流畅,字数1000~1200字。

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解析:第三题 参考例文 转变经济发展方式,推进产业转型升级 2009年可能将是新世纪以来我省经济形势最为严峻的一年,经济增速回落、企业经营困难、发展信心不足、社会矛盾突出等问题,将会给我省经济社会发展带来前所未有的挑战。这其中,不仅有世界金融危机和国内宏观经济形势的影响,也是我省长期积累的结构性、素质性矛盾的集中体现。因此,解决这一场由金融危机带给我省的发展之“危”,同样也是转变经济发展方式、推进产业结构转型升级之“机”。 然而,在危难之间要把握住发展之机,使我省继续率先发展、走在前列,需要省委省政府和各级党政机关按照“保增长、抓转型、重民生、促稳定”的工作主线,科学决策、英明(正确)领导;需要全省企业家继续秉承“浙商精神”,诚信经营、积极进取;更需要全省人民认真实施“创业富民、创新强省”总战略,辛勤工作、努力奋斗,而这其中,笔者认为,如下几点显得尤为重要。 一是坚定发展信心,弘扬浙江精神。困难面前,信心显得尤为重要。要相信,浙江现在面临的问题,是经济发展水平达到一定阶段必然会遇到也必然能克服的;企业所遇到的发展困境,通过技术创新、产品升级、结构调整、市场开拓,是可以闯过去的。关键是要有勇气,要敢于面对现实、面对困难,继续秉承“自强不息、坚韧不拔、勇于创新、讲求实效”的浙江精神,努力走出目前所面临的困境。 二是转变发展方式,优化产业结构。大力进行技术创新,发展自主知识产权,实施企业和产品品牌战略,提高企业的美誉度和产品的附加值。促进劳动密集型、资源消耗性、环境污染性产业的转型升级,大力发展文化创意、电子商务、服务业、物流等现代产业。利用浙江地理优势,大力发展“山上浙江”、“海上浙江”,促进浙江经济区域协调发展,支持欠发达地区利用地区优势内生新兴产业。注重改善投资、消费、出口的结构,加大政府投资力度,通过改变区域环境形成投资需求来带动社会性投资的增长;多管齐下拉动消费需求增长,千方百计增加城乡居民收入,扩展消费市场、提高消费能力,改善消费环境,保护消费者权益;积极开拓国外市场,转变外贸增长方式,转变以低竞争力的中小企业和低附加值的产品为主的外贸出口方式。 三是树立服务理念,创新体制机制。打造服务型政府,积极为企业提供外部市场信息;通过信贷优惠、税赋和行政性收费减免,为企业发展减负;积极促进企业和高校、科研单位之问联姻,促进校企合作。大力发展商会、行业协会等社会中介,为企业之间的技术交流、资源共享、市场合作搭建平台。通过制定地方法规、行政规章、行业制度等,进一步净化市场环境,保护企业的商标品牌和知识产权,鼓励企业积极进行技术创新和结构升级。 四是完善营销网络,全力开拓市场。积极发展和完善营销网络,特别是发展自主的国际营销网络。大力发展国内贸易,改变目前浙江经济过度以来出口的现状。积极跟踪内外部的市场需求变化,有针对性地调整企业生产。通过增强市场占有率、占有营销网络,提高企业自主定价能力,适时转嫁成本压力。

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单项选择题

The simple act of surrendering a telephone number to a store clerk may seem innocuous—so much so that many consumers do it with no questions asked. Yet that one action can set in motion a cascade of silent events, as that data point is acquired, analyzed, categorized, stored and sold over and over again. Future attacks on your privacy may come from anywhere, from anyone with money to purchase that phone number you surrendered. If you doubt the multiplier effect, consider your e-mail inbox. If it’s loaded with spam, it’s undoubtedly because at some point in time you unknowingly surrendered your e-mail to the wrong Web site.

Do you think your telephone number or address are handled differently A cottage industry of small companies with names you’ve probably never heard of—like Acxiom or Merlin—buy and sell your personal information the way other commodities like corn or cattle futures are bartered. You may think your cell phone is unlisted, but if you’ve ever ordered a pizza, it might not be. Merlin is one of many commercial data brokers that advertises sale of unlisted phone numbers compiled from various sources—including pizza delivery companies. These unintended, unpredictable consequences that flow from simple actions make privacy issues difficult to grasp, and grapple with.

In a larger sense, privacy also is often cast as a tale of "Big Brother"—the government is watching you or a big corporation is watching you. But privacy issues don’t necessarily involve large faceless institutions: A spouse takes a casual glance at her husband’s Blackberry, a co-worker looks at e-mail over your shoulder or a friend glances at a cell phone text message from the next seat on the bus. While very little of this is news to anyone—people are now well aware there are video cameras and Internet cookies everywhere—there is abundant evidence that people live their lives ignorant of the monitoring, assuming a mythical level of privacy. People write e-mails and type instant messages they never expect anyone to see. Just ask Mark Foley or even Bill Gates, whose e-mails were a cornerstone of the Justice Department’s antitrust case against Microsoft.

And polls and studies have repeatedly shown that Americans are indifferent to privacy concerns. The general defense for such indifference is summed up a single phrase: "I have nothing to hide. " If you have nothing to hide, why shouldn’t the government be able to peek at your phone records, your wife see your e-mail or a company send you junk mail It’s a powerful argument, one that privacy advocates spend considerable time discussing and strategizing over.

It is hard to deny, however, that people behave different when they’re being watched. And it is also impossible to deny that Americans are now being watched more than at any time in history.

The email example shows()

A. email has become the predominant means of communication

B. careless surrendering of personal information can be harmful

C. the communication via email is replacing that via telephone

D. email will become an area for potential attacks on privacy