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268 Sentences With "more pervasive"

How to use more pervasive in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "more pervasive" and check conjugation/comparative form for "more pervasive". Mastering all the usages of "more pervasive" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Slime is, suddenly, more pervasive than it's been in decades.
Facial recognition technology is everywhere, and only becoming more pervasive.
Let's hope the next 10 years see more pervasive reform.
It's bigger, more pervasive and in every way more dangerous.
The more pervasive the reported discrimination, the higher their risk.
It also writes that it carried out "the introduction of more pervasive encryption throughout our environment" — so, again, questions should be asked why it took an incident response to trigger a "more pervasive" security overhaul.
Few cultural stereotypes are more pervasive than the surly French garçon.
Few cultural stereotypes are more pervasive than the surly French waiter.
The need for liquidity may be even more pervasive this time.
The collective mood is more pervasive and more obvious than ever.
But do you see a way to make this story more pervasive?
The internet has made it, in fact, more pervasive than ever before.
For girls, there's a lot less action but more pervasive food imagery.
In China, however, unwanted illegal calls and messages are far more pervasive.
As artificial intelligence becomes more pervasive, so will automation and its effects.
Now, with social media, their influence is more pervasive than in 1788.
The internet will be more pervasive and the market can change completely.
One thing is for certain: Technology is becoming more pervasive and persuasive.
And together they made globalization more pervasive and the world more prosperous.
Their anger at the opposing party and its leaders is more pervasive.
But neo-Confederate ideas are more pervasive than we like to admit.
Reports from Politico and Washington Post indicate the problem is much more pervasive.
But it appears Halo Top's underfilling is a bit more pervasive than that.
Because of this, the trend towards "open access" will only become more pervasive.
And the impact is far more pervasive than the alleged Wells Fargo scam.
This is one of the more pervasive ambiguities in contemporary American political discourse.
"That makes the culture of silence so much more pervasive," Ms. Gosfield said.
The rise of smartphones makes these behaviors frictionless and thus more pervasive, more standardized.
As plastic surgery itself becomes safer and more accessible, it's also becoming more pervasive.
But public health experts say testing in South Korea has been far more pervasive.
Banning fireworks, Mr. Dayal said, fails to halt more pervasive pollutants in the city.
They've also left so many Filipinos vulnerable to less lethal, but more pervasive, victimization.
SHODAN's presence felt somehow even more pervasive as I walked along corridor after corridor.
I think that gets even more pervasive over time with all the tech players.
Products are getting a lot easier to use and they're becoming much more pervasive.
If anything, the practice has become more pervasive, not less, since the Belle deal.
More pervasive, though, are pesticides and herbicides, which are routinely sprayed on crops like corn.
As troll culture becomes more pervasive online, it becomes harder to pick a blanket answer.
And now, Michelle Pfeiffer says abuse in Hollywood is even more pervasive than previously revealed.
As teen girls are online all the time, this means the abuse is more pervasive.
Less visible but likely more pervasive, how about going out to lunch with co-workers?
The drinking culture in the UK feels more pervasive than it does in the US.
Neglect is actually much more pervasive, because that's more obvious and it's harder to hide.
And the Harry Potter Content Industrial Complex is far more pervasive and frightening than EDM.
That's far more pervasive than the baby photos and comments that we post on Facebook.
The events since Sunday show the limits of that thinking as their platforms become more pervasive.
"The more pervasive the politics of nationalism, the more ubiquitous fake news will be," he said.
As these practices became more pervasive and successful in the commercial market, public programs took notice.
But it has become more pervasive in recent years, according to M.T.A. officers I've spoken with.
And then we're also seeing security questions and things like biometric security become much more pervasive.
Malvertising has been a problem for years, but lately has become more pervasive on mobile devices.
The problem is more pervasive, having to do with an overall lack of quality health care.
He said research fraud may be more pervasive, but detection of it is also getting better.
After the accident, Atkins found that problems with oxygen systems were more pervasive than widely thought.
And now wireless networks are on the brink of becoming exponentially faster, more pervasive and more versatile.
However, men's sexual harassment of women has been more pervasive and socially expected and accepted in society.
These things are still occurring today, but they are even more pervasive, thanks to the crime cartels.
The issue of gun control is growing only more pervasive because one activist group has been relentless.
This is one example of the more pervasive problem of the mistreatment of women around the world.
They result in other harms, which are probably more pervasive and might have a bigger overall impact.
But while cyberespionage will always grab headlines, there's a quieter, more pervasive security threat at play here.
But they've been chasing a moving target, because the lies just keep getting bigger and more pervasive.
The blackpill is an extreme and crudely worked out version of this much more pervasive reactionary impulse.
From Opinion, Jennifer Senior argues that dismissing women's ideas is a more pervasive problem than sexual harassment.
Debates over privacy will intensify as consumer tracking online, at home and in shops becomes ever more pervasive.
The records show the problems are more pervasive and continued for a longer period than those previously reported.
The only thing more pervasive in E3 press conferences than Skyrim these past few years has been Minecraft.
Perhaps the school's concern should be focused on a problem more pervasive than a shortage of parking spaces.
Hatred of Jews in my native South is a phenomenon that is distinct from the more pervasive racism.
The survey's authors and sponsors say the results suggest that sexual harassment is more pervasive than people realize.
Three-dimensional printing is more pervasive than ever, yet it remains mostly limited to plastics, ceramics and metals.
He takes credit for the economy in a more pervasive and insistent way than any president before him.
I think that sense of control has become a lot more pervasive just in the last decade alone.
The gap he describes doesn't manifest in the form of overtly racist attitudes; it's more pervasive, more insidious.
Facial recognition is becoming more pervasive in consumer products and law enforcement, backed by increasingly powerful machine-learning technology.
But the problem is more pervasive than people feeling uncomfortable about explaining their choices not to drink, Melle explained.
These operations are likely to become far more pervasive as the number of significant data breaches continues to grow.
Now, as gender equality has become more pervasive, Rotunno believes women have abdicated the responsibilities that come with it.
With a rising population and ever-more pervasive global inequality, it's certainly an asset class with room for growth.
In resource-scarce areas where Ebola outbreaks have occurred, the danger to health care workers is even more pervasive.
"The effect of sea-level rise on human populations could be more pervasive and widespread than anticipated," they wrote.
Over time what has made this issue more challenging to address and cyberbullying more pervasive is, of course, technology.
Thirty years later, porn is more pervasive than ever, but it's also more diffuse—and so are the debates.
Digital technology has become more pervasive on the industrial side of the economy, and Annunziata has been in the forefront.
It's an illness with many more pervasive symptoms, and it's about time we treat it as seriously as we should.
Two new reports say those efforts were far more pervasive on Instagram and other social media platforms than previously known.
The only thing more pervasive than weed and irresponsible future leaders on a liberal arts college campus are useless majors.
By upping its design but not its prices, the Swedish giant is making its ephemeral furnishings more pervasive than ever.
In recent years, apologies and professional statements of regret have become more pervasive than ever, especially in the business world.
Video games are not only far more pervasive than they were 30 years ago; they are also immensely more complex.
It also seems to have driven those spies to demand more pervasive access to Yahoo's systems than ever—and Yahoo complied.
Today, images of destruction are practically mandated in action movies, and they're even more pervasive than they were before the attacks.
But I wonder if, with more patience from politicians and donors, organizations also could have improved health in more pervasive ways.
We're looking at something much bigger and more pervasive than mere hypocrisy: We're talking about bad faith on an epic scale.
"Facebook routinely makes misrepresentations to induce consumers to adopt wider and more pervasive uses of facial recognition technology," the complaint said.
I think we're going to see that it is more pervasive than we imagined, but not different than what we thought.
There's a growing chance that it will belong to a robot: a new and ever more pervasive kind of independent mind.
This silence is all the more surprising considering how much more pervasive bubbles are today than they were 10 years ago.
We just want rapid-fire jokes in a beautiful setting, rather than necessarily maybe the style that is more pervasive right now.
While researchers might study the impact of a single episode of Law & Order, say, Harry Potter's potential influence is far more pervasive.
This incisive history of white evangelical movements in America argues that their influence has been more pervasive and diverse than generally realized.
But this is a situation that is likely to change in the future, as IoT becomes more pervasive in homes and offices.
In a future with more pervasive AI, people will be interacting with machines on a regular basis—sometimes without even knowing it.
Though time and again proven untrue, this rhetoric—echoed in society as a whole—has only become more pervasive in recent years.
That it was being heard in Silicon Valley, where assertions of sexual harassment have steadily grown more pervasive, added to the attention.
David's experience, though, points to a related and more pervasive issue: the ways governments threaten, intimidate and undermine journalists and factual reporting.
As machine learning and artificial intelligence become more pervasive and influential, it's crucial to understand the potential and the reality of these technologies.
In fact, Black women are forced to grapple with a unique brand of slut-shaming that is even more pervasive in my opinion.
Google's software has been able to identify music for a while, although this rollout will see it become more pervasive across Android devices.
Davie spoke of the more pervasive cultural influences that result in women being more reluctant than men to advocate on their own behalf.
Failure to stoke faster and more pervasive recoveries since a systemic financial collapse eight years ago has already lit a fuse of discontentment.
And while shopping—like other famously addictive things—has always been a way to self-soothe, the internet's undeniably made it more pervasive.
But data shows that when Krasner's predecessors were in charge, violent crime and gun violence were even more pervasive than they are now.
"Downside risks had become more pervasive and that their persistence could ultimately also necessitate a revision to the baseline growth scenario," the ECB added.
Amazon's transformation into the world's more pervasive retail operation wouldn't be complete unless the company began a seemingly counterintuitive push from online to offline.
And to speak of either massacre more narrowly than that is to miss the greater message, the more pervasive danger and the truest stakes.
A select few — usually wealthy, male, and white — sit at the top, and as the pyramid widens, power becomes scarcer and oppression more pervasive.
But the report did not address the broader implication — that disrupting nature's patterns could extend well beyond extreme weather, with far more pervasive impacts.
But the problems involved with policing knife crimes were "much more diverse" than with gun crimes, Mr. Bratton said, because knives were more pervasive.
Kanye's influence had never been more pervasive, and his next album would usher in his imperial phase in shades of dun brown and green.
Although Green provides much of the raw material for the film, it acknowledges that he is only one part of a more pervasive problem.
By using a subtle and slightly neutralized blue, which is a very slow wavelength color, it makes that sense feel more pervasive than immediate.
As hard as it is to admit, Trump is just a symptom of a larger, more pervasive current of hatred running through America's veins.
But the extreme example actually rests on a more pervasive phenomenon — namely, the under-enforcement of the criminal law against some groups of offenders.
Unlike some of the other breakthroughs on this list, Truvada has become more pervasive and widespread throughout the decade as costs have come down.
But the climate of fear and anger Mr. Kushner summoned feels, if anything, even more pervasive today than it did when "Angels" first opened.
Copper, palladium, and more recently platinum and gold have all seen a pickup in the last three months following the more pervasive dollar weakness.
Meanwhile, a 0.8 percent gain in services last year reflects North Korea's economic shift towards capitalism as the black market there has become more pervasive.
But it's hard to be sympathetic to Nunes here, since he has remained silent on many of the far more pervasive examples of Twitter harassment.
We also need to reconcile that the behavior, highlighted by the #MeToo campaign, is not restricted to a few bad apples -- it's far more pervasive.
It changes the way you think about performance, because while one might see apps like this as an escapist experience, it might be more pervasive.
But more than that, I found it fruitful that some members of Congress seemed to recognize the more pervasive issue of so-called organic content.
Yet minds feel more crimped, fear more pervasive, possibility more limited, adventure more choreographed, politics more stale, economics more skewed, pressure more crushing, escape more elusive.
A recent New York Times investigation found that data harvested from our cell phones is used in much more pervasive ways than most people previously realized.
They are indicative of a much more pervasive and systematic refusal by Airbnb to treat the rule of law with the sort of conscientiousness it deserves.
The committee said gender harassment was more pervasive in medicine than in the other sciences, partly because harassment can come from patients, as well as colleagues.
However, as more banks shun the financing of coal projects amid government commitments to turn to cleaner energy sources, renewable energy is expected become more pervasive.
It's telling that Trump fears only the threats that can be blamed on outsiders while ignoring the more lethal, more pervasive killers that afflict the citizenry.
It's not brand new to the Facebook ecosystem, but the functionality is soon to get far more pervasive as more developers build their own effects for Facebook.
And here you said it was much more pervasive than any of us thought, the animus against Donald Trump really came through in some of these texts.
Next year the start-up will bring its tools to new areas, though, as it looks to make what it calls "augmented writing" more pervasive, Harris said.
As technology becomes more and more pervasive across industries and functions, companies like Exxon, GE, Citi, and Walmart are all racing to become technology companies as well.
The draft motion, published online this month, aims to address the new challenges that Europe's robotic workforce will present as robot technology becomes more pervasive and intelligent.
It is a more pervasive presence in America than its rivals, with branches all over the country, bringing it a degree of geographic diversification that others lack.
For less powerful groups, the degree of disquiet created by Trump is less alien, but even more pervasive -- and comes with fewer opportunities to simply switch off.
Of course, the bigger and more pervasive problem here is that the political class simply cannot get this health care thing right because... it's the political class.
This appalling ignorance hints at a much more pervasive and systemic problem: the deep and paralyzing apathy embedded in the U.S. government's attitude towards the African continent.
Why it matters: Criticism of technology's impact on society is not new, but smartphones and social media are becoming even more pervasive, particularly for children and teenagers.
With the onset of the Cold War, and of a second Red Scare more pervasive and longer-lasting than the original, Communists found themselves persecuted and isolated.
Two of the most significant predictions for the new decade are that AI will become more pervasive, and the U.S. health-care system will need to evolve.
It's worth noting that Pew's survey doesn't find that most WesternEuropean Christians hold anti-Islam views — simply that they're much more pervasive among those who identify as religious.
"Without regulatory intervention," the company's ethics board writes, "there is a risk that competition will encourage a race-to-the-bottom of more pervasive and more powerful surveillance."
Ultimately, the team's goal is to debunk some of the more pervasive myths surrounding animals — like that if you cut an earthworm in half, you get two earthworms.
As fashionable as it is to bemoan the industry's reliance on sequels and remakes, generic approaches to plot and character development are far more pervasive, and equally unsatisfying.
The EPA determined that contamination was more pervasive than originally thought, and the ground had suffered from subsidence due to mining so most buildings weren't fit for habitation.
This could be an opportunity to move that conversation beyond black and white sexual harassment and into a more murky — but arguably more pervasive and harmful — grey area.
NATO has focused more on cyber defense as cyber intrusions have become more pervasive and damaging, stoking concerns about the potential for attacks that might compromise critical infrastructure.
But this and other recent scenarios involving sexual abuse also show the lack of moral striving that seems to have become more pervasive than ever in our nation.
The second instinct, which is more pervasive, is the idealistic belief that the U.S. can unilaterally bring about favorable outcomes in places like Syria, Ukraine, Venezuela or Iran.
By 2013, its use of the tactic was considered even more pervasive than New York City's, according to Wesley G. Skogan, a political science professor at Northwestern University.
T.I.'s understanding of how sex works sounds like it's stuck somewhere in sixth grade, when the myth that the hymen is a poppable cherry is more pervasive.
But it is even more pervasive, affecting Intel chips, microprocessors from the longtime Intel rival AMD and the many chips that use designs from the British company ARM.
That's a more pervasive and destructive phenomenon than we tend to realize, and the idea of neoliberalism is the closest we have for a word that describes it.
But as drones become more pervasive, a startup called AirMap is building software and systems to help drone operators fly only where it's safe and legal to do so.
Applying that doctrine to modern technology, which is far more pervasive and ubiquitous than it was when Smith and Miller were decided in the 1970s, is an uneasy proposition.
But stricter rules for allowing this reunification imposed by the Trump administration and a more pervasive atmosphere of fear have created a bottleneck that is slowing down family reconnection.
The production deftly uses the self-consciousness of its characters to create a more pervasive, self-examining consciousness about the artistic process that sets the rhythms for their dialogue.
The tech industry in 2018 is bigger, more pervasive and far more dangerous than it was when he started in the job only a few years ago, he writes.
Like social networks or email, smart gadgets offer convenience and comfort, at the price of turning everything done with them into fuel for an ever more pervasive data economy.
But as parties have become more uniform, Americans more geographically sorted by ideology and cable news more pervasive, even school-board elections have turned into referendums on national arguments.
But the more pervasive grievance, the one that seems to cut across all Hamtramck's varied groups, is frustration with how the city is perceived and portrayed from the outside.
Solnit acknowledges failures of empathy in extreme circumstances (for example, the Isla Vista shooter who massacred six people in the name of misogyny), but it's much more pervasive than that.
As connectivity gets better, as screens get more pervasive and things, you can expect we will follow the consumer needs and wants to create a great experience for those verticals.
Those professed Catholics in Congress who talk about religion but fail to act on its core tenets betray a more pervasive kind of anti-Catholic bias that is often overlooked.
Pornography was a political hot button topic from the 1960s until the 1990s, when changes in censorship law and new technologies like video recording made erotic imagery much more pervasive.
Slightly less noxious but vastly more pervasive, the smell of the brown marmorated stinkbug is often likened to that of cilantro, chiefly because the same chemical is present in both.
"I do not view it primarily through a competitive lens — technology today is much more pervasive, and the top five companies by market cap are all very different," he said.
Palmer and Norman both said in interviews that the impact of Brexit would be more complicated, more pervasive and take longer to play out than policymakers and the public appreciated.
Get ready for Chrome OS to get a lot more pervasive and a lot more interesting this year, if only because it's going to show up in new kinds of hardware.
But no one raises a fuss despite corporate intrusion into private lives being way more pervasive than anything the FBI ever did during my 28-year career in counterterrorism and counterintelligence.
It's a combo that has besieged Japan for the past six years even after aggressive monetary stimulus — and JPMorgan's alert to investors is that it's poised to be more pervasive.4.
" Wray said China's espionage efforts are much more pervasive, pointing to economic-espionage investigations in all 50 states that include "everything from corn seeds in Iowa to wind turbines in Massachusetts.
Many people were still unfamiliar with ASMR at the time, and the pickle crunching was a perfect entry for the surreal meme humor that has become more pervasive over the years. 
Wildfires have been even more pervasive in 244 in central and northern Europe than last year, including the United Kingdom, Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Malta, the Netherlands, Poland and Germany.
"Negative attitudes toward Islam are more pervasive in Italy than elsewhere in Europe," said Neha Sahgal, associate director for research at the Pew Center, who was a conductor of the survey.
And the first one is the IG report really tells us that the problems at the FBI and the Department of Justice were more pervasive and problematic than any of us realized.
"It's going to be far more pervasive in terms of what data aggregators know about you and how they can influence your lives," said Rob Spalding, senior fellow at the Hudson Institute.
As the impact of technology on business becomes more pervasive, a policy of sitting things out to see who the winners are in the end carries more risk today than ever before.
As previously mentioned, it's illegal to be gay in Pakistan, as well as India, Iran, and Afghanistan to name a few, and social taboos can be even more pervasive than the laws.
Digital blackface extends the historical and ongoing minstrel practice that gives it its name, but new technology also "presents whole new type of animal, more dangerous and more pervasive" than anything before.
And with soaring land values, coveted beachfront locations already built on and surging demand for new and bigger houses with copious amenities, teardowns in the area have become more pervasive than ever.
While the -900 was becoming more pervasive, some airlines decided to hold out for the larger A350 variant that was to make its commercial debut in 2018, the Airbus A350-1000 XWB.
New York (CNN Business)Bill Gates says the US government must step up its regulation of big tech companies, whose influence in culture, business and all areas of life is becoming more pervasive.
Her gender and the historic nature of the possibility of the first woman president will be an even more pervasive campaign message if the unpopular-among-women Donald Trump is the GOP nominee.
This is all a part of the ambient intelligence future where technology fades into the fabric of daily life, becoming both more pervasive and less overt, present wherever you are and always accessible.
There is some countervailing evidence, that relative rankings of corruption do have some validity: diplomats from countries where corruption is seen as more pervasive are less likely to pay parking fines, for example.
Rapid price gains in Toronto suggest the market has entered a phase in which these "extrapolative expectations" are becoming more pervasive and speculative buying is taking place, the bank said in the report.
Editorial Grinding poverty in the United States has long been synonymous with the Deep South, where low wages, poor health and diminished opportunity are more pervasive than in other parts of the country.
Roughly a year since stories of harassment and discrimination at work started to dominate the headlines, professionals in entertainment say the problems facing their industry are more pervasive than what you might think.
But following the revelation that the contamination is at least 4-years-old and more pervasive than originally stated, a public health expert said it may be necessary to test many more kids.
Through the return of women's social organizations and the formalization of whisper networks, female solidarity is more pervasive than ever, a byproduct of girl power and the cumulation of years of quiet rebellion.
Digital tracking has since become far more pervasive and intertwined with peoples' daily lives — advertisements follow them from their computers to their phones and even their TVs — and often, it can feel inescapable.
Struggling to find qualified personnel to fill cybersecurity roles is nothing new, as it has become a problem for the public and private sectors as cybersecurity threats have become more pervasive and advanced.
Countless numbers of these intelligences are being built and programmed; they are only going to get smarter and more pervasive; they're going to be better than us, but they'll never be just like us.
But as health care costs have risen and ride-hail has become more pervasive, people are increasingly relying on Uber and Lyft drivers to get them to the hospital when they need emergency care.
This desire for validation and a record of attendance has always existed in some form or another – as ticket stub and programme collectors will attest – but it seems more pervasive, and problematic, than before.
When anyone says it's so much worse now than it ever was, it feels worse because it's more pervasive and we're all implicated in it and it's quicker and it's surround sound of this.
Windows Ink, the ability to use the Bluetooth Surface Pen to mark up apps, images and documents; take notes; draw; and create impressive art, is more pervasive than ever in Windows 10 Fall Creators Update.
Though when we think of technology today, we often assume the Internet, social media, or mobile telephony, technologies are far more pervasive and universal than that—writing is a technology, the wheel is a technology.
It's all so much bigger and more pervasive than Pokémon Go, but perhaps the app has a role to play in our understanding of the vastness of the problem, and our desire to control it.
The Senate Intelligence Committee vice chairman has made it very clear that Russian attacks on the U.S. election system were even more pervasive than leaked National Security Agency documents published by The Intercept revealed. Sen.
It's all so much bigger and more pervasive than Pokémon Go, but perhaps the app has a role to play in our understanding of the vastness of the problem, and our desire to control it.
"With this faster, more pervasive intelligence embedded directly into devices, the potential to make our world safer, more productive and more personal is limitless," Intel Movidius exec Remi El-Ouazzane wrote in a blog post.
The defining music of the first half of the 20th century was jazz; the defining music of the second half of the 21977th century was rock, but with an ideology and saturation far more pervasive.
As social media becomes a "more pervasive part of day to day life," said Paul Barrett of New York University's Stern Center for Business and Human Rights, the potential damage caused by disinformation becomes greater.
While explicit bias remains part of the fabric of life in the United States, elected leaders and chiefs of police have increasingly focused on what is often called implicit bias, inherently unintentional yet more pervasive.
Workforce development: Both the League of Cities and Conference of Mayors emphasized the importance of skills training and apprenticeships to help prepare workers for jobs of the future as AI and automation become more pervasive.
"JUUL's targeting of Native American Tribes was more pervasive than initially known," investigators concluded, noting that Juul's moves to hand out free products were a violation of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act.
Altering people's looks to cheat cameras has become increasingly popular with artists and designers in recent years, as the use of facial recognition has grown more pervasive, raising fears over privacy, according to fashion experts.
Altering people's looks to cheat cameras has become increasingly popular with artists and designers in recent years, as the use of facial recognition has grown more pervasive, raising fears over privacy, according to fashion experts.
"This shows that the forces that are restraining many economies are a lot harder to contend with and more pervasive than many people were hoping or believing," said Roberto Perli, a partner in Cornerstone Macro.
Developments in artificial intelligence, deep learning, analytics algorithms and the like point to a more pervasive and yet more subtle type of software that more easily adapts to us, rather than the other way around.
It doesn't even touch the creation of fake accounts, and fake pages, which in many ways is the more pervasive and insidious effort, but figuring out a way to legislate around that, that gets dicier.
But even more pervasive are the effects of physical theft of sensitive paperwork from desks or cars, insiders stealing data for financial gain, and mistakes, like sending sensitive information to the wrong person, the report found.
The latter Newman is better situated thanks to a war movie that makes more pervasive use of his music, but I think the Globes are down to clown and will go for Gudnadottir's "Joker" score instead.
Developments in artificial intelligence, deep learning, analytics algorithms and the like instead point to a more pervasive and yet more subtle type of software that more easily adapts to us, rather than the other way around.
That said, I think Allen and VandeHei are reflecting on and responding to a more pervasive sentiment within the Washington political class, and one that I share: Given how Trump is behaving, shouldn't his numbers be lower?
Given the rise of the popularity of tattoos in our culture—they're way more pervasive, commonplace, and mainstream—as with anything else, as ink becomes more mainstream, legal issues are bound to crop up more and more.
Still, Weinstein's disgrace is a sign that even if patriarchal sociopathy is more pervasive than we like to imagine, it can be defeated when a culture adopts other values and is forced to live up to them.
So, the more people around him who get convicted of crimes, and the more pervasive the criminality within an organization, the harder it is for any boss to get away with the "I had no idea" defense.
Image: GoogleBeyond Gmail, Google Maps, and YouTube, Google Assistant is shaping up to be one of the most important Google products in the years ahead, and it's already more pervasive and more advanced than you might have realized.
"As social data becomes more pervasive and powerful, we actively seek out new ways to help our clients leverage this information for their own investing decisions," John Hart, managing director, trading and product development at TD Ameritrade said.
Soltani, then serving as an F.T.C. technologist, worked on both investigations, and his efforts helped highlight a more pervasive problem: Most consumers simply didn't have the time or experience to navigate the personal-data economy on their own.
The Department of Justice is investigating a banking unit of Wells Fargo after the bank's review found that employees' altering of documents was a more pervasive practice than previously thought, according to The Wall Street Journal on Thursday.
While the change in the tax code may have had an immediate financial impact on Gold Star families this year, it may be a consequence of a more pervasive problem with how survivors benefits are classified and paid out.
The popular perception of racism as mostly the product of the kind of monstrous people who, say, would drive into a crowd of pedestrians in Charlottesville, Virginia, makes it difficult to address the more pervasive daily practices of it.
In order for those minority voices to seem more pervasive and influential, look for them to continue to join together, like Hungary's Viktor Orbán and Italy's Matteo Salvini, against the global, liberal establishment as next year's European Parliament elections edge closer.
She added that an uptick in cases doesn't mean Legionella bacteria is more pervasive, but that people are likely becoming more health-literate and going to doctors as soon as they notice symptoms, causing more cases to be reported overall.
Amazon does listen to what you tell Alexa — sort of As "smart" tech products at home, from speakers to microwaves, become more pervasive, consumers have begun to wonder whether the companies behind those devices are eavesdropping on what they say.
The question, then, is how the league continues to prevent the perception, real or otherwise, that games might be influenced by gamblers, while also adapting to a changing world in which casinos and gambling in general are becoming more pervasive.
If you are wondering if violence in America and around the world is more pervasive today than you can remember, just read the headlines from one day's news and judge for yourself: In the United States, FBI statistics confirm your hunch.
Especially at the low end, there's a lot of incentive for manufacturers to pile on extra software in a bid to make those devices more profitable — but that could cut against Google's efforts to make its own services more pervasive and popular.
The cowardly shootings our nation has witnessed — in a synagogue, in a black church, and on a baseball diamond — along with the mailed pipe bombs, are extreme manifestations of a deeper more pervasive attack on American values of tolerance, reasoned discussion, and nonviolence.
On Thursday, I wrote that President Trump's remarks on immigration from "shithole" countries was emblematic of a larger, more pervasive, and more dangerous viewpoint on the intersection of immigration and race: Trump isn't just expressing what some conservatives view as "politically incorrect" sentiments.
WASHINGTON — Russian efforts to interfere in American politics were more pervasive on Instagram and other social media platforms than previously known and showed a clear preference for Donald Trump during the last presidential election, according to a pair of new reports prepared for the Senate.
Also, towards the end of the exhibition, a back wall displayed war photos, an uninspired and obvious move that doesn't get at the more pervasive mythology that is embedded in our popular culture, a mythology that the rest of the show begins to examine.
And as games have gotten both more pervasive and more complex, inviting us to spend more and more time playing them, a new gaming debate has emerged, one separate from the moral panic that continues to persist: Might games actually be good for us?
Also, I have a theory—unproven, for sure—but it seems to be more pervasive in communities that somehow have been through some trauma, whether that trauma is the closing of a factory, or the failing of a tourism industry, or whatever it is.
"Chattanooga and other cities were perhaps wise to get a first-mover advantage in stealing businesses from other cities, but as the deployment of fiber networks becomes more pervasive the first- or early-mover advantages of cities with municipal broadband networks is diminished," he wrote.
But the killing may reveal a more pervasive problem: the shortcomings of a neighborhood policing program that Mayor Bill de Blasio has pitched as a cure for excessive police force, but which often plays no role in the hurried encounters that determine whether someone lives or dies.
But concerns about how AI is trained as it becomes an ever more pervasive force in our daily lives will only continue to raise alarms, especially as most of how this technology works remains beyond closed doors and improves using methods Amazon is loathe to ever disclose.
There are numerous reasons to believe that he hurt Trump more than he hurt Clinton, especially when one considers that #NeverTrump was always a stronger and more pervasive phenomenon than #NeverHillary, and the bulk of those #NeverTrump voters seem to have wound up on Johnson's doorstep.
"Consumer discretionary, health care, and telecoms are the only sectors generating real earnings growth right now, so it's a little bit more pervasive than this, even though the short-term volatility sure has an element of the [Deutsche Bank] announcement to it," he told "Squawk Box."
As the Cypherpunks' most frequent contributor, and at the group's in-person meetings in the Bay Area, Mr. May advocated using cryptography to spread government secrets, as WikiLeaks later did, and to evade surveillance of individuals, which he believed would become more pervasive with the spread of computers.
Interviews with law enforcement officials, educators, researchers, students and a gunman's mother, as well as a review of court documents, academic studies and the writings of killers and would-be killers, show that the school-shooting copycat syndrome has grown more pervasive and has steadily escalated in recent years.
We must take more care to understand that those who are harassed or abused by women may feel a particular kind of shame, and don't experience the harassment or abuse identically to a woman who is harassed or abused by a man – a more pervasive, but at least better-understood, dynamic.
"As evidenced by this investigation, the threats we face have never been more severe, or more pervasive, or more potentially damaging to our national security, and no country poses a broader, more severe long-term threat to our nation's economy and cyber infrastructure than China," FBI Director Christopher Wray said during a press conference Thursday.
While Measure is a great indicator of how mobile AR can add value to people's lives today—you hold up your phone, you get the length of that couch or the height of those drapes, you're done—AR's more pervasive future likely hinges on being there when we need it, no pocket pullout required.
"Clearly as we all learn more about the sexual harassment issue across the country, it is both more pervasive than most people would have thought a year ago, and it's an issue that's been allowed to perpetuate itself in part because the voices of victims have been silenced," Smith told Axios in an interview.
But the larger, more pervasive scandal in New York State, to borrow from the writer Michael Kinsley, is not what's criminal but what's perfectly legal: the influence of powerful players funneling political contributions to lawmakers through limited liability companies that avoid restrictions on corporate donations, and through personal donations for which the state sets an excessively high limit.
But because they are salacious — because they are embodied, because we can actually see them — I wonder if we spend more time discussing them than another gray-zone problem that, in my view, is far more pervasive and often less easily solved with a sharp rebuke or a complaint to human resources: not being taken seriously.
Given the current regulatory, legal and political climate in our country, and while technology becomes increasingly more pervasive in our society, there is an urgent need for members of the tech community to devote greater attention to what's happening in Washington, D.C. All branches of government — legislative, executive and judicial — contend with a host of weighty issues that carry high-stakes consequences for the industry.
Given how much more pervasive web live streaming and mobile devices are than they were seven years ago, and given an expected increase in US visitors to the country because Markle's an American, the viewership and economic figures could be higher this time, though probably not as high as the billions of viewers and billions in economic growth some credulous observers have predicted the wedding will generate.
Amid all the commentary of the past week, one of the more pervasive themes has been the view that Markle, as a feminist, should not be marrying into such a patriarchal institution as the British monarchy (although in recent years, it has become less patriarchal, by overhauling the rules on male primogeniture and giving older sisters the right to succeed to the throne ahead of their younger brothers).
This scenario may not be exactly playing out like this in 2030, of course—it is indeed likely that the Internet will be a lot more pervasive than today, extending to many of the objects of our daily life and the basic infrastructures organizing our societies, but a lot of the technology I mention may very well not be the one we envisage and manipulate in the present day.
The 49ers organization has stepped up in many cases and provided help, particularly in crisis cases, but this has been in response to what are essentially the worst symptoms of a much deeper and more pervasive problem: a lack of commitment and a failure by the N.F.L. and the players union to respond to support the players who contributed so much to building the league into what it is today.
" The mayor wouldn't talk to CNN on camera, but in a letter to EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy that was obtained by CNN, he says Region 5 "received soil sampling data in December of 2014, showing that lead contamination within the West Calumet Housing Complex is extremely more pervasive, severe, and extensive than identified by the EPA's prior inadequate sampling, yet failed to share such data with the city until May 24, 2016.
"This president has presided over an era in which universal tracking is becoming more pervasive, not just from intelligence agencies but also at the level of local law enforcement," said Ben Wizner, the director of the speech, privacy and technology project at the American Civil Liberties Union and the chief legal adviser to Edward J. Snowden, a former government contractor who revealed in 2013 that United States intelligence agencies had created a mass surveillance system to comb through Americans' phone records and international internet traffic.

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