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因此,背后的主導(dǎo)力量是網(wǎng)絡(luò)超級(jí)大國(guó),只有一個(gè),就是美國(guó)。當(dāng)它們被破壞,真正糟糕的事就會(huì)發(fā)生了,你的工廠會(huì)爆炸,無(wú)論你的操作員或安全系統(tǒng)都無(wú)法注意到這一點(diǎn),這很可怕??傊?,我們找到了這兩個(gè)數(shù)字彈頭,實(shí)際上是針對(duì)同一個(gè)目標(biāo),但從不同角度。我們也看到了這次攻擊的目標(biāo),實(shí)際上進(jìn)行的相當(dāng)緩慢、低調(diào),顯然為了達(dá)成目標(biāo),快把維修工程師逼瘋了,因?yàn)樗麄儫o(wú)法迅速找出答案。如果你曾聽(tīng)過(guò)Stuxnet的釋放程序,是復(fù)雜、高科技的,讓我跟你們說(shuō)明一下。因此,我們從Windows釋放程序開(kāi)始,讓病毒載體進(jìn)入灰色方塊中,破壞離心機(jī),延遲伊朗的核計(jì)劃,任務(wù)完成,很簡(jiǎn)單,對(duì)吧?我想說(shuō)明我們是如何發(fā)現(xiàn)這個(gè)的,當(dāng)我們?cè)诎肽昵伴_(kāi)始研究Stuxnet時(shí),對(duì)這個(gè)東西的攻擊目標(biāo)一無(wú)所知,唯一了解的是它在Windows的部份非常、非常復(fù)雜,釋放程序部份使用多個(gè)零日漏洞,它似乎想要做些什么,用這些灰色方塊,這些實(shí)時(shí)控制系統(tǒng),因此,這引起我們的注意,我們開(kāi)始了一個(gè)實(shí)驗(yàn)計(jì)劃,我們用Stuxnet感染我們的系統(tǒng)并審視結(jié)果,然后一些非常有趣的事發(fā)生了。這些裝置與運(yùn)作我們城市和國(guó)家的基礎(chǔ)設(shè)施有密切關(guān)系,這使它們逐漸成為一場(chǎng)新興且具高度復(fù)雜型態(tài)的電子戰(zhàn)爭(zhēng)攻擊目標(biāo)。如果大家對(duì)此專(zhuān)欄有何建議的話,歡迎大家在下面留言,或是電郵至OTP at TEDtoChina dot 我們下期再見(jiàn)。)” Smits 修復(fù)雨林透過(guò)復(fù)雜的生態(tài)學(xué),生物學(xué)家Willie Smits發(fā)掘一個(gè)重新植林的快捷方式,在婆羅洲救回了許多棲息于當(dāng)?shù)氐募t毛猩猩,進(jìn)而創(chuàng)造出一個(gè)得以修復(fù)脆弱生態(tài)系統(tǒng)的藍(lán)圖。由于珍古道爾(Jane Goodall):英國(guó)生物學(xué)家、動(dòng)物行為學(xué)家和著名動(dòng)物保育人士。而生物學(xué)家愛(ài)德華阿爾同學(xué)們,今后讓我們努力學(xué)習(xí)科學(xué)知識(shí),勤于觀察,勇于探索,用創(chuàng)新點(diǎn)綴人生,讓科技融入理想!我的演講完畢,謝謝大家!第三篇:Photosthatchangedtheworld(改變世界的照片TED演講)Photos that changed the world Good moring, name is Xiehonglan,I e from Fuzhou, the capital city of Fujian faces the island of Taiwan,off the China area nurtures many eminent scholars and politicians of the Chinese contemporary history,such as Yanfu,BinXing and Lin love my graduated from Nankai my topic is Photos that changed the world To start with, I want to ask a you believe images can change the world? However, the truth is that we know that the images themselves don’t change the world, but we are also aware that, since the beginning of photography, images have provoked reactions in people, and those reactions have caused change to let’s begin with a group of images, they are so wellknown, you might even recognize them in a different I think we are looking for something are looking for images that shine an unpromising light on crucial issues, images that transcend borders, that transcend religions, images that provoke us to step up and do other words, to , this image, you have all changed our view of the physical have never seen our planet from this perspective people credit a lot of the birth of the environmental movement to our seeing the planet like this for the first time, its smallness, its years later, this groupare aware of the destructive power that our species can wield over our images taken by Brent Stirton in the Congo, these gorillas were murdered, some would even say crucified, and unsurprisingly, they sparked international , images have power to shed light of understanding on suspicion, ignorance, and in particularthe issue of HIV/ the 1980s, people avoided talking about the simple act, in 1987, of the most famous woman in the world, the Princess of Wales, touching an HIV/AIDS infected baby, did a great deal, especially in Europe, to stop , better than most, knew the power of an when we are confronted by a powerful image, we all have a can look away, or we can address the , when these photos appeared in the Guardian in 1998, they put a lot of focus and attention, and in the end, a lot of money, towards the Sudan famine relief the images change the world? No, but they had a major Adams said, “you don’t take a photograph, you make it.” In my view, it’s not the photographer who makes the photo, it’s bring to each image, our own values, our own belief systems, and as a result of that, the image resonates with us.第四篇:TED演講綠色未來(lái)(A Greener Future?)大家好,我是Zach。我們每天都生活并享受在科技的成果中。re seeing another playout of that :還有一件事歸根結(jié)底,在狩獵及采集社會(huì)中,人們一生中通常有2到3個(gè)伴侶他們并不是兩兩相對(duì)的。s no question about it that this is a were millions ofyears where you found that sweet boy at the other side of the water hole, andyou went for 。sinteresting, the millennials actually want to be very good parents, whereas thegeneration above them wants to have a very fine marriage but is not as focusedon being a good see all of these :是的,這一點(diǎn)毫無(wú)疑問(wèn)但有趣的是,如今千禧一代非??释蔀楹细竦募议L(zhǎng),而他們的上一代人希望有個(gè)美滿的婚姻,但卻不向他們一樣專(zhuān)注于成為合格的家長(zhǎng),你可以看到這些細(xì)微的差別。超過(guò)97%的人都表示想找尊重自己、值得信任的、能交心的、能逗你笑的、花時(shí)間陪自己的以及長(zhǎng)相看著順眼的人。ve changed, thatwe now want a person to love, and for thousands of years, we had to marry theright person from the right background and right kin in fact,in my studies of 5,000 people every year, I ask them, 39。當(dāng)我在聽(tīng)你演講的時(shí)候我想到了這些,正如語(yǔ)言重現(xiàn)現(xiàn)實(shí)一樣。在這種狀態(tài)下,強(qiáng)調(diào)情感關(guān)系中的不界定屬性但同時(shí)能讓你維持這段關(guān)系以及自由做出選擇的空間。the right one?39。t change, but the context and the way we regulatethese relationships changes a ,即主要由責(zé)任和義務(wù)集體和忠誠(chéng)主義支配的模式。誒斯特每個(gè)人都有困擾,但我認(rèn)為詩(shī)人蘭德?tīng)朜obody gets out alive.39。m not a Pollyanna。Along with this, we see a rise of a host ofbeliefs: the belief of virginity at marriage, arranged marriagesstrictlyarranged marriagesthe belief that the man is the head of the household,that the wife39。s actuallywomen piling into the job market in cultures around the millions ofyears, our ancestors lived in little hunting and gathering to work to gather their fruits and came home with 60to 80 percent of the evening doubleine family was the were regarded as just as economically, socially and sexually powerful ,甚至也不是“慢慢愛(ài)”的結(jié)果。Would youremarry the person you39。re seeing is a real expansion of the premitment stage before you tie marriage used to be the beginning of a relationship, now it39。s singles want to know every single thing about a partner beforethey learn a lot between the sheets, not only about how somebody makeslove, but whether they39??偛粫?huì)是那么多人都喪失了理智?And I stumbled, then, on a statistic thatreally came home to was a very interesting academic article in which Ifound that 67 percent of singles in America today who are living longterm withsomebody, have not yet married because they are terrified of 39。我們調(diào)查了5000多人,這是基于美國(guó)統(tǒng)計(jì)局的代表性樣本。slow love.39。 and you don39。我認(rèn)為它尤為重要。s got very good verbal skills and people skills, who39。And as it turns out, those who were veryexpressive of the dopamine system tend to be curious, creative, spontaneous,energeticI would imagin