The Internet revolution is going to be like all the other revolutions we have seen in history. It's going to be over before a lot of us even know it started.
I don't go online, I don't read reviews, I try not to look at anything on the Internet.
I don't immerse myself in the Internet chatter because it opens you up to a whole source of danger.
Obviously there's so much about me on the Internet that you can turn against me, and you can make me into any person you want.
There is a significant momentum behind the social Internet. A wide range of public investors were very enthusiastic about that.
Pussy Riot is against the cult of consumerism and the commercialization of art. Our performances were always open for everyone and anyone can see our video clips for free on the Internet.
I know that the internet has helped a new world audience find me.
The person on the shrine is myself. I listen to my own music constantly. I made a whole other record already. I look at myself on the internet constantly, so much so that I actually physically hate my face. It's like I've become apart from myself. I can't even live up to myself.
We should set a national goal of making computers and Internet access available for every American . . . we must help all Americans gain the skills they need to make the most of the connection.
I think the large part of the function of the Internet is it is archival. It's unreliable to the extent that word on the street is unreliable. It's no more unreliable than that. You can find the truth on the street if you work at it. I don't think of the Internet or the virtual as being inherently inferior to the so-called real.
It's too easy to trivialize people. The Internet does it all the time.
One thing that the Internet has created is the sense that information is at your fingertips, when it's really only a very, very limited, specific, and slanted kind of information.
The future is electronic. It's radio, television and the Internet; it's not really newspapers anymore.
Here, all of a sudden, we have a revolution in - in communication, and it is - it is really, truly big. Internet is as big as the introduction of fire to the human race, or the introduction of electricity into our lives.
[Internet] is amazing as much as human beings can be amazing, and it's debased and depraved and vile as human beings can be.
Fragility of modern world leaves me with the idea we'd better anticipate what's going on. We take our right steps today and now. And we'd better avoid, that we are overdependent on, let's say, the internet.
Some businesses offer such a lousy customer experience that they are prime candidates for competition from Internet based stores.
For people who are desperate and searching, sexuality on the Internet offers an incredible release.
The great thing about the Guggenheim is that you can see art in the fastest way if you want to. Which isn't bad. It's almost like Frank Lloyd Wright didn't know something called the Internet was going to exist, so he made it so you can go down as fast as possible.
I spent half my life without the internet, it was pretty much the same thing just a whole lot slower and a whole lot more intense!
I think my generation was one of the last to remember the first days of the internet.
One of the paradoxes that makes the internet such a suggestive place is that, on the one hand, we perceive it as perpetually in motion and changing, and, on the other hand, it has this god-like immortality to it: It seems like it won't die and is not subject to decay, and that everything can be unwound, unlike present-tense experience, where you can't archive the present moment, you can't go back and read it over again. That's the fundamental hallmark of the internet.
The Internet reflects the societies in which we live, and so the content on the Net and some of the abuses that you see on the Net are reflections of that.
I don't like to read the Internet; I'm not aware of what's going on.
There are a lot of idiots on the Internet getting a lot of attention.