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Can't Surf, Won't Surf
Which? Online's 2000 Annual Internet Survey Reports That 15 Million Britons Say They Won't be Getting On The Internet
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British Business At Risk From Security Apathy
Compaq Survey Reveals Lax Attitude Toward Data Security
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Retirement Market Confused About Open Market Option
Newly launched retirement specialist, Evergreen Retirement Assurance, backed by Britannic plc Group, has commissioned extensive research into awareness and attitudes on open market option in a nation-wide MORI poll.
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Revealed - Britain's Happy Homeowners
Whatever's happened to the great British reserve? We are a nation of happy homeowners - and, what's more, we're prepared to admit it.
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Britain Struck Down By E-Apathy - 93% Of Brits Don't Want To Be Part Of The New Economy
The internet revolution is a subject of massive indifference to most people, according to new research for business web site FT.com published today. Despite the perceived fame and fortune associated with the dotcom industry, the nation is gripped by the phenomenon of e-apathy, in which people surveyed about the internet said they either didn't know or didn't care about the subject.
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Internet To Change Borrowing Behaviour
Consumers are not shopping around for the best deal when arranging personal finance a survey revealed today, but this looks set to change as the Internet makes borrowers sharpen up when looking for a personal loan.
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Huge Public Opposition To Basic Principles Of The World Trade Organisation
Globalisation has hit the headlines in recent months, with the demonstrations in Seattle late last year and, over the last few days, at the IMF and World Bank meetings in Washington. But public opinion has rarely been sought on the subject.
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SMEs Are Flocking To Buy And Sell Via The Internet
Survey commissioned by SME champion, mondus.co.uk, reveals 80% of SMEs would trade-unions online if there was a simple way to do it.
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Lawyers Endorse Woolf Reforms As A Positive Change And In-House Welcome Judicial Powers To Introduce ADR
The MORI CEDR Civil Justice Audit is an independent assessment of attitudes and perceptions by experienced legal practitioners - both in-house and external - focusing on the effects the new Civil Procedure Rules (CPR) have had on the cost and speed of the settlement of cases. In particular, the survey focuses on how the use of mediation fits into their overall practice.