Over the past few decades, we have seen the transition from industrial work to information technology work, from industrial technology work to information technology. Why is educated experts going out of work Why is this happening? According to Rifkin, he believes that the work is going to be over. Our extensive unemployment, factory automation, and dissolution of the middle class are three important points.
Digital agriculture may become a competitive industry. This is very important in the industry experienced the wave of large integration during the past decades. However, we are at the forefront of digital weapons competition, and as companies control seeds and pesticides, there are possibilities for some large pesticide groups to lead digital agricultural tools soon . A joint company of Bayer and Monsanto is very interested in managing farmer information through a data driven revolution to maximize profit. In the world where companies such as Facebook are criticized by Congress for exploiting personal data through the platform there is no room to focus on the data we need for our food supply. The Department of Justice needs to listen to the overwhelming concern of farmers that the post-merger company will manage data on farm practices and occupy one product's advantage to increase sales of other products.
Bayer, Monsanto, Big Data: Who will dominate our food system in the era of digital agriculture and large scale merger?
It is obvious to me that over the past several decades, these industries have undergone fundamental worldwide transformation. In the decades after World War II, the machine tool industry is dominated by US companies such as Warner & Swasey and Wiedemann (now a member of the Bendix Automation Group) and internationally recognized as a leader in that field . However, as Germany and Japan recovered from World War II and became industrialized, they began to compete with the United States and began offering more advanced automatic machine tools than American suppliers. For some reason, manufacturers in the United States have not invested effectively in machine tools and automation technology, so market share to major international companies such as Toshiba in Japan, Siemens in Germany, high-tech companies like Sweden and Switzerland It continues to expand.