甲、乙积怨已久,一天甲到乙单位大闹,砸坏了乙的电脑。乙起诉要求甲赔偿财产损失,法院审理后,判决认定乙的诉讼请求成立。判决生效后,乙认为自己不仅财产上受到损失,精神上也受到损害,于是又向法院起诉,要求甲赔偿因该侵权行为导致的精神损害费一万元。关于本案,以下哪种观点是正确的( )
A. 精神损害应当赔偿,人民法院对乙的起诉应当受理
B. 乙之前在侵权诉讼中没有提出精神损害赔偿请求,此时,人民法院对乙的起诉不应当受理
C. 对于该起诉是否受理,要区分受害人甲是否在诉前意识到精神损害的存在。如果没有意识到,就可以向法院起诉;如果已经意识到,但当时没有请求的,人民法院不应当受理
D. 在前诉中没有提出精神损害赔偿请求,但声明保留的,人民法院对关于精神损害的起诉应予受理
·Read the following article about real-time information and the questions on the opposite page.·For each question 15-20, mark one letter (A, B, C or D ) on your Answer Sheet for the answer you choose.Over the past several years, I have interviewed dozens of senior executives of Fortune 1,000 companies and asked two questions: "Is there information that would help you run your company far better if you had it in real time, and, if m, what is it" Without exception, they answered yes to the first question, then ticked off the one to three items they wanted. Dave Dorman at AT&T said he wanted real-time customer transaction information, such as contract renewals and cancellations. Rick Wagoner at GM wanted real-time progress reports on new vehicle development. Others on his senior team wanted certain narrowly defined data on product quality and productivity. Dick Notebaert at Qwest wanted customer satisfaction numbers. The CEO of a well-known services business wished he had real- time transaction volume data on a limited group of his best customers, while the CEO of an events business wanted to see minute-by-minute tracking of how much show-floor space has been sold.Oddly, though, very few of the executives I’ve spoken with receive the real-time information they say they could use (notable exceptions include some of the executives mentioned above, who now get their data). Why aren’t they getting it Clearly, these managers could direct corporate resources toward acquiring any data sets they wanted. The answer is that neither they, nor those who support them, are asking the fight questions. Although they agree, when prompted, that they need real-time information, in practice their reflex is to respond to business events after the fact rather than detect them as they unfold. Instead of asking, "How can we react faster" they should be asking, "What real-time information will allow us to detect critical events the instant they occur"The danger in asking the latter question, of course, is that the executive may quickly drown in a torrent of data. The solution is to carefully identify the precise and minimum information that’s required — only those data that would cause the executive to change a judgment or a course of action (what accountants would call "material" information). Examples might include real-time sales results, new customer sign ups, shifts in petroleum prices, or any information that, if instantly available, would keep a CEO from getting in trouble with the board. My research suggests, and interviews with CEOs confirm, that one needs to receive only a very small amount of information in real time to avoid trouble or exploit an opportunity.Here’s an example. In eBay’s early days, the company often received complaints about offensive items that were put up for auction, especially those tied to tragic news events. Maynard Webb, eBay’s chief operating officer, told me that, in response, a team was created to conduct real-time news monitoring and to warn executives when problem items appeared. This real-tree detection and rapid response strategy have paid off in many instances, most notably after the collapse of the World Trade Center and the shuffle Columbia disaster. Webb and other senior executives were notified immediately when offensive items appeared (World Trade Center rubble showed up just 20 minutes after the first tower fell), and they had them removed before eBay’s 1range could be harmed.If you’re not tracking real-time information already, start. Don’t assume that it’s too granular to merit your attention, that me else in the company is already monitoring it, or that it simply doesn’t exist. Identify what it is that you need. Then ask for it. In the first paragraph, the writer mentions the companies to show that real-time information
A. concerns customers and business transactions.
B. is helpful to these companies.
C. means different things in different professions.
D. provides practical information.