How to Use cyberspace in a Sentence
cyberspace
noun- We send e-mails through cyberspace.
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Whether that's in trade, whether that's in the South China Sea, whether that's in cyberspace.
— CBS News, 4 Oct. 2019 -
And so that is why the future of conflict is not just in cyberspace.
— CBS News, 27 Apr. 2022 -
When cyberspace was closed down, the sedition was stopped.
— Jon Gambrell, The Seattle Times, 28 Jan. 2018 -
In a second Cold War, the proxy wars will likely be fought in cyberspace.
— Matt Georgy, Forbes, 19 July 2022 -
In 2011 there was a new bad guy in cyberspace behind the website Silk Road.
— CBS News, 10 Nov. 2020 -
Based on a quick look around cyberspace, there are a lot of people U-M can prove wrong.
— Kirkland Crawford, Detroit Free Press, 2 Apr. 2018 -
Iran will disrupt more tanker traffic in the Persian Gulf and hit the U.S. in cyberspace.
— Ian Bremmer, Time, 6 Jan. 2020 -
In cyberspace, the advantage goes to those that have speed and agility.
— ABC News, 21 Nov. 2021 -
This is just one campaign in a long battle in cyberspace.
— CBS News, 20 Dec. 2020 -
The squalling protest of the status quo is one of the group’s signature themes — in this case, the social dangers of cyberspace.
— Christa Titus, Billboard, 25 Mar. 2022 -
But clearly, cyberspace has long been a dog-eat-dog world, and there’s nothing left but cats.
— Angela Hill, The Mercury News, 13 June 2017 -
Or, perhaps, fun and games were the best uses for cyberspace after all.
— Cecilia D'anastasio, Wired, 10 Jan. 2022 -
The coming age would exist in cyberspace, and the landscape would be littered with eye phones, not iPhones.
— Jordan Crucchiola, Wired News, 17 Apr. 2015 -
My invitation didn’t get lost in the mail or in cyberspace.
— Abigail Van Buren, oregonlive, 23 Aug. 2020 -
For years, Andy Parker has been on a crusade to cleanse cyberspace of the disturbing footage.
— Chris Harris, PEOPLE.com, 24 Feb. 2022 -
The United States is not a unitary actor in cyberspace.
— The Washington Post, The Denver Post, 13 Mar. 2017 -
It’s not a leap to predict that the next major war will be fought heavily in cyberspace.
— al, 14 May 2021 -
Maybe so, but in cyberspace, words and actions matters.
— Robert Hackett, Fortune, 9 Mar. 2021 -
New threats emerge in space and cyberspace almost daily.
— Peter Aitken, Fox News, 13 Jan. 2022 -
Nearly two decades later, those emails are lost in cyberspace.
— Maggie Menderski, The Courier-Journal, 29 Jan. 2020 -
Soon his staff will convert the aging record to a string of ones and zeroes that will live forever in cyberspace.
— Chase Difeliciantonio, San Francisco Chronicle, 6 Sep. 2021 -
And if that listing isn't glowing, it will get swiped back into cyberspace.
— Kelly Corbett, House Beautiful, 28 Jan. 2020 -
Taco Bell had said the winners would be announced on March 16, which came and went with Dan and Bianca stalking cyberspace for word.
— Lisa Gutierrez, kansascity.com, 27 June 2017 -
The call for Bradley to come back won’t be popular everywhere, at least not on the fringes on cyberspace where #BobOut has emerged as a hashtag.
— Dylan Hernández Columnist, Los Angeles Times, 29 Aug. 2021 -
In cyberspace, calls for armed uprisings and civil war grow stronger.
— David Klepper, ajc, 16 Aug. 2022 -
Geopolitical events proved how cyberspace is a global tool that can be used for good and evil.
— Mike Lefebvre, Forbes, 6 Jan. 2023 -
Despite science fiction fears of Skynet and the Borg, AI has the potential to make cyberspace safer for humans.
— Richard A. Clarke, WSJ, 5 Oct. 2020 -
Militaries used to focus only on the threats from land, sea, and air, but in this century, cyberspace and space have become complex terrains of conflict.
— Daniel W. Drezner, Foreign Affairs, 12 Aug. 2024 -
And with the voluntary resignation of the 2023 winner, Noelia Voigt, the pageant has come under intense scrutiny from news outlets and all corners of cyberspace.
— Frank Witsil, Detroit Free Press, 5 Aug. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'cyberspace.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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