Gatekeeper [noun]

Definition of Gatekeeper:

watchperson

Synonyms of Gatekeeper:


Opposite/Antonyms of Gatekeeper:

-


Sentence/Example of Gatekeeper:

A boy needs his dad to be the initiating gatekeeper to a dog-eat-dog world!

One of Criteo’s proposals to provide more balance in the cookieless targeting and measurement process is to set up an “independent gatekeeper” such as a cloud service provider or SSP to “provide people more control and transparency,” said Blanchard.

One of Criteo’s proposals is to set up an “independent gatekeeper” such as a cloud service provider or server side platform to “provide people more control and transparency,” said Blanchard.

Specifically he has been thinking about he and others learned how to use the web to get around gatekeepers like the big, traditional media companies and inadvertently “opened a kind of Pandora’s box,” he said.

Wisecracks like “Protesters storm parliament in this former British colony” flew thick and fast worldwide, highlighting the irony of a putsch in a country that sees itself as the global gatekeeper of democratic propriety.

The gatekeeper status also means regulators will not need to do the work of establishing dominance first — “which means you’ll get to the sanction must faster and should prevent damages in the marketplace”, she noted.

Symphony orchestras, late to the game in almost every way when it comes to social change, were no longer gatekeepers when it came to defending the old “canon” against music by women, people of color and composers outside the Western tradition.

Second, so much about how these gatekeepers exercise their power remains unknown to the rest of us.

Similar to Gilmore, the group’s other onetime leader, this helps explain why Allen chose to perform almost exclusively with the Arkestra over the course of his career, straddling the roles of leader, educator and, ultimately, gatekeeper.

What is really apparent now is that these gatekeepers such as Apple are really becoming private regulators.