参考答案和解析
正确答案: C
解析:
纵观全文可知,本文核心的内容是计算机与个人隐私的问题(Privacy issue cause by computer),选C项。
更多“单选题The best title for the passage would be ______.A Privacy on data filesB Heated attacks on the computerC Privacy issue caused by computerD Privacy has been long neglected”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    Text 2 America rarely looks to Brussels for guidance.Commercial freedom appeals more than governmental control.But when it comes to data privacy,the case for copying the best bits of the European Union's approach is compelling.The General Data Protection Regulation(GDPR)is due to come into force next month.It is rules-heavy and has its flaws,but its premise that consumers should be in charge of their personal data is the right one.The law lets users gain access to,and to correct,information that firms hold on them.It gives consumers the right to transfer their data to another organisation.It requires companies to define how they keep data secure.And it lets regulators levy big fines if firms break the rules.America has enacted privacy rules in areas such as health care.But it has never passed an overarching data-protection law.The failings of America's self-regulatory approach are becoming clearer by the week.Large parts of the online economy are fuelled by data that consumers spray around without thought.Companies'mysterious privacy policies obscure what they do with their users'information,which often amounts to pretty much anything they please.Facebook is embroiled in crisis after news that data on 87m users had been passed to a political-campaign firm.These are changing the calculus about the benefits of self-regulation.Opponents of privacy legislation have long argued that the imposition of rules would keep technology companies from innovating.Yet as trust leaks out of the system,innovation is likely to suffer.If consumers worry about what smartphone apps may do with their data,fewer new offerings will take off.It is striking that many of the firms preparing for the GDPR's arrival in Europe are excited that the law has forced them to put their data house in order.The need to minimise legal fragmentation only adds to the case for America to adopt bits of the GDPR.One reason behind the new rules in the EU was to harmonise data-protection laws so that firms can do business across Europe more easily.America is moving in the opposite direction.States that have detected a need for greater privacy are drafting their own laws.California has pending legislation that would establish a data-protection authority to regulate how the state's big tech firms use Californians'personal data.The GDPR is far from perfect.At nearly 100 articles long,it is too complex and tries to achieve too many things.The compliance costs for smaller firms,in particular,look burdensome.But these are arguments for using it as a template,not for ignoring the issue of data protection.If America continues on today's path,it will fail to protect the privacy of its citizens and long-term health of its firms.America's data economy has thrived so far with hardly any rules.That era is over.
    It can be inferred from Paragraph 4 that privacy legislation is likely to_____

    A.be opposed by tech companies
    B.cause concerns among consumers
    C.promote corporate innovation
    D.hinder the popularity of apps

    答案:C
    解析:
    [信息锁定]第四段首先指出隐私立法反对者的观点:立法会阻碍科技公司创新。作者转而进行反驳:若信任脱离该体系,则创新很可能会变糟。最后举例说明:若消费者担忧智能手机apps会如何处置其数据,则新apps将难以大获成功”。可见作者认为:立法不会阻碍创新,反而是创新的保证,C.正确。[解题技巧]A.由第四段②句…keep technology companies from innovating(隐私立法会阻碍公司创新)主观推知“隐私立法会招致公司反对”,但这是“立法反对者(opponents)观点”(是作者驳斥的看法)。由段末句可知,大部分公司欢迎隐私立法。B.对④句consumers worry断章取义,作者并非指出“立法会引发消费者担忧”,而是以条件句式(lf…,fewer...)强调“若消费者担忧自己数据的安全.则会阻碍新应用的采用(即:立法非常必要)”。D.源自④句fewer new offerings will take off,但这并非是“立法的影响”,而是“消费者担忧自己数据安全会造成的结果”(立法会大大消除这种担忧)。

  • 第2题:

    Text 2 America rarely looks to Brussels for guidance.Commercial freedom appeals more than governmental control.But when it comes to data privacy,the case for copying the best bits of the European Union's approach is compelling.The General Data Protection Regulation(GDPR)is due to come into force next month.It is rules-heavy and has its flaws,but its premise that consumers should be in charge of their personal data is the right one.The law lets users gain access to,and to correct,information that firms hold on them.It gives consumers the right to transfer their data to another organisation.It requires companies to define how they keep data secure.And it lets regulators levy big fines if firms break the rules.America has enacted privacy rules in areas such as health care.But it has never passed an overarching data-protection law.The failings of America's self-regulatory approach are becoming clearer by the week.Large parts of the online economy are fuelled by data that consumers spray around without thought.Companies'mysterious privacy policies obscure what they do with their users'information,which often amounts to pretty much anything they please.Facebook is embroiled in crisis after news that data on 87m users had been passed to a political-campaign firm.These are changing the calculus about the benefits of self-regulation.Opponents of privacy legislation have long argued that the imposition of rules would keep technology companies from innovating.Yet as trust leaks out of the system,innovation is likely to suffer.If consumers worry about what smartphone apps may do with their data,fewer new offerings will take off.It is striking that many of the firms preparing for the GDPR's arrival in Europe are excited that the law has forced them to put their data house in order.The need to minimise legal fragmentation only adds to the case for America to adopt bits of the GDPR.One reason behind the new rules in the EU was to harmonise data-protection laws so that firms can do business across Europe more easily.America is moving in the opposite direction.States that have detected a need for greater privacy are drafting their own laws.California has pending legislation that would establish a data-protection authority to regulate how the state's big tech firms use Californians'personal data.The GDPR is far from perfect.At nearly 100 articles long,it is too complex and tries to achieve too many things.The compliance costs for smaller firms,in particular,look burdensome.But these are arguments for using it as a template,not for ignoring the issue of data protection.If America continues on today's path,it will fail to protect the privacy of its citizens and long-term health of its firms.America's data economy has thrived so far with hardly any rules.That era is over.
    The most suitable title for this text would be____

    A.American firms in Europe will have to comply with the GDPR
    B.America should protect its citizens'privacy and its firms'health
    C.America should borrow from Europe's data-privacy law
    D.America's data economy is evolving into a new era

    答案:C
    解析:
    [信息锁定]文章前两段提出观点“就数据隐私,美国应借鉴欧盟方法(即《通用数据保护条例》)”。第三至五段从保护个人隐私,促进公司健康发展、保障技术创新、减少立法碎片等方面论证说明理由。末段总结发出呼吁“GDPR虽远非完美,但依然可用作数据保护的法律模版;美国应改变以前的自我监管方式、指定隐私保护法”。可见全文核心在于“美国应借鉴欧盟的隐私法GDPR”.C.为恰当标题。[解题技巧]A.未抓住本文主要面向对象:文章面向的是“美国(Amercica)”,而非“美国公司。B.符合作者总体观点,但未体现本文立足点“美国应通过借鉴欧洲的GDPR来保护其公民隐私及公司健康”。D.偏离本文关注对象:作者重点关注的是“数据隐私的保护”,而非“数据经济的发展”。

  • 第3题:

    Text 2 Internet service providers have realized that they are sitting on a treasure chest of data about your online activities that they could be selling to advertisers.Recognizing the privacy threat,the Federal Communications Commission adopted rules that would have stopped them from doing so without your consent,but Congress recently shot down the regulation.This is a big deal.Privacy doesn't merely benefit individuals;it fundamentally shapes how society functions.It is crucial for marginalized communities and for social movements.Privacy enables these groups to network,organize,and develop their ideas before challenging the status quo.But when people know they're being tracked and monitored,they change their behavior.This chilling effect hurts our intellectual freedoms and our capacity for social progress.The data that tracks our behavior feeds into machine-learning algorithms that make judgments about us.When used for advertising,they can reproduce our own prejudiced behavior.Marketers can use machine learning to figure out your unique features-do you resDond better to words or to pictures?Do you make impulsive shopping decisions?-to target you with exactly the advertisement that will best persuade you.When consequential decisions about employment or loans are made using this kind of data,the result can feel absurd and incomprehensible,because these systems aren't programmed to explain their decisions.There aren't yet effective ways for humans to hold algorithms accountable for how they categorize us.The good news is how effective technology can be in preventing tracking.We found that ad blockers and other browser-privacy tools can decrease tracking by 80 percent or more.More complex tools can be even more effective.In other worcls,the more technically savvy among us can enjoy dramatically better privacy and digital freedoms.But this has resulted in a technological"arms race,"which is worrying by itself,but also because such technical skill correlates with historically advantaged groups.Meanwhile,publishers are caught in the ad-blocking crossfire,endangering the free press.One bright spot is that online privacy research has had a tremendous effect.It has helped regulators curb the worst of the offenses,forced companies to roll back invasions because of public-relations pressure,spurred the development of privacy tools,and developed a healthy public debate about online tracking.The fight for privacy is now closely linked to the fight for digital civil liberties and democratic values,and it is a movement that includes activists,artists,journalists,researchers,and everyday users of technology.There's tremendous power in your hands to take charge of your own privacy as well as foster these societal values.
    It can be learned from Paragraph 3 that data-driven algorithms could____

    A.overcome personal prejudices
    B.produce unconvincing advertisements
    C.form unreliable hiring decisions
    D.categorize humans reasonably

    答案:C
    解析:
    [信息锁定]第三段首先指出个人数据可被用于机器学习算法,评判人类。随即明确影响:用于做广告时,会复制我们自身偏见行为;用于营销时,可实现精准投放,更有效劝诱消费者;用于雇佣和贷款决策时,往往生成荒谬难懂的结果。可见C.符合文意。[解题技巧]A.与第三段②句“个人数据驱动的算法会复制(reproduce)我们自身的偏见行为”矛盾。B.与第三段③句“算法有助于营销人员发现你的特点、向你精准投放最能说服你的广告”相悖。D.对第三段⑤句effective ways.…accountable.…categorize us断章取义:将其原本含义“基于数据的算法无法对‘如何对人类分类’负责(即:其分类并不可靠)”理解为与之相反的“可将人们合理分类”。

  • 第4题:

    Text 2 America rarely looks to Brussels for guidance.Commercial freedom appeals more than governmental control.But when it comes to data privacy,the case for copying the best bits of the European Union's approach is compelling.The General Data Protection Regulation(GDPR)is due to come into force next month.It is rules-heavy and has its flaws,but its premise that consumers should be in charge of their personal data is the right one.The law lets users gain access to,and to correct,information that firms hold on them.It gives consumers the right to transfer their data to another organisation.It requires companies to define how they keep data secure.And it lets regulators levy big fines if firms break the rules.America has enacted privacy rules in areas such as health care.But it has never passed an overarching data-protection law.The failings of America's self-regulatory approach are becoming clearer by the week.Large parts of the online economy are fuelled by data that consumers spray around without thought.Companies'mysterious privacy policies obscure what they do with their users'information,which often amounts to pretty much anything they please.Facebook is embroiled in crisis after news that data on 87m users had been passed to a political-campaign firm.These are changing the calculus about the benefits of self-regulation.Opponents of privacy legislation have long argued that the imposition of rules would keep technology companies from innovating.Yet as trust leaks out of the system,innovation is likely to suffer.If consumers worry about what smartphone apps may do with their data,fewer new offerings will take off.It is striking that many of the firms preparing for the GDPR's arrival in Europe are excited that the law has forced them to put their data house in order.The need to minimise legal fragmentation only adds to the case for America to adopt bits of the GDPR.One reason behind the new rules in the EU was to harmonise data-protection laws so that firms can do business across Europe more easily.America is moving in the opposite direction.States that have detected a need for greater privacy are drafting their own laws.California has pending legislation that would establish a data-protection authority to regulate how the state's big tech firms use Californians'personal data.The GDPR is far from perfect.At nearly 100 articles long,it is too complex and tries to achieve too many things.The compliance costs for smaller firms,in particular,look burdensome.But these are arguments for using it as a template,not for ignoring the issue of data protection.If America continues on today's path,it will fail to protect the privacy of its citizens and long-term health of its firms.America's data economy has thrived so far with hardly any rules.That era is over.
    According to Paragraphs l and 2,GDPR——.

    A.stresses commercial freedom over governmental control
    B.aims to give citizens the control of their personal data
    C.grants companies the right to collect user information
    D.recognizes the legitimacy of data transfer among firms

    答案:B
    解析:
    [信息锁定]第二段②句指出GDPR的前提是“消费者应该掌管自己的个人数据”,可见B.正确,aims to give citizens the control of their personal data同义替换its premise that consumers should be in charge of their personal data.[解题技巧]A.与首段②句同义,但这是“美国历来的观点”,并非“欧盟的GDPR特征”,整体理解首段内容可知二者实为反向。C.将第二段③句“GDPR允许用户(users)获取公司手中的其个人信息”窜改为“GDPR赋予公司(firms)收集个人信息的权利”。D.将第二段④句’‘GDPR给予了消费者将其数据转移到另一机构/公司的权利”窜改为“GDPR承认了公司之间转移数据的合法性”。

  • 第5题:

    Text 2 Internet service providers have realized that they are sitting on a treasure chest of data about your online activities that they could be selling to advertisers.Recognizing the privacy threat,the Federal Communications Commission adopted rules that would have stopped them from doing so without your consent,but Congress recently shot down the regulation.This is a big deal.Privacy doesn't merely benefit individuals;it fundamentally shapes how society functions.It is crucial for marginalized communities and for social movements.Privacy enables these groups to network,organize,and develop their ideas before challenging the status quo.But when people know they're being tracked and monitored,they change their behavior.This chilling effect hurts our intellectual freedoms and our capacity for social progress.The data that tracks our behavior feeds into machine-learning algorithms that make judgments about us.When used for advertising,they can reproduce our own prejudiced behavior.Marketers can use machine learning to figure out your unique features-do you resDond better to words or to pictures?Do you make impulsive shopping decisions?-to target you with exactly the advertisement that will best persuade you.When consequential decisions about employment or loans are made using this kind of data,the result can feel absurd and incomprehensible,because these systems aren't programmed to explain their decisions.There aren't yet effective ways for humans to hold algorithms accountable for how they categorize us.The good news is how effective technology can be in preventing tracking.We found that ad blockers and other browser-privacy tools can decrease tracking by 80 percent or more.More complex tools can be even more effective.In other worcls,the more technically savvy among us can enjoy dramatically better privacy and digital freedoms.But this has resulted in a technological"arms race,"which is worrying by itself,but also because such technical skill correlates with historically advantaged groups.Meanwhile,publishers are caught in the ad-blocking crossfire,endangering the free press.One bright spot is that online privacy research has had a tremendous effect.It has helped regulators curb the worst of the offenses,forced companies to roll back invasions because of public-relations pressure,spurred the development of privacy tools,and developed a healthy public debate about online tracking.The fight for privacy is now closely linked to the fight for digital civil liberties and democratic values,and it is a movement that includes activists,artists,journalists,researchers,and everyday users of technology.There's tremendous power in your hands to take charge of your own privacy as well as foster these societal values.
    The author views preventing Web tracking with technology as____.

    A.radical and dangerous
    B.complex and impractical
    C.simple but effective
    D.helpful but risky

    答案:D
    解析:
    [信息锁定]第四段先肯定(The good news is)技术可高效阻止网络追踪,随后转折指出(But)以技术手段制止网络追踪会引发军备竞赛、有利于强势群体、甚至会危及出版自由。可见D.是对作者观点的正确概括。[解题技巧]A.忽视第四段前四句对先进技术效用的认可,且“激进的(radical)”无信息支撑。B.impractical(不切实际的)与第四段②③句“技术工具已实现有效制止网络追踪”相悖.且complex并非文中所指:文中指“更复杂的技术可能更有效”而非“反追踪技术总体复杂”。C.忽视段落转折后内容,且simple-词无信息支撑。

  • 第6题:

    ( )is a term for data sets that are so large or complex that traditional data processing applications are inadequate. Challenges include analysis, capture ,data curation.,search,sharing,storage,transfer,visualization,querying, updating and information privacy.

    A.Data market
    B.Data warehouse
    C.Big data
    D.BI

    答案:C
    解析:
    翻译:大数据是一种庞大的复杂的数据集合,能够解决传统的数据处理无法解决的包括数据的分析、捕捉、管护、查找、分享、储存、转换、可视化、升级以及信息的保密等问题。A.数据集市 B.数据仓库 C.大数据 D.商业智能

  • 第7题:

    以下哪一项是和电子邮件系统无关的?()

    • A、PEM(Privacy enhanced mail)
    • B、PGP(Pretty good privacy)
    • C、X.500
    • D、X.400

    正确答案:C

  • 第8题:

    单选题
    What lessons can be learned from the past in this decade?
    A

    Private issue has always been associated with data collection.

    B

    Attacks on freedom are new.

    C

    The accumulation of data encourages oppression.

    D

    Privacy has been a neglected issue.


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    从第二段开头“The privacy issue has been raised most insistently with…”可知A项符合题意。

  • 第9题:

    名词解释题
    隐私权(Privacy)

    正确答案: 又称“宁居权”,是公民个人有依照法律规定保护自己的隐私不受侵害的权利。
    一是公民对于自己与社会公共生活无关的私人事项,有权要求他人不打听、不搜集、不传播,也有权要求新闻媒介不报道、不评论、不非法获得。
    二是公民对于自己与社会公共生活无关的私生活,有权要求他人不得任意干涉,包括自己的身体不受搜查,自己的住宅和其他私生活区域不受侵入、窥探。
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第10题:

    单选题
    The best title for this passage would be ______.
    A

    Hints for Successful Reading

    B

    Hints for Speed Reading

    C

    Effective Reading

    D

    Lightning Speed Exercises


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    首先排除A、C两项。全文都是围绕快速阅读而写的,虽然提到了闪电阅读,但那只是为了提高阅读速度所采用的一个方法,所以不能以闪电阅读为题,所以选B。

  • 第11题:

    单选题
    Which of the following would be the best title of this passage?
    A

    Justice in Society

    B

    Punishment

    C

    Fair Trial

    D

    Equality


    正确答案: D
    解析:
    文章以社会公正开头,但接着主要谈的是惩罚,故答案选B。

  • 第12题:

    判断题
    The privacy of members of organizations has been invaded through the creation and maintenance of data files of computers.
    A

    B


    正确答案:
    解析:
    主要信息的找寻和判断。关于电脑对个人隐私的影响问题,录音中首先就指出“电脑会增加组织和团体对成员的控制,并且侵犯成员隐私的潜在可能,已经引起了人们的广泛关注”,接着提到“The privacy issue has been raised with respect to creation and maintenance of data files”,可知数据文件的创建和维护会牵涉到隐私问题。因此,题干中所提到“由于电脑数据文件的创建和维护,机构成员的隐私会因而受到侵犯”与该段录音表达内容相一致。
    【录音原文】
    The potential of computers for increasing the control of organizations or society over their members and for invading the privacy of those members has caused considerable concern. The privacy issue has been raised most insistently with respect to creation and maintenance of data files that assemble information about persons from a multitude of sources.

  • 第13题:

    Text 2 America rarely looks to Brussels for guidance.Commercial freedom appeals more than governmental control.But when it comes to data privacy,the case for copying the best bits of the European Union's approach is compelling.The General Data Protection Regulation(GDPR)is due to come into force next month.It is rules-heavy and has its flaws,but its premise that consumers should be in charge of their personal data is the right one.The law lets users gain access to,and to correct,information that firms hold on them.It gives consumers the right to transfer their data to another organisation.It requires companies to define how they keep data secure.And it lets regulators levy big fines if firms break the rules.America has enacted privacy rules in areas such as health care.But it has never passed an overarching data-protection law.The failings of America's self-regulatory approach are becoming clearer by the week.Large parts of the online economy are fuelled by data that consumers spray around without thought.Companies'mysterious privacy policies obscure what they do with their users'information,which often amounts to pretty much anything they please.Facebook is embroiled in crisis after news that data on 87m users had been passed to a political-campaign firm.These are changing the calculus about the benefits of self-regulation.Opponents of privacy legislation have long argued that the imposition of rules would keep technology companies from innovating.Yet as trust leaks out of the system,innovation is likely to suffer.If consumers worry about what smartphone apps may do with their data,fewer new offerings will take off.It is striking that many of the firms preparing for the GDPR's arrival in Europe are excited that the law has forced them to put their data house in order.The need to minimise legal fragmentation only adds to the case for America to adopt bits of the GDPR.One reason behind the new rules in the EU was to harmonise data-protection laws so that firms can do business across Europe more easily.America is moving in the opposite direction.States that have detected a need for greater privacy are drafting their own laws.California has pending legislation that would establish a data-protection authority to regulate how the state's big tech firms use Californians'personal data.The GDPR is far from perfect.At nearly 100 articles long,it is too complex and tries to achieve too many things.The compliance costs for smaller firms,in particular,look burdensome.But these are arguments for using it as a template,not for ignoring the issue of data protection.If America continues on today's path,it will fail to protect the privacy of its citizens and long-term health of its firms.America's data economy has thrived so far with hardly any rules.That era is over.
    Facebook is mentioned to show that_____.

    A.America needs a general data-protection law
    B.online economy relies heavily on consumer data
    C.online news can produce strong economic impact
    D.America has benefited greatly from self-regulation

    答案:A
    解析:
    [信息锁定]第三段首先指出,美国尚未通过任何一项包罗性的数据保护法,其自我监管方式的弱点正日益突显,公司几乎可以对用户数据为所欲为。最后指出,“将8700万用户的数据转给一家政治活动公司”的行为被报道之后,脸书陷入了危机。可见,文中提及脸书意在说明自我监管方法存在缺陷、美国需要一部全面的数据保护法,A.正确。[解题技巧]B.为第三段③句所述事实,但这是背景信息,并未触及核心观点,因此并非事例说明对象。且事例本身强调的是“脸书因转移用户数据而陷入危机”,并非“脸书对用户数据的依赖”。C.对事例信息“新闻披露(news)使得脸书陷入危机”过度推导,文中并非意在强调“新闻的影响”,更未指出这是“在线新闻”。D.对第四段首句the benefits of self-regulation断章取义,结合第三段③句可知,该句是在指出“自我监管方法的益处受到质疑”,选项内容与其相悖。

  • 第14题:

    Text 2 America rarely looks to Brussels for guidance.Commercial freedom appeals more than governmental control.But when it comes to data privacy,the case for copying the best bits of the European Union's approach is compelling.The General Data Protection Regulation(GDPR)is due to come into force next month.It is rules-heavy and has its flaws,but its premise that consumers should be in charge of their personal data is the right one.The law lets users gain access to,and to correct,information that firms hold on them.It gives consumers the right to transfer their data to another organisation.It requires companies to define how they keep data secure.And it lets regulators levy big fines if firms break the rules.America has enacted privacy rules in areas such as health care.But it has never passed an overarching data-protection law.The failings of America's self-regulatory approach are becoming clearer by the week.Large parts of the online economy are fuelled by data that consumers spray around without thought.Companies'mysterious privacy policies obscure what they do with their users'information,which often amounts to pretty much anything they please.Facebook is embroiled in crisis after news that data on 87m users had been passed to a political-campaign firm.These are changing the calculus about the benefits of self-regulation.Opponents of privacy legislation have long argued that the imposition of rules would keep technology companies from innovating.Yet as trust leaks out of the system,innovation is likely to suffer.If consumers worry about what smartphone apps may do with their data,fewer new offerings will take off.It is striking that many of the firms preparing for the GDPR's arrival in Europe are excited that the law has forced them to put their data house in order.The need to minimise legal fragmentation only adds to the case for America to adopt bits of the GDPR.One reason behind the new rules in the EU was to harmonise data-protection laws so that firms can do business across Europe more easily.America is moving in the opposite direction.States that have detected a need for greater privacy are drafting their own laws.California has pending legislation that would establish a data-protection authority to regulate how the state's big tech firms use Californians'personal data.The GDPR is far from perfect.At nearly 100 articles long,it is too complex and tries to achieve too many things.The compliance costs for smaller firms,in particular,look burdensome.But these are arguments for using it as a template,not for ignoring the issue of data protection.If America continues on today's path,it will fail to protect the privacy of its citizens and long-term health of its firms.America's data economy has thrived so far with hardly any rules.That era is over.
    Which of the following is true,according to Paragraph 5?

    A.The GDPR may result in fragmentation of international law.
    B.America is restricting its firms from doing business in Europe.
    C.American states have detected a need for greater data privacy.
    D.California is considering legislation to protect personal data.

    答案:D
    解析:
    [信息锁定]第五段指出,EU新法(GDPR)在协调各项数据保护法律,使公司可以更方便地在整个欧洲范围内做生意。美国则在反其道而行之,(并未制定统一的、出调性法律,而是)那些发现更大隐私需求的州在各自起草自己的法律。最后以加州为例:加州已形成待理法案,意在成立专门的部门,规定大型科技公司如何使用加州人的个人数据。可见D.为文中事实。[解题技巧]A.将第五段①句“借鉴欧洲的GDPR可以使美国的立法碎片最小化”偷换为“GDPR可能导致国际法碎片”,文中并未提及“国际法”。B.对firms can do business across Europe more easily.America is moving in the opposite direction断章取义.该内容意指“GDPR有利于公司在整个欧洲范围内交易;而美国却是各州纷纷设立自己的法律,限制了公司在整个美国范围内的运作”。C.将第五段④句的限制条件“那些已发现更犬隐私需求的州……”(言外之意为“有些州并未发现这种需求”)改为全部情形“美国各州已发现更大的隐私需求”。

  • 第15题:

    Text 2 Internet service providers have realized that they are sitting on a treasure chest of data about your online activities that they could be selling to advertisers.Recognizing the privacy threat,the Federal Communications Commission adopted rules that would have stopped them from doing so without your consent,but Congress recently shot down the regulation.This is a big deal.Privacy doesn't merely benefit individuals;it fundamentally shapes how society functions.It is crucial for marginalized communities and for social movements.Privacy enables these groups to network,organize,and develop their ideas before challenging the status quo.But when people know they're being tracked and monitored,they change their behavior.This chilling effect hurts our intellectual freedoms and our capacity for social progress.The data that tracks our behavior feeds into machine-learning algorithms that make judgments about us.When used for advertising,they can reproduce our own prejudiced behavior.Marketers can use machine learning to figure out your unique features-do you resDond better to words or to pictures?Do you make impulsive shopping decisions?-to target you with exactly the advertisement that will best persuade you.When consequential decisions about employment or loans are made using this kind of data,the result can feel absurd and incomprehensible,because these systems aren't programmed to explain their decisions.There aren't yet effective ways for humans to hold algorithms accountable for how they categorize us.The good news is how effective technology can be in preventing tracking.We found that ad blockers and other browser-privacy tools can decrease tracking by 80 percent or more.More complex tools can be even more effective.In other worcls,the more technically savvy among us can enjoy dramatically better privacy and digital freedoms.But this has resulted in a technological"arms race,"which is worrying by itself,but also because such technical skill correlates with historically advantaged groups.Meanwhile,publishers are caught in the ad-blocking crossfire,endangering the free press.One bright spot is that online privacy research has had a tremendous effect.It has helped regulators curb the worst of the offenses,forced companies to roll back invasions because of public-relations pressure,spurred the development of privacy tools,and developed a healthy public debate about online tracking.The fight for privacy is now closely linked to the fight for digital civil liberties and democratic values,and it is a movement that includes activists,artists,journalists,researchers,and everyday users of technology.There's tremendous power in your hands to take charge of your own privacy as well as foster these societal values.
    According to Paragraph l,Congress intends to____.

    A.protect citizens'personal data
    B.monitor advertisers'online activities
    C.allow ISPs to sell users'data
    D.approve the FCC's privacy rules

    答案:C
    解析:
    [信息锁定]第一段首先暗示互联网服务供应商行为“将用户在线活动数据卖给广告商”;随后引出联邦通信委员会对策“规定未经个人许可不得出售其在线活动数据”;最后指出国会近日决策“否决联邦通信委员会的监管规定”。可见,国会再度赋予了互联网服务供应商出售用户数据的权利,C.正确。[解题技巧]A.对首段②句前半句偷梁换柱:保护公民个人数据的是“FCC”而非“国会”。B.扭曲首段①句关系:将“ISP监控用户在线行为”改为“国会监控广告商在线行为”。D.与首段②句后半句相悖:国会是“否决了(shot down)”而非“通过了(approved)”FCC规定。

  • 第16题:

    Text 2 Internet service providers have realized that they are sitting on a treasure chest of data about your online activities that they could be selling to advertisers.Recognizing the privacy threat,the Federal Communications Commission adopted rules that would have stopped them from doing so without your consent,but Congress recently shot down the regulation.This is a big deal.Privacy doesn't merely benefit individuals;it fundamentally shapes how society functions.It is crucial for marginalized communities and for social movements.Privacy enables these groups to network,organize,and develop their ideas before challenging the status quo.But when people know they're being tracked and monitored,they change their behavior.This chilling effect hurts our intellectual freedoms and our capacity for social progress.The data that tracks our behavior feeds into machine-learning algorithms that make judgments about us.When used for advertising,they can reproduce our own prejudiced behavior.Marketers can use machine learning to figure out your unique features-do you resDond better to words or to pictures?Do you make impulsive shopping decisions?-to target you with exactly the advertisement that will best persuade you.When consequential decisions about employment or loans are made using this kind of data,the result can feel absurd and incomprehensible,because these systems aren't programmed to explain their decisions.There aren't yet effective ways for humans to hold algorithms accountable for how they categorize us.The good news is how effective technology can be in preventing tracking.We found that ad blockers and other browser-privacy tools can decrease tracking by 80 percent or more.More complex tools can be even more effective.In other worcls,the more technically savvy among us can enjoy dramatically better privacy and digital freedoms.But this has resulted in a technological"arms race,"which is worrying by itself,but also because such technical skill correlates with historically advantaged groups.Meanwhile,publishers are caught in the ad-blocking crossfire,endangering the free press.One bright spot is that online privacy research has had a tremendous effect.It has helped regulators curb the worst of the offenses,forced companies to roll back invasions because of public-relations pressure,spurred the development of privacy tools,and developed a healthy public debate about online tracking.The fight for privacy is now closely linked to the fight for digital civil liberties and democratic values,and it is a movement that includes activists,artists,journalists,researchers,and everyday users of technology.There's tremendous power in your hands to take charge of your own privacy as well as foster these societal values.
    Online privacy research has had a tremendous effect by____.

    A.providing evidence to regulators
    B.fining companies for invasions
    C.designing privacy tools
    D.raising public awareness

    答案:D
    解析:
    [信息锁定]第五段①句指出网络隐私研究已产生重大影响。②句指出研究借助公共关系压力迫使公司减少隐私侵犯,并生成了有关网络追踪的健康公众辩论。③④句说明现状:隐私斗争已是全民广泛参与的运动,捍卫隐私的力量就在你手中。可见,网络隐私研究强化了公众的网络隐私保护意识,D.正确。[解题技巧]A.基于主观认识“研究的部分作用在于为管理者提供证据”,对第五段②句“网络隐私研究协助监管者制止严重侵犯行为”过度推导,但文中并未提及网络隐私研究以何种方式出助监管。B.将第五段②句研究迫使公司停止入侵的方式“借助公共关系压力”篡改为“罚款处罚”。C.将第五段②句研究“推动隐私工具发展”局限为“设计隐私工具”。

  • 第17题:

    To meet the ethical requirements, the participants were informed that their involvement in the study was voluntary and that their personal privacy would be treated______.

    A.confidentially
    B.proudly
    C.confidently
    D.secretly

    答案:A
    解析:
    本题考查近义词辨析。题目意为“为了满足道德要求,参与者被告知他们可以自愿参与研究,并且个人隐私将得到____处理。”A选项“保密地”,B选项“自豪地”,C选项“自信地”,D选项“秘密地”。 根据题干,研究会将个人隐私保密处理,故A选项符合题意。
      

  • 第18题:

    隐私权(Privacy)


    正确答案: 又称“宁居权”,是公民个人有依照法律规定保护自己的隐私不受侵害的权利。
    一是公民对于自己与社会公共生活无关的私人事项,有权要求他人不打听、不搜集、不传播,也有权要求新闻媒介不报道、不评论、不非法获得。
    二是公民对于自己与社会公共生活无关的私生活,有权要求他人不得任意干涉,包括自己的身体不受搜查,自己的住宅和其他私生活区域不受侵入、窥探。

  • 第19题:

    A bank wants to maximize the security of employee computer data displayed on their screen.Which of the following would BEST accomplish these goals?()

    • A、Keyboard filters
    • B、Privacy filters
    • C、Screensavers
    • D、Secure display drivers

    正确答案:B

  • 第20题:

    单选题
    The best title for the passage would be ______.
    A

    Privacy on data files                

    B

    Heated attacks on the computer

    C

    Privacy issue caused by computer    

    D

    Privacy has been long neglected


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    纵观全文可知,本文核心的内容是计算机与个人隐私的问题(Privacy issue cause by computer),选C项。

  • 第21题:

    填空题
    The EU has raised concerns about its influence on consumer privacy.____

    正确答案: B
    解析:
    根据题干信息“The EU has raised concerns about”可以定位到B段“Already, the EU has raised concerns about its impact on consumer privacy”,故匹配段落为B。

  • 第22题:

    填空题
    Consumer groups have the other idea about the issue, they think the risk of violating someone’s privacy is hit data collected becomes more.____

    正确答案: D
    解析:
    根据题干信息“Consumer groups”可以定位到D段“But consumer groups see the issue another way: the more data collected, the higher the risk of violating someone’s privacy”,故匹配段落为D。

  • 第23题:

    填空题
    The FTC did offer a ray of hope for privacy advocates.____

    正确答案: I
    解析:
    根据题干信息可以定位到I段“The FTC did offer a ray of hope for privacy advocates”,故匹配段落为I。