首页
登录
职称英语
(1) NOT since the era of imperial Rome has the "thumbs-up" sign been such a p
(1) NOT since the era of imperial Rome has the "thumbs-up" sign been such a p
游客
2023-11-28
19
管理
问题
(1) NOT since the era of imperial Rome has the "thumbs-up" sign been such a potent and public symbol of power. A mere 12 years after it was founded, Facebook is a great empire with a vast population, immense wealth, a charismatic leader, and mind-boggling reach and influence. The world’s largest social network has 1.6 billion users, a billion of whom use it every day for an average of over 20 minutes each. In the Western world, Facebook accounts for the largest share of the most popular activity (social networking) on the most widely used computing devices (smartphones); its various apps account for 30% of mobile internet use by Americans. And it is the sixth-most-valuable public company on Earth, worth some $ 325 billion.
(2) Even so, Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s 31-year-old founder and chief executive, has even greater ambitions. He has plans to connect the digitally unconnected in poor countries by beaming internet signals from solar-powered drones, and is making big bets on artificial intelligence (AI), "chatbots (聊天机器人)" and virtual reality (VR). This bid for dominance will bring him into increasing conflict with the other great empires of the technology world, and Google in particular. The ensuing battle will shape the digital future for everyone.
Empires built on data
(3) Facebook has prospered by building compelling services that attract large audiences, whose attention can then be sold to advertisers. The same is true of Google. The two play different roles in their users’ lives: Google has masses of data about the world, whereas Facebook knows about you and your friends; you go to Google to get things done, but turn to Facebook when you have time to kill. Yet their positions of dominance and their strategies are becoming remarkably similar. Unparalleled troves of data make both firms difficult to challenge and immensely profitable, giving them the wealth to make bold bets and to deal with potential competitors by buying them. And both firms crave more users and more data—which, for all the do-gooding rhetoric, explains why they are both so interested in extending internet access in the developing world, using drones or, in Google’s case, giant balloons.
(4) The task is to harness data to offer new services and make money in new ways. Facebook’s bet on AI is a recognition that " machine learning" —in which software learns by crunching data, rather than having to be explicitly programmed—is a big part of the answer. It already uses AI techniques to identify people in photos, for example, and to decide which status updates and ads to show to each user. Facebook is also pushing into AI-powered digital assistants and chatbot programs which interact with users via short messages. Next week it is expected to open up its Messenger service (which can already be used to do things like order an Uber car), to broaden the range of chatbots. And Facebook’s investment in VR—it bought Oculus, the cheerleader of this emerging field, for $ 2 billion in 2014—is a bold guess about where computing and communication will go after the smartphone.
(5) But Facebook faces rivals in all these areas. Google is using AI techniques to improve its internet services and guide self-driving cars, and other industry giants are also investing heavily in AI—though with the deepest pockets and the most data to crunch, Facebook and Google can attract the best researchers and most promising startups. Facebook lags behind Amazon, Apple, Google and Microsoft when it comes to voice-driven personal assistants; when it comes to chatbots, it faces competition from Microsoft and a host of startups eager to prove that bots are the new apps, And its push into VR—which Mr. Zuckerberg sees as a stepping stone to "augmented reality (增强现实)" (AR), where information is superimposed on the real world—pits it against formidable rivals, too. Microsoft has jumped straight to AR with its HoloLens (全息透镜) headset, its most impressive product in years, and Google, already active in VR, has invested in Magic Leap, a little-known AR startup.
(6) The scale of Facebook’s ambition, and the rivalries it faces, reflect a consensus that these technologies will transform how people interact with each other, with data and with their surroundings. AI will help devices and services anticipate your needs (Google’s Inbox app already suggests replies to your e-mails). Conversational interfaces will let you look things up and get things done by chatting to a machine by voice or text. And intelligent services will spread into a plethora of products, such as wearable devices, cars and VR/AR goggles. In a decade’s time computing seems likely to take the form of AR interfaces mediated by AI, using gestures and speech for inputs and the whole world as its display. Information will be painted onto the world around you, making possible new forms of communication, creativity and collaboration.
(7) This is the ambitious vision that Facebook, Google, Microsoft and other technology giants are working towards. But along the way there are certain to be privacy and security concerns. Crunching all that information to provide personalised services looks a lot like surveillance, and will cause a backlash if consumers do not feel they are getting a good deal in return for handing over their personal details (as the advertising industry is discovering to its cost)—or if security is inadequate. Power from the people
(8) There will also be worries about concentration and monopoly, and the danger of closed ecosystems that make it hard for people to switch between services. Facebook’s plan to offer free access to a limited subset of websites was blocked by India’s telecoms regulator, which argued that it was "risky" to allow one company to act as a gatekeeper. And Germany’s competition authority is investigating the way Facebook handles personal data. As its dominance grows, Facebook can expect to face more such cases, as Microsoft and Google did before it.
(9) Striking a balance between becoming ever more intimately entwined in billions of peoples’ lives, making huge profits as a result and avoiding a backlash will be one of the biggest business challenges of the century. Even in ancient Rome, emperors could find that the crowd suddenly turned against them. So applaud Mr. Zuckerberg—and fear for him, too. [br] It can be inferred from the comparisons between Facebook and Google that______.
选项
A、they are different in the way they become successful
B、they offer internet access in poor countries for dissimilar purposes
C、they are well-matched in strength in the development of AI
D、Google is ahead of Facebook as to voice-driven personal assistants
答案
C
解析
推断题。文章第五段第二句提到,其他行业巨头也在大力投资人工智能。但脸谱网和谷歌拥有最雄厚的财力和最海量的计算数据,它们能吸引最优秀的研究人员和最具前途的创业公司。由此可知,在发展人工智能方面,脸谱网和谷歌实力相当,故[C]符合文意,为答案。第三段前两句提到脸谱网的成功是靠打造引人瞩目的服务来吸引大批用户,然后将他们的关注卖给广告商。谷歌也是如此。这表明谷歌和脸谱网取得成功的途径一样,[A]与原文不符,故排除;第三段最后一句指出两家公司都渴望得到更多的用户和数据——尽管有着“行善”的粉饰,但却解释了它们为何对在发展中国家扩展互联网接入如此感兴趣,由此可知这两家公司为贫穷国家提供互联网接入的目的相同,都是为了获得更多的用户和数据,故排除[B];第五段第三句指出在语音私人助理方面,脸谱网落后于亚马逊、苹果、谷歌和微软,[D]在原文直接提及,无需推断,故排除。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3227497.html
相关试题推荐
(1)NOTsincetheeraofimperialRomehasthe"thumbs-up"signbeensuchap
(1)NOTsincetheeraofimperialRomehasthe"thumbs-up"signbeensuchap
(1)NOTsincetheeraofimperialRomehasthe"thumbs-up"signbeensuchap
(1)NOTsincetheeraofimperialRomehasthe"thumbs-up"signbeensuchap
随机试题
急性龈乳头炎的疼痛性质不表现为() A.重度叩痛 B.自发胀痛
放置宫内节育器的禁忌证不包括A.乳腺增生 B.生殖器官炎症 C.近3个月月经
某省住宿餐饮业零售额增长迅速(如图所示),2003年住宿餐饮业零售额仅为259.
表中最靠近赤道的四个城市,其年均降水量的均值为:A.1747毫米 B.17
在地上热力管道与街道或铁路交叉时,管道与地面之间应保留足够的距离,此距离根据(
“管理者就绩效目标和工作标准经与员工讨论后达到一致”是()阶段沟通的目的和侧重
急性肾盂肾炎的治疗应是A.敏感抗生素分组轮流使用 B.用药后症状消失即停药
对工程总图布置合理性评估,主要应从( )方面进行。A.生产工艺流畅性 B
原发性甲状腺功能减退症最早出现异常的是A.血TSH B.血总T C.血游离T
蒸压加气混凝土砌块砌体采用加气混凝土砌块砌筑砂浆时,水平灰缝厚度和竖向灰缝宽度不
最新回复
(
0
)