[originaltext] [1]A Danish politician who tried to post a photo of Copenhage

游客2024-01-21  27

问题  
[1]A Danish politician who tried to post a photo of Copenhagen’s famous Little Mermaid statue on Facebook was told it could not be published because of posting rules.
    Social Democrat MP Mette Gjerskov wanted to post a link to her blog, which included a shot of the bronze statue, when she received a rejection notification from the site. The message, which Ms. Gjerskov shared on her social media accounts, said the Little Mermaid image contained "too much bare skin or sexual implication". It added that the rules applied even if an image had "artistic or educational purposes".
    Ms. Gjerskov described the decision as "totally ridiculous", although in a later update she said Facebook had subsequently given in and approved the image. [2]In March this year, the site clarified its rules on naked photos and said that it does allow photos of paintings, sculptures and other art that depicts naked figures.
    Questions 1 and 2 are based on the news report you have just heard.
    1. Where is the statue located?
    2. What do we learn about Facebook’s current posting rules?

选项 A、It allows photos of paintings of ridiculous figures.
B、It doesn’t allow photos having no educational purposes.
C、It allows photos of paintings of nudity.
D、It doesn’t allow photos of no artistic value.

答案 C

解析
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