[originaltext]W: Welcome to today’s program. Today we have the CEO of Google. G

游客2024-09-08  14

问题  
W: Welcome to today’s program. Today we have the CEO of Google. Glad to see you here, Larry.
M: Me too, thanks for having me.
W: You have mentioned employees before, and their rights. What is your stance on robot rights?
M: This is a complex issue, and one that hasn’t really been solved during the last decade. We apply the Marissa Test named after our Ex-User Experience Vice President. Our experts will tell the machine a really very sad story and if the machine starts to cry, we will give it "human" rights like payments, off-days and so on. By the way, they don’t like to be called robots.
W: Really? Why not?
M: They like to be called robotic persons, that’s all. Some of these machines can be quite sensitive. It’s part of our philosophy to support this.
W: Has the robotic strike two years ago hit your company as hard as others?
M: Maybe. Maybe even harder. We have the biggest robotic personnel in the USA. Only the Chinese beat us at that, but then again, they beat us mostly at anything these days. As opposed to a human strike, a robotic personnel strike is really more like, "Hey, they’re actually off." You can’t even talk to them, discuss things. We do believe in minimum wage for RPs, we really do.
W: By the way, were you surprised at Marissa’s running for President?
M: She’s an incredibly bright and talented woman. We wish her all the best, from all of us.
W: One question people ask over and over during the last 30 years. Is it really important that you still have a focus on the search? So many companies have come up with different ideas and different technologies.
M: The more knowledge we collect, the more important it becomes, actually. It’s simply the only means of navigating such a huge body of data. We’ve played around with many concepts during the last years, most importantly the personal information agent. That was our single most successful product after search.
W: I found it fascinating these days, you can have conversations with the Google search box like it would be your best friend.
M: Exactly. This was the stuff we wanted to have there from beginning. Some of us thought it would take us 300 years, but they didn’t include robotic personnel working for us into the calculation. This changes the whole game.
W: Some said that when you gave away robots for free, you were destroying the robots industry at large.
M: We really don’t think so. I mean we only want to serve our users. That’s our goal.
1. What does Larry think about robot rights?
2. What can we learn from the conversation about robots?
3. What did Larry say about Google’s focus on search?
4. What can we learn from the conversation about the Google search box?
5. What did Larry think of giving away robots for free?

选项 A、This is not a complicated issue.
B、It hasn’t been fixed during the last decade.
C、Robots deserve no "human" rights like payment.
D、He doesn’t care about robots rights.

答案 B

解析 本题问Larry是怎么看“机器人权利”的。录音中,女士问男士对于“机器人权利”的看法,男士(Larry)回答,这是一个复杂的问题,在最近10年也没有解决,B项与会话相符,故为答案。A项与录音的This is a complex issue相矛盾,可排除;会话提到,如果机器人听到悲伤故事会哭的话,就会给予机器人“人权”,由此可见C、D也不正确。
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