[originaltext]M: Ruth Peters is a child psychologist, hey, Ruth, good morning.

游客2024-11-05  10

问题  
M: Ruth Peters is a child psychologist, hey, Ruth, good morning. Nice to have you back.
W: Good morning, Matt.
M: I look at it like the rules for photos online are a little bit like the rules for wearing a microphone around here, If you don’t want someone to hear it, you don’t say while you are wearing a microphone. If you don’t want someone to see the pictures, don’t put them online.
W: There is absolutely no control once it goes online. I don’t care if it says it’s personal, it’s private, whatever. Once it’s on there, somebody can actually copy it, paste it to their own website or into their own computer. And even if you sanitize that site afterward, those people still have it.
M: And if you are a parent, and you’ve got teenagers, daughters, sons, this Facebook craze, and this Myspace craze is part of their daily socialization, how do you convince them that what can seem fun at one moment can become a nightmare another moment.
W: Well, first of all, I think what Miss New Jersey did is probably did more for all of this than anybody could do. And so I think what you do is, you talk to your child, you explain it to them, and then you have to supervise them. That’s the key word; you have to supervise your kids online.
M: I’ll talk about supervising them in just a second but I think a parent has to say to a child, look, this is for your friends and your family. These are the people who are supposed to see these photos. But it only takes one angry friend or one jealous friend to make these things public.
W: Exactly, and that’s where we say you do not have control, and so if you want to send photos to your friends or families, send them an email with that on. It doesn’t have to go into this public sphere.
M: So parents have to familiarize themselves with Facebook and Myspace and all these things. At least they can help their children.
W: And it’s easy, most parents think that the technology is bafflement beyond them, but it’s really very simple to start your own account, to go in, and be able to look and see what your children are doing.
Questions 1 to 5 are based on what you have just heard.
1. According to the man, what is the rule for picture online?
2. What example can illustrate that there is no control online?
3. How should parents warn their kids of the danger of Facebook craze?
4. According to Ruth, what is a safer way to share photos with friends?
5. What is parents’ purpose in getting familiar with social websites?

选项 A、People prefer to put their private picture online.
B、People just put their preferable pictures online.
C、Pictures with microphone are prohibited online.
D、Pictures are not allowed to be copied online.

答案 B

解析 对话一开头,男士就提到,网上放图的规则(rifles for photos online)和使用扩音器相似。不想别人看到的照片就不放上网(don’t want someone to see the pictures,don’t put them online),B项是这句话的“反话正说”,为本题答案。A、C项利用原文的private和microphone作干扰。D项所说刚好和事实相反,网上图片可以任意复制。
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