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      《輕松學習英語》系列二 初級 Level 3 10 MS Censorship 詞匯課

      所屬教程:《輕松學習英語》系列二

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      掃描二維碼方便學習和分享
      https://online2.tingclass.net/lesson/shi0529/0008/8168/3102.mp3
      https://image.tingclass.net/statics/js/2012

      Microsoft’s Cyber Censorship

      Publish Date: February 2, 2007

      All Sound (Audio) Archives Available At:

      https://www.effortlessenglish.libsyn.com

      From Amnesty International

      In December 2005 Microsoft cooperated with Chinese authorities to shut down the controversial blog of Zhao Jing (Michael Anti), a Beijing-based researcher for the New York Times, and an active critic of censorship in China.

      The blog, which was hosted on servers located in the United States, was removed and was therefore censored not only in China but globally. Reacting to criticism, Microsoft claims to have implemented a new set of standards to ensure that they will only remove blogs when they receive formal legal notice from the Chinese government and that access will only be denied to users in China.

      Microsoft’s search engine MSN China filters the results of searches for politically sensitive terms, displaying a message in Chinese which states Certain content was removed from the results of this search’. Searches undertaken in June 2006 by AI produced this message for the words ‘Falun Gong’, ‘Tibet Independence’ and ‘June 4’ (the date of the Tiananmen Square massacre).

      Furthermore, Microsoft has admitted that it responds to directions from the Chinese government by restricting users of MSN Spaces from using certain terms in their account name, space name, space sub-title or in photo captions. At the same time the company asserts that MSN Spaces do not filter blog content in any way. Amnesty International considers this claim to be at odds with the facts.

      When Microsoft launched MSN Spaces in China in June 2005, attempts to create blogs with words including ‘democracy’, ‘human rights’ and ‘freedom of expression’ were blocked, producing the following error message (in Chinese): ‘You must enter a title for your space. The title must not contain prohibited language, such as profanity. Please type a different title.’ Tests by AI carried out in 2006 demonstrated continued blocking of certain terms including ‘Tiananmen incident’ in the title of blogs.

      As a result of such actions, Microsoft users in China are denied the ability to access the full range of information available internationally on human rights topics, including websites and web pages of Amnesty International and other human rights organizations.

      Cyber: adj. related to computers or machines; relating to the internet

      Amnesty: n. pardon, forgiveness

      authorities: n. government people

      controversial: adj. causing argument, at issue

      blog: n. web log, internet diary or journal

      censorship: n. banning (of information), preventing information from being published

      servers: n. big computers that host software, accounts, etc.

      censored: v. banned, deleted

      globally: adj. world-wide, all over the world.

      criticism: n. disapproval

      implemented: v. used, done

      to ensure: v. to promise, to guarantee

      legal: adj. related to the law,

      access: n. entry, admission

      filters: v. separate, screen politically sensitive terms: n. words that make the government angry

      displaying: v. showing

      AI: n. Amnesty International

      produced: v. created, made

      Falun Gong: n. a spiritual (religious) group- that is often attacked by the Chinese government

      massacre: n. killing (of many innocent, peaceful, or weak people)

      admitted: v. confessed, agreed

      directions: n. orders, commands

      restricting: v. limiting, stopping

      terms: n. words (or phrases), names

      asserts: v. says, insists at odds with: idiom. does not agree with, goes against

      launched: v. started, began

      blocked: v. stopped, prevented

      prohibited: v. denied, forbidden, banned

      profanity: n. bad language, obscenity

      incident: n. happening, event

      the full range of: n. all of, every

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