2011年12月英语六级真题答案详解

上传人:M****1 文档编号:561931700 上传时间:2023-03-01 格式:DOC 页数:23 大小:104.50KB
返回 下载 相关 举报
2011年12月英语六级真题答案详解_第1页
第1页 / 共23页
2011年12月英语六级真题答案详解_第2页
第2页 / 共23页
2011年12月英语六级真题答案详解_第3页
第3页 / 共23页
2011年12月英语六级真题答案详解_第4页
第4页 / 共23页
2011年12月英语六级真题答案详解_第5页
第5页 / 共23页
点击查看更多>>
资源描述

《2011年12月英语六级真题答案详解》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《2011年12月英语六级真题答案详解(23页珍藏版)》请在金锄头文库上搜索。

1、Googles plan for worlds biggest online library: philanthropy or act of piracy?Google has already scanned 10 million books in its bid to digitise the contents of the worlds major libraries, but a copyright battle now threatens the project, with Amazon and Microsoft joining authors and publishers oppo

2、sed to the scheme.In recent years the worlds most venerable libraries have played host to some incongruous visitors. In dusty nooks and far-flung stacks, teams of workers dispatched by Google have been beavering away to make digital copies of books. So far, Google has scanned more than 10 million ti

3、tles from libraries in America and Europe including half a million volumes held by the Bodleian in Oxford. The exact method it uses is unclear; the company does not allow outsiders to observe the process.Why is Google undertaking such a venture, so seemingly out-of-kilter with its snazzy, hi-tech im

4、age? Why is it even interested in all those out-of-print library books, most of which have been gathering dust on forgotten shelves for decades? The company claims its motives are essentially public-spirited. Its overall mission, after all, is to organise the worlds information, so it would be odd i

5、f that information did not include books. Like the Ancient Egyptians who attempted to build a library at Alexandria containing all the known worlds scrolls, Google executives talk of constructing a universal online archive, a treasure trove of knowledge that will be freely available or at least free

6、ly searchable for all.The company likes to present itself as having lofty, utopian aspirations. This really isnt about making money is a mantra. We are doing this for the good of society. As Santiago de la Mora, head of Google Books for Europe, puts it: By making it possible to search the millions o

7、f books that exist today, we hope to expand the frontiers of human knowledge.Dan Clancy, the chief architect of Google Books, offers an analogy with the invention of the Gutenberg press Googles book project, he says, will have a similar democratising effect. He talks of people in far-flung parts bei

8、ng able to access knowledge as never before, of search queries leading them to the one, long out-of-print book they need.And he does seem genuine in his conviction that this is primarily a philanthropic exercise. Googles core business is search and find, so obviously what helps improve Googles searc

9、h engine is good for Google, he says. But we have never built a spreadsheet outlining the financial benefits of this, and I have never had to justify the amount I am spending to the companys founders.It is easy, talking to Clancy and his colleagues, to be swept along by their missionary zeal. But Go

10、ogles book-scanning project is proving controversial. Several opponents have recently emerged, ranging from rival tech giants such as Microsoft and Amazon to small bodies representing authors and publishers across the world. In broad terms, these opponents have levelled two sets of criticisms at Goo

11、gle.First, they have questioned whether the primary responsibility for digitally archiving the worlds books should be allowed to fall to a commercial company. In a recent essay in the New York Review of Books, Robert Darnton, the head of Harvard Universitys library, argued that because such books ar

12、e a common resource the possession of us all only public, not-for-profit bodies should be given the power to control them.The second, related criticism is that Googles scanning of books is actually illegal. This allegation has led to Google becoming mired in a legal battle whose scope and complexity

13、 makes the Jarndyce and Jarndyce case in Bleak House look straightforward.At its centre, however, is one simple issue: that of copyright. The inconvenient fact about most books, to which Google has arguably paid insufficient attention, is that they are protected by copyright. Copyright laws differ f

14、rom country to country, but in general protection extends for the duration of an authors life and for a substantial period afterwards, thus allowing the authors heirs to benefit. (In Britain and America, this post-death period is 70 years.) This means, of course, that almost all of the books publish

15、ed in the 20th century are still under copyright and last century saw more books published than in all previous centuries combined. Of the roughly 40 million books in US libraries, for example, an estimated 32 million are in copyright. Of these, some 27 million are out of print.Outside the US, Googl

16、e has made sure only to scan books that are out of copyright and thus in the public domain (works such as the Bodleians first edition of Middlemarch, which anyone can read for free on Google Books Search).But, within the US, the company has scanned both in-copyright and out-of-copyright works. In its defence, Google points out that it displays only snippets of books that are in copyright arguing that

展开阅读全文
相关资源
相关搜索

当前位置:首页 > 高等教育 > 习题/试题

电脑版 |金锄头文库版权所有
经营许可证:蜀ICP备13022795号 | 川公网安备 51140202000112号