A、Getting visitors to vote on the website. B、Getting more traffic. C、Turning its traffic into money. D、Contacting politicians an

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问题  
For two months after he started the website digg. com, Kevin Rose didn’t need an alarm clock. "By 6 a. m. , I was up and on the computer," he recalls. "(26)It was the sheer fear of not knowing what was on my own home page."
   Here’s why: experienced editors do not deliberate over Digg’s front page. It’s strictly a popularity contest. Users post news stories and images  found anywhere from the websites of big newspapers to small blogs—and with the click of a button, other users either "digg" the items (meaning they like them) or "bury" them (meaning they don’t).
   (27)Kevin Rose started Digg as an "experiment". But he quit his day job within months, Today, the site gets 35 million different visitors a month. When he started Digg, he thought, "If this can pay my rent and I can stay cool in my apartment and drink my tea and have an awesome little office, that’d be more than I could ask for." As a child in Las Vegas, Rose was "the most unpopular kid in school". In the early ’90s, he persuaded his parents to buy him his own computer, which he used to talk technology in chat rooms.
   (28)Like many websites, Digg hasn’t yet figured out how to transform its traffic into profit. Nonetheless, it continues to develop. Digg now recommends stories to users based on other stories they like. It also lets them vote on questions they want to ask politicians and famous people.

选项 A、Getting visitors to vote on the website.
B、Getting more traffic.
C、Turning its traffic into money.
D、Contacting politicians and famous people.

答案C

解析 事实细节题。短文最后提到,正如很多网站一样? Kevin Rose还没有想出如何将浏览量转化为利润,因此Digg网站目前的主要问题是C)“将浏览量转变为利润”。
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