首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
On the Internet, ads are a real problem. They’re a problem for us, the people, and not just because they clutter up our Web page
On the Internet, ads are a real problem. They’re a problem for us, the people, and not just because they clutter up our Web page
admin
2023-01-17
38
问题
On the Internet, ads are a real problem. They’re a problem for us, the people, and not just because they clutter up our Web pages, they also cost us money (in mobile data charges), battery life and time. Surprisingly, they’re also a problem for advertisers and websites. Suddenly the popularity of ad-blocking software has reached a tipping point. According to a study by Adobe and PageFair (which offers anti-ad-blocking services), 41 percent of adults younger than 30 use these blockers. Overall, ad-blocker installations are up 48 percent in a year—and that was before Apple began approving ad-blocking apps for the iPhone and iPad last September, marking ad blocking has come to the mobile world for the first time in a huge way.
The tiling is, most of those free articles, videos and services you enjoy are brought to you by the advertising. If you’re not seeing the ads, then the central financial transaction of the online content economy collapses. What then?
Some websites appeal to visitors directly, asking you to view the ads. Last summer Wired. com’s home page said, "Please do us a favor and disable your ad blocker." Other sites simply turn you away if you have an ad blocker installed. The sites for leading UK broadcasters Channel 4 and ITV present a dark screen.
Enter ad-blocker-blocking technology—Web software that tries to fool the ad blockers so that the ads appear despite your blocker. Some companies that operate ad blockers even accept money from large advertisers, although they deny giving ads from those companies’ special treatment.
But these tactics treat the public as the enemy. They create a technology arms race. "You will see our ads, like it or not! Advertising executives may tell you that one solution may be native advertising: ads dressed up as articles. They’re displayed as actual stories or videos rather than splashy ads, so they pass through ad blockers. These can lead to some murky territory, however, blurring the line between traditional content and content aiming to sell you something.
So tech Utopians like me wonder why the answer isn’t micropayments. You know, instead of looking at ads, you’re automatically billed a few cents for each article you read or video you watch. Unfortunately, in the late 1990s and early 2000s a bunch of companies tried to invent micropayment systems; all of them failed.
To find out why, I tracked down the CEOs of some of the startups who have all moved on to other endeavors. "Micropayments sound great on paper," former BitPass CEO Douglas Knopper told me. "But in practice, they require four things for the consumer that are hard to pull off: simplicity, ubiquity, security—and it has to be free. The economics to the retailer don’t work, because there are too many middlemen—credit card processors, etc. So until someone figures out how to crack the code… micropayments aren’t going to get any traction."
The timing was wrong, too. Charles Cohen, founder of failed micropayment company Beenz, told me that these efforts mostly died because the dot-com bubble burst, and most of the companies who were accepting and issuing our microcurrency went up in a puff of smoke.
So micropayments may face an uphill battle, but there aren’t any screamingly obvious reasons why they couldn’t work now. It seems Web companies would be happy to get out of the ad-blocking arms race, while Web users, well, we wouldn’t mind paying a few cents here and there to never encounter another intrusive banner ad or slow-to-load video ad.
Although ad-blockers are loaded, we can still see the ads because________.
选项
A、ad-blockers fail to work effectively
B、online ads are handled in a special way
C、ad-blocker companies cheat the public
D、Competition in blocking technology is fierce
答案
C
解析
第5段第2句提到“运营广告拦截插件的公司甚至会收取大型广告客户的费用,即便他们不承认对这些广告商的广告作了特殊处理。”可知软件公司欺骗了大众,故正确答案为C。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/PjcD777K
本试题收录于:
CATTI二级笔译综合能力题库翻译专业资格(CATTI)分类
0
CATTI二级笔译综合能力
翻译专业资格(CATTI)
相关试题推荐
Peoplegenerallyassumethatwhentheyconsideranotherpersona"friend,"thatpersonalsothinksofthemasafriend,whichme
Americahaslongbeenresistanttoadequatepovertypoliciesbecauseofitsstrongstrainofthinkingthatthepoorareresponsi
Scientistssentpatternsofelectricitycoursingacrosspeople’sbrains,coaxingtheirbrainstoseelettersthatweren’tthere.
A.HelptodetectasuspectB.DiscoverthepotentialhealthproblemsearlierC.RevealtheunknownsofthefamilyD
A.HelptodetectasuspectB.DiscoverthepotentialhealthproblemsearlierC.RevealtheunknownsofthefamilyD
Thinnerisn’talwaysbetter.Anumberofstudieshave【C1】________thatnormal-weightpeopleareinfactathigherriskofsomedi
Thinnerisn’talwaysbetter.Anumberofstudieshave【C1】________thatnormal-weightpeopleareinfactathigherriskofsomedi
Thinnerisn’talwaysbetter.Anumberofstudieshave【C1】________thatnormal-weightpeopleareinfactathigherriskofsomedi
随机试题
下列对畸胎瘤CT征象的描述,错误的是
王先生,65岁,因风湿性心脏瓣膜病20年,近3个月来,每当稍快步行走或梳洗时即感心悸、气急,坐下休息片刻后可缓解,阅读、进餐无不适,夜间阵发性呼吸困难伴关节肿痛1周入院。自述不了解风湿性心脏病的防治知识,该病人目前存在的护理问题应除外
“资产=负债+所有者权益”体现了企业资金运动过程中某一特定时期的资产分布和权益构成。()
居住在市区的中国公民李某,为一中外合资企业的职员,2015年取得以下所得:(1)每月取得合资企业支付的工资9800元;(2)2月份,为某企业提供技术服务,取得报酬30000元,与其报酬相关的个人所得税由该企业承担;(3)3月份,从A国取得特许权使用费
某市一居民企业为增值税一般纳税人,2012年1~11月份取得销售收入2000万元,实现会计利润755万元。1—11月份无相关纳税调整事项。2012年12月份发生相关业务如下:(1)12月8日销售一批空调给某大型商场,不含税价款700万元。(2)
A、 B、 C、 D、 C第一组图的规律是将第一个图形横向放置后,可拆分为第二、第三个图形,按照这个规律,应该选C。
Sincetheadversityquotientconsiderablycontributestoourlifeandsocialprogress,weareobligatedtotrainourselvessoas
C语言中最基本的数据类型包括()。
创建交叉表查询,在“交叉表”行上有且只能有一个的是______。
______makeitpossibleforastronautstoreachthemoon.
最新回复
(
0
)