Rupert Murdoch once described them as the "rivers of gold"—the lucrative classified-advertising revenues that flowed into big ne

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问题     Rupert Murdoch once described them as the "rivers of gold"—the lucrative classified-advertising revenues that flowed into big newspaper groups. But the golden rivers are being diverted online as the Internet breaks the grip that local and regional newspapers once held over their advertising markets.
    Typically, a local newspaper would expect to get some 80% of its revenue from advertising, of which around two-thirds would come from classifieds. But last year in the San Francisco Bay area, job ads worth some $60m were lost from newspapers to the web, reckons Classified Intelligence, a consultancy. Emap, a British publisher, recently gave warning of a 30% decline in recruitment ads in one of its titles, Nursing Times, following the launch of a free website for jobs in Britain’s National Health Service.
    The Internet has become the fastest-growing advertising medium. Online ad revenues reached $5.8 billion in the first six months of this year in America, up 26% on the same period last year, according to a joint study by the Interactive Advertising Bureau and Pricewaterhouse-Coopers. In Britain, online ad revenues surged by 62% in the same period to almost £500m ($870m).
    Search advertising—the small text-ads that appear alongside Google and Yahoo! searches—ac count for 40% of the online ad market. Another 20% goes to display ads and 18% to classified advertising. But search advertising can also work like a small ad and will increasingly challenge print classifieds as websites develop localized and more elaborate services for online users.
    Perhaps the most significant development came on November 16th, when Google started up a prototype service called Google Base. It offers a searchable database of free listings, including small ads which can be narrowed down to postal regions. Among its first Offerings were used cars. In no time, Google could challenge eBay, whose own auction listings now work much like a giant classified website—especially with its "buy-it-now" options. But eBay charges sellers. Even so, it sold more than 450m items in the three months to September 30th, for almost $11 billion.
    In response, most print publishers are expanding online. Mr. Murdoch is buying websites including Propertyfinder and MySpace, a social-networking site. Newspaper groups have teamed up to jointly operate websites to compete with Monster for recruitment ads. But the online operators are expanding too. eBay, for instance, is building a global network of classified sites under the Kijiji brand. It also has a stake in the popular Craigs-list which, having soaked up so many listings around its San Francisco home, is now frightening other newspapers as it expands its mostly-free ads service to other cities around the world.

选项 A、newspapers earn a lot from ads.
B、the money flow like rivers into websites.
C、newspapers began to share the ad revenues with websites.
D、websites took away many ad revenues from newspapers.

答案D

解析 语义理解题。由题干中的the golden rivers are being diverted定位至首段第二句,联系上下文含义解答语义题。开篇指出:鲁伯特.默多克曾经将流入大型报纸集团的分类广告收入描述为rivers of gold。第二段中的But表明后面的情况与前文截然不同:随着互联网打破地方报纸过去对广告市场的控制,情况发生了改变。可见互联网让报纸的广告收入下降。
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