英语考试,英语试题
  英语四级考试  英语六级考试  考研英语  职称英语考试  金融英语考试  公共英语考试  商务英语考试  托福英语考试  雅思英语考试  英语专业四级  英语专业八级  GMAT
英语考试网 > 托福英语考试 > 托福阅读 > 

【挑战TIME】12期:WhyFacebookIstheFuture(1)

Introduction

Facebook is enjoying a tremendous popularity these days, and WHY? Here is a article from TIME that will answer your question. (In China, there are some websites like Facebook, such as 校内网 )

(This article have lots of New words)

        Why Facebook Is the Future

On Aug. 14 a computer hacker named Virgil Griffith unleashed a clever little program onto the Internet that he dubbed WikiScanner. It's a simple application that trolls through the records of Wikipedia, the publicly editable Web-based encyclopedia, and checks on who is making changes to which entries. Sometimes it's people who shouldn't be. For example, WikiScanner turned up evidence that somebody from Wal-Mart had punched up Wal-Mart's Wikipedia entry. Bad retail giant.

WikiScanner is a jolly little game of Internet gotcha, but it's really about something more: a growing popular irritation with the Internet in general. The Net has anarchy in its DNA; it's always been about anonymity, playing with your own identity and messing with other people's heads. The idea, such as it was, seems to have been that the Internet would free us of the burden of our public identities so we could be our true, authentic selves online. Except it turns out--who could've seen this coming?--that our true, authentic selves aren't that fantastic. The great experiment proved that some of us are wonderful and interesting but that a lot of us are hackers and pranksters and hucksters. Which is one way of explaining the extraordinary appeal of Facebook.

Facebook is, in Silicon Vall--ese, a "social network": a website for keeping track of your friends and sending them messages and sharing photos and doing all those other things that a good little Web 2.0 company is supposed to help you do. It was started by Harvard students in 2004 as a tool for meeting-- or at least discreetly ogling--other Harvard students, and it still has a reputation as a hangout for teenagers and the teenaged-at-heart. Which is ironic because Facebook is really about making the Web grow up.

Whereas Google is a brilliant technological hack, Facebook is primarily a feat of social engineering. (It wouldn't be a bad idea for Google to acquire Facebook, the way it snaffled YouTube, but it's almost certainly too late in the day for that. Yahoo! offered a billion for Facebook last year and was rebuffed.) Facebook's appeal is both obvious and rather subtle. It's a website, but in a sense, it's another version of the Internet itself: a Net within the Net, one that's everything the larger Net is not. Facebook is cleanly designed and has a classy, upmarket feel to it--a whiff of the Ivy League still clings. People tend to use their real names on Facebook. They also declare their sex, age, whereabouts, romantic status and institutional affiliations. Identity is not a performance or a toy on Facebook; it is a fixed and orderly fact. Nobody does anything secretly: a news feed constantly updates your friends on your activities. On Facebook, everybody knows you're a dog.

Maybe that's why Facebook's fastest-growing demographic consists of people 35 or older: they're refugees from the uncouth wider Web. Every community must negotiate the imperatives of individual freedom and collective social order, and Facebook constitutes a critical rebalancing of the Internet's founding vision of unfettered electronic liberty. Of course, it is possible to misbehave on Facebook--it's just self-defeating. Unlike the Internet, Facebook is structured around an opt-in philosophy; people have to consent to have contact with or even see others on the network. If you're annoying folks, you'll essentially cease to exist, as those you annoy drop you off the grid.

Facebook has taken steps this year to expand its functionality by allowing outside developers to create applications that integrate with its pages, which brings with it expanded opportunities for abuse. (No doubt Griffithis hard at work on FacebookScanner.) But it has also hung on doggedly to its core insight: that the most important function of a social network is connecting people and that its second most important function is keeping them apart.

共2页: 1 [2] 下一页



【挑战TIME】08期:VideoGamesThatKeepKidsFit
托福雅思极速英语:到最好的餐厅吃龙虾
来源:www.english-exam.com 时间:2008-02-24 点击:2 [返回顶部↑
赞助商链接
相关栏目
  •  托福词汇
  •  托福语法
  •  托福听力
  •  托福作文
  •  托福试题
  •  托福辅导
  •  托福资讯
  • 相关文章
  •  【挑战TIME】08期:VideoG
  •  托福雅思极速英语:我在大
  •  托福雅思极速英语:来参加
  •  托福雅思极速英语:去电影
  •  【挑战TIME】22期:AreWeH
  •  托福雅思极速英语:今晚你
  • 热点文章
  •  托福考试阅读词汇附中英文
  •  如何准备新托福阅读考试
  •  如何面对阅读理解
  •  Toefl阅读分类词汇精选(1
  •  托福阅读理解的三大主题题
  •  Toefl阅读分类词汇精选(2

  • 英语考试网 Copyright © 2006-2008 english-exam.com