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線上直播——網(wǎng)絡(luò)時(shí)代的新型隱患?

所屬教程:金融時(shí)報(bào)原文閱讀

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2020年03月13日

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線上直播——網(wǎng)絡(luò)時(shí)代的新型隱患?

線上直播在豐富人們的娛樂生活的同時(shí),也來帶了更大的社會(huì)問題:當(dāng)直播的內(nèi)容變成了暴力犯罪時(shí),網(wǎng)絡(luò)監(jiān)管者們往往無能為力。

測(cè)試中可能遇到的詞匯和知識(shí):

indulge滿足;縱容[?n'd?ld?]

snippet小片;片斷['sn?p?t]

proposition命題;提議[pr?p?'z??(?)n]

disquieting令人不安的[d?s'kwa??t??]

maven內(nèi)行,專家['me?v(?)n]

moderator仲裁人;調(diào)解人['m?d?re?t?]

dissident持不同政見者['d?s?d(?)nt]

futile無用的;無效的['fju?ta?l]

derelict玩忽職守的;無主的;遺棄物['der?l?kt]

Why livestreaming means danger on a different scale (951 words)

By Nilanjana Roy

When livestreaming first became a mainstream craze in China and South Korea a couple of years ago, it didn't seem either that scary or that much of a game-changer. I thought of it as an extension of webcams, and indulged my inner geek binge-watching popular noodle-eating stars from Seoul and smart-mouthed tattoo artists from Yunan turning themselves into internet celebrities.

The growing popularity of broadcasting live snippets from your life online, on platforms such as Tencent, Periscope and Twitch, is inevitable — and, at its most basic, not so different from sharing status updates on Facebook or uploading photos to Instagram. For businesses, too, livestream platforms and apps can be an attractive commercial proposition.

But there is also something hugely disquieting about it. As Facebook has discovered since introducing its Live feature, the difficulty of value-neutral technology is that in granting access to the giggling teen idols and the make-up advice mavens, the same applies to those with grimmer impulses. And when acts unfold on the internet as they actually occur, the results are both compelling, and often a lot less containable.

Recently this has had disturbing results: a rash of murders, rapes and other violent crimes have since been streamed in real time. One of the most prominent and horrific occurred last month, when a man named Wuttisan Wongtalay livestreamed a video on Facebook of himself murdering his 11-month-old daughter on a hotel rooftop in Phuket, before killing himself.

Just over a week previously, a man in Ohio recorded a video of himself murdering 74-year-old Robert Godwin Sr and then posted it on to Facebook. As the social network's vice-president Justin Osofsky wrote in a blog post the next day: “It was a horrific crime — one that has no place on Facebook, and goes against our policies and everything we stand for.”

Yet the video of Godwin's shooting stayed live for more than an hour and 45 minutes after it had been posted, while the clips that Wongtalay uploaded stayed live for roughly 24 hours, until they were removed following a request by the Thai police. Last week, Facebook announced that it would add 3,000 more moderators over the next year to combat the problem. “Over the last few weeks,” wrote the network's founder Mark Zuckerberg, “we've seen people hurting themselves and others on Facebook — either live or in video posted later. It's heartbreaking, and I've been reflecting on how we can do better for our community.”

Along with many others, and as we've seen over and over again with new technologies, I believe that there's no way to shove genies back into bottles. No amount of regulation is going to prevent humans from taking to livestreaming, and that means all humans — even psychopaths, even murderers. It's also true that many technological innovations come with a full set of evil possibilities included. So I'm trying to understand why the downside to livestreaming has set off such a strong alarm bell for me.

In part my fears about this type of broadcasting are to do with the fact that this is the most extreme, transparent internet medium so far — and the dangers seem correspondingly extreme. But it's also to do with scale. Livestreaming is essentially democratic, in that it hands power, control and massive platforms over to everyone — excellent news for dissidents in oppressive regimes, for example. But it's dangerous because it empowers everyone, irrespective of their intent, or their capacity for evil.

What's more, the live component will render most attempts to regulate or moderate these streams futile. The sanity of the first version of the internet depended to a great extent on the ability of moderators to clean child pornography and beheading videos off such disparate places as crossword-solvers' forums, chess-playing sites and an old-web hangout called Hot Tub. Unmoderated or poorly moderated sites went the way of derelict building sites — someone would swing by to smash the one remaining lightbulb, and soon these places went under, covered in piles of rubble.

But the scale of livestreaming today makes this seem impossible. As a medium grows larger, moderators can no longer screen original content, since they are limited to screening complaints, which also grow in number. This might be called the Eco Map Problem, after Umberto Eco's essay on the impossibility of mapping a constantly changing territory on an exact 1:1 scale.

In any case, as India and the US, among other countries, have discovered, it's almost impossible to keep the violence down — misinformation and false news spread very quickly via WhatsApp and other networks and, increasingly, so do clips from videos showing riots, lynchings and rapes.

If a solution is to be found it is still, ironically, far more likely to be technological rather than behavioural. Might the next wave of change on the internet see the rise of gated communities, where “residents” are protected by a clever filter from the growing violence and high crime in the stream?

This is not a Doomsday prediction. The net has generated other challenges and, to some extent, evolved solutions, and livestreaming also brings immense possibility in its wake. But it feels, too, like we're heading into a wave of massive behaviour change online, without our life-jackets on or adequate preparation for the many levels of turbulence and disruption ahead.

1.What posted on the livestream platform make livestreaming controversial?

A.Make-up lessons

B.Violent crimes

C.Playing games

D.Food-eating video

答案(1)

2.Which company announced that it would be stricter about livestreaming?

A.Google

B.Micrsoft

C.Facebook

D.Snapchat

答案(2)

3.What makes the moderation of livestreaming impossible?

A.Public passion

B.Huge profits behind it

C.Fake news

D.Its large scale

答案(3)

4.What is the name for the incapability of moderators in terms of large scale of livestreaming?

A.Middle Income Trap

B.Eco Map Problem

C.Demographic Dividend

D.Lewis Turning-Point

答案(4)

(1)答案:B.Violent crimes

解釋:由于某些博主直播暴力犯罪(如殺人、強(qiáng)奸)的過程,使得直播平臺(tái)受到了較大的爭議。

(2)答案:C.Facebook

解釋:臉書近日宣布將在明年增加3000名審核人以更好地應(yīng)對(duì)直播所帶來的社會(huì)效應(yīng)。

(3)答案:D.Its large scale

解釋:作者認(rèn)為,互聯(lián)網(wǎng)直播龐大的規(guī)模使得對(duì)其監(jiān)管和審核十分地困難。

(4)答案:B.Eco Map Problem

解釋:由于直播規(guī)模的龐大,監(jiān)管者只能通過用戶舉報(bào)來進(jìn)行審查,這被稱為“生態(tài)地圖問題”。

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