Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Many office workers think work email is as private as a phone call, but that’s not true because the rules about email privacy are unclear. People argue about government and company emails—some say offices should be able to delete messages, while others say emails give extra details (like who got a message and when) that paper copies don’t. Employers often read emails on company systems and courts have sometimes allowed this, and laws usually stop outsiders from spying on email but not internal monitoring. The only sure way to keep an email private is to encrypt it, but encryption makes email harder to use.
Logic Breakdown
Summarize the passage's overall thrust—note the repeated emphasis on legal ambiguity and workplace examples—to identify the author's main goal rather than focusing on a single paragraph.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage7.The author's primary purpose in writing the passage is to
Correct Answer
D
"Most office workers assume that the messages they send to each other via electronic mail are as private as a telephone call or a face-to-face meeting. That assumption is wrong." and "the question of how private electronic mail transmissions should be has emerged as one of the more complicated legal issues of the electronic age." The author then presents multiple examples (the government-records deletion debate; the automotive-company monitoring and lawsuit) and discusses legal limits and practical trade-offs ("no absolute guarantee of privacy exists in any computer system" and encryption undermining convenience). These elements together show the passage's primary purpose is to illustrate the complexities of electronic-mail privacy in the workplace.
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