Library/PT 115/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

The passage explains that in the mid-1990s the Internet made it easy to share information, including copyrighted books, photos, music, and films, but older copyright laws didn’t clearly cover making digital copies. Because turning works into digital files might not count as a “material” reproduction, much online copying wasn’t obviously illegal. Experts say the law should be updated to ban unauthorized digital copying, but doing that raises hard questions about what exactly would be illegal, how to enforce rules among millions of users, and the clash between people who treat information as free and publishers who want to protect and sell their work.

Logic Breakdown

Scan the opening and concluding paragraphs to identify the central tension (Internet users' expectation of free access vs. copyright holders' rights) and the author's overall claim: although updating the law is widely seen as necessary, criminalizing digitalization poses substantial practical and legal problems. Choose the answer that captures both elements.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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24.

Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?

Correct Answer
B
Choice B accurately paraphrases the passage's main point: the passage recognizes the need to revise Canadian copyright law to address unauthorized reproduction over the Internet but repeatedly emphasizes that criminalizing digitalization is likely to be complicated. Supporting quotations: "Copyright experts say that Canadian copyright law ... has not kept pace with technology—specifically with digitalization" (shows the recognized need to update the law); "because digitalization merely transforms the work into electronic signals in a computer's memory, it is not clear whether digitalization constitutes a material reproduction—and so unauthorized digitalization is not yet technically a crime" (shows legal uncertainty about digitalization); "But criminalizing digitalization raises a host of questions" and "laws against digitalization might be virtually unenforceable given that an estimated 20 million people around the world have access to the Internet..." (gives examples of the practical and enforcement problems); and "most experts think it will be hard to resolve the clash between the Internet community ... and the publishing community" (concludes that resolving the issue will be difficult).
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