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
Choose the option that reconciles Internet users' desire for broad free access with publishers' desire for ownership/compensation. Key supporting lines: 'Users of the Internet...envision it as a way for people to have free access to information via their personal computers.'; 'copyright holders look for ways to protect their material from unauthorized and uncompensated distribution.'; and '...the Internet community, which is accustomed to treating information as raw material available for everyone to use, and the publishing community, which is accustomed to treating it as a commodity owned by its creator.'
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage25.Given the author's argument, which one of the following additions to current Canadian copyright law would most likely be an agreeable compromise to both the Internet community and the publishing community?
Correct Answer
A
A is the best compromise because it preserves access (permitting digitalization) while providing compensation to copyright holders (a small fee). The passage establishes both sides: Internet users 'envision...free access to information' and publishers seek ways to prevent 'unauthorized and uncompensated distribution.' The author frames the conflict as between treating information as 'raw material available for everyone to use' and treating it as 'a commodity owned by its creator,' so a policy that allows access but requires payment directly addresses both concerns and is most strongly supported by the passage.
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