Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
The passage describes a debate over Web copyright: creators want stronger laws to stop copying, while users worry that restricting access will harm the Web’s openness. The author argues that posting a document online is like leaving a public phone message and making a link is like giving out the phone number—posting the document means the poster controls access. Because the poster can limit access (for example with a password), merely linking to a page is not the same as copying or distributing it, and stricter copyright laws that punish linking would hurt the Web as a free forum.
Logic Breakdown
Find the paragraph with the telephone-answering-machine analogy and ask what role that analogy plays in the author's argument — does it illustrate a factual similarity, present both sides, or support the author's rule for deciding who controls distribution?
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage21.The author's discussion of telephone answering machines serves primarily to
Correct Answer
D
The analogy is used to state the author's controlling principle for the copyright question: who controls distribution. Support from the passage: To answer this question, it must first be determined who controls distribution of a document on the Web. When A places a document on a Web page, this is comparable to recording an outgoing message on one's telephone answering machine for others to hear. When B creates a link to A's document, this is akin to B's giving out A's telephone number, thereby allowing third parties to hear the outgoing message for themselves. While B's link may indeed facilitate access to A's document, the crucial point is that A, simply by placing that document on the Web, is thereby offering it for distribution. Therefore, even if B leads others to the document, it is A who actually controls access to it. Hence creating a link to a document is not the same as making or distributing a copy of that document. These sentences show the analogy illustrates the basic principle (posting = offering for distribution; linking ≠ distribution) that the author uses to determine the outcome of the copyright debate.
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