公共英语三级

单选题 It is indicated in the text that__________.

A.Indonesians are sensitive to password security
B.young people tend to have secure passwords
C.nag screens help little in password security
D.passwords for credit cards are usually safe

参考答案:C进入在线模考
推理题。A项“印尼人对密码安全很敏感”,这与第四段第三句中“those who spoke Indonesian the least”相反;B项“年轻人倾向使用安全的密码”,这与第四段第二句“Older users had better passwords than young ones”相反;D项“信用卡的密码通常是安全的”,这与第四段第四句“Passwords designed to hide sensi-tive information such as credit—card numbers were only slightly more secure than those protecting less important things,like access to games”相反;故排除A、B、D三项。C项“提示窗口对密码安全帮助不大”,与第四段第五句“‘Nag screens’that told users they had chosen a weak password made virtually no difference”相符,故选C。

你可能感兴趣的试题

1 The underlined word“compromise”in Para.5 most probably means__________.

A.comprise
B.compensate
C.endanger
D.encounter

2 The last paragraph of the text suggests that__________.

A.net users regulate their online behaviors
B.net users rely on themselves for security
C.big websites limit the number of guesses
D.big websites offer users convenient access

3 根据下面资料,回答题。
John Lubbock, a British member of the Parliament, led to the first law to safeguard Britain´ s heritage--the Ancient Monuments Bill. How did it happen?
By the late 1800s more and more people were visiting Stonehenge for a day out. Now a World Heritage Site owned by the Crown, it was, at the time, privately owned and neglected.
But the visitors left behind rubbish and leftover food. It encouraged rats that made holes at the stones´ foundations, weakening them. One of the upright stones had already fallen over and one had broken in two. They also chipped pieces off the stones for souvenirs and carved pictures into them, says architectural critic Jonathan Glancey.
It was the same for other pre-historic remains, which were disappearing fast. Threats also in-cluded farmers and landowners as the ancient stones got in the way of working on the fields and were a free source of building materials.
Shocked and angry, Lubbock took up the fight. When he heard Britain´ s largest ancient stone circle at Avebury in Wiltshire was up for sale in 1871 he persuaded its owners to sell it to him and the stone circle was saved.
"Lubbock aroused national attention for ancient monuments, "says Glancey. "At the time places like Stonehenge were just seen as a collection of stones, ancient sites to get building materials. "
"Lubbock knew they were the roots of British identity. He did for heritage what Darwin did for natural history. "
But Lubbock couldn´t buy every threatened site. He knew laws were needed and tabled the Ancient Monuments Bill. It proposed government powers to take any pre-historic site under threat away from uncaring owners, a radical idea at the time.
For eight years he tried and failed to get the bill through parliament. Finally, in 1882, it was voted into law. It had, however, been watered down; people had to willingly give their ancient monuments to the government. But what it did do was plant the idea that the state could preserve Britain´ s heritage better than private owners.
Pressure started to be put on the owners of sites like Stonehenge to take better care of them.
According to the text,Stonehenge in the late l800s was__________.

A.a royal property
B.utterly neglected
C.legally protected
D.a public property