【
Introduction
】
Facebook is enjoying a tremendous popularity these days, and WHY? Here is a article from TIME that will answer your question. (In China, there are some websites like Facebook, such as
校内网
)
(This article have lots of New words)
【
Fast Reading
】
From: www.time.com
URL:
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1655722,00.html
Technoculture
Why Facebook Is the Future
Thursday, Aug. 23, 2007
By LEV GROSSMAN
Enlarge Photo
Illustration for TIME by Leo Espinosa
On Aug. 14 a computer hacker named Virgil Griffith unleashed a clever little program onto the Internet that he dubbed WikiScanner.
It's a simple application that trolls through the records of Wikipedia, the publicly editable Web-based encyclopedia, and checks on who is making changes to which entries. Sometimes it's people who shouldn't be. For example, WikiScanner turned up evidence that somebody from Wal-Mart had punched up Wal-Mart's Wikipedia entry. Bad retail giant.
WikiScanner is a jolly little game of Internet gotcha, but it's really about something more: a growing popular irritation with the Internet in general.
The Net has anarchy in its DNA; it's always been about anonymity, playing with your own identity and messing with other people's heads.
The idea, such as it was, seems to have been that the Internet would free us of the burden of our public identities so we could be our true, authentic selves online. Except it turns out--who could've seen this coming?--that our true, authentic selves aren't that fantastic. The great experiment proved that some of us are wonderful and interesting but that a lot of us are hackers and pranksters and hucksters. Which is one way of explaining the extraordinary appeal of Facebook.
Facebook is, in Silicon Vall--ese, a "social network": a website for keeping track of your friends and sending them messages and sharing photos and doing all those other things that a good little Web 2.0 company is supposed to help you do. It was started by Harvard students in 2004 as a tool for meeting-- or at least discreetly ogling--other Harvard students, and it still has a reputation as a hangout for teenagers and the teenaged-at-heart. Which is ironic because Facebook is really about making the Web grow up.
Whereas Google is a brilliant technological hack, Facebook is primarily a feat of social engineering. (It wouldn't be a bad idea for Google to acquire Facebook, the way it snaffled YouTube, but it's almost certainly too late in the day for that. Yahoo! offered a billion for Facebook last year and was rebuffed.) Facebook's appeal is both obvious and rather subtle. It's a website, but in a sense, it's another version of the Internet itself: a Net within the Net, one that's everything the larger Net is not. Facebook is cleanly designed and has a classy, upmarket feel to it--a whiff of the Ivy League still clings. People tend to use their real names on Facebook. They also declare their sex, age, whereabouts, romantic status and institutional affiliations. Identity is not a performance or a toy on Facebook; it is a fixed and orderly fact. Nobody does anything secretly: a news feed constantly updates your friends on your activities. On Facebook, everybody knows you're a dog.
Maybe that's why Facebook's fastest-growing demographic consists of people 35 or older: they're refugees from the uncouth wider Web. Every community must negotiate the imperatives of individual freedom and collective social order, and Facebook constitutes a critical rebalancing of the Internet's founding vision of unfettered electronic liberty. Of course, it is possible to misbehave on Facebook--it's just self-defeating. Unlike the Internet, Facebook is structured around an opt-in philosophy; people have to consent to have contact with or even see others on the network. If you're annoying folks, you'll essentially cease to exist, as those you annoy drop you off the grid.
Facebook has taken steps this year to expand its functionality by allowing outside developers to create applications that integrate with its pages, which brings with it expanded opportunities for abuse. (No doubt Griffith is hard at work on FacebookScanner.) But it has also hung on doggedly to its core insight: that the most important function of a social network is connecting people and that its second most important function is keeping them apart.

















【
Analysis
】
Marked with green color
-----
New Words(analysis in section 2)
Underlined with green line
-----
Good Sentences(analysis in section 3)
Marked with red color
--
Good usage of words or phrases (analysis in section 2 or 3)
On Aug. 14 a computer hacker named Virgil Griffith
unleash
ed a clever little program onto the Internet that he
dubbed
WikiScanner. It's a simple application that
troll
s through the records of Wikipedia,
the publicly editable Web-based
encyclopedia
, and checks on who is making changes to which entries.
Sometimes it's people who shouldn't be. For example, WikiScanner turned up evidence that somebody from Wal-Mart had
punch
ed up Wal-Mart's Wikipedia entry. Bad retail giant.
WikiScanner is a
jolly
little game of Internet
gotcha
, but it's really about something more: a growing popular irritation with the Internet in general. The Net has
anarchy
in its DNA; it's always been about
anonymity
, playing with your own identity and messing with other people's heads. The idea,
such as it was
, seems to have been that the Internet would
free us of
the
burden
of our
public identities
so we could be our true,
authentic
selves
online.
Except it turns out--who could've seen this coming?--that our true, authentic selves aren't that fantastic. The great experiment proved that some of us are wonderful and interesting but that a lot of us are
hackers
and
pranksters
and
hucksters
. Which is one way of explaining the extraordinary appeal of Facebook.
Facebook is, in Silicon Vall--ese, a "social network": a website for keeping track of your friends and sending them messages and sharing photos and doing all those other things that a good little Web 2.0 company is supposed to help you do. It was started by Harvard students in 2004 as a tool for meeting-- or at least
discreetly
ogling
--other Harvard students, and it still has a reputation as a
hangout
for
teenagers and the teenaged-at-heart.
Which is ironic because Facebook is really about making the Web grow up.
Whereas
Google is a brilliant technological
hack
, Facebook is primarily
a feat of
social engineering.
(It wouldn't be a bad idea for Google to acquire Facebook, the way it
snaffle
d YouTube, but it's almost certainly too late in the day for that. Yahoo! offered a billion for Facebook last year and was
rebuff
ed.) Facebook's appeal is both obvious and rather subtle. It's a website, but in a sense, it's another version of the Internet itself: a Net within the Net, one that's everything the larger Net is not. Facebook is cleanly designed and has a
classy
,
upmarket
feel to it--a
whiff
of the Ivy League still clings. People tend to use their real names on Facebook. They also declare their sex, age, whereabouts, romantic status and institutional
affiliation
s. Identity is not a performance or a toy on Facebook; it is a
fixed and orderly
fact. Nobody does anything secretly: a news feed constantly updates your friends on your activities.
On Facebook, everybody knows you're a dog.
Maybe that's why Facebook's fastest-growing
demographic
consists of people 35 or older: they're
refugee
s from the
uncouth
wider Web. Every community must negotiate the
imperative
s of individual freedom and collective social order, and Facebook constitutes a critical rebalancing of the Internet's founding vision of
unfettered
electronic liberty.
Of course, it is possible to
misbehave
on Facebook--it's just
self-defeating
. Unlike the Internet, Facebook is structured around an
opt-in
philosophy; people have to consent to have contact with or even see others on the network. If you're annoying folks, you'll essentially cease to exist, as those you annoy drop you off the
grid
.
Facebook has taken steps this year to expand its functionality by allowing outside developers to create applications that integrate with its pages, which brings with it expanded opportunities for abuse. (
No doubt
Griffith
is hard at work on FacebookScanner.) But it has also
hung on
doggedly
to its core insight: that
the most important function of a social network is connecting people and that its second most important function is keeping them apart.
【
Section one
】
Vocabulary
1.
unleash:
[VN]
~ sth (on / upon sb/sth) to suddenly let a strong force, emotion, etc. be felt or have an effect: The government's proposals unleashed a storm of protest in the press
2.
troll:
troll trolls trolling trolled
If you troll through papers or files, you look through them in a fairly casual way. (mainly BRIT, INFORMAL) :Trolling through the files revealed a photograph of me drinking coffee in the office.
3.
encyclopedia:
[
en
ˌsaikləuˈpi:diə
]
a book or set of books giving information about all areas of knowledge or about different areas of one particular subject, usually arranged in alphabetical order; a similar collection of information on a CD-ROM: a children's encyclopedia
◆
an encyclopedia of music
4.
punch:
verb
[VN]
~ sb/sth (in / on sth) to hit sb/sth hard with your FIST (= closed hand): He was kicked and punched as he lay on the ground.
◆
She punched him on the nose.
◆
He was punching the air in triumph.
5.
jolly:
adjective, adverb, verb
adjective (jollier, jolliest)
happy and cheerful: a jolly crowd / face / mood
(old-fashioned) enjoyable: a jolly evening / party / time
jollity noun [U] (old-fashioned): scenes of high-spirits and jollity
adverb (old-fashioned, BrE, informal) very: That's a jolly good idea.
◆
It was jolly lucky it didn't rain.
Idioms:
jolly good! (old-fashioned, BrE, spoken) used to show that you approve of sth that sb has just said: 'I'll be there by ten o'clock.' 'Jolly good!'
jolly well (old-fashioned, BrE) used to emphasize a statement when you are annoyed about sth: If you don't come now, you can jolly well walk home!
verb (jollies, jollying, jollied, jollied) (BrE)
Phrasal Verbs: jolly sb along to encourage sb in a cheerful way
jolly sb into sth / into doing sth to persuade or encourage sb to do sth by making them feel happy about it
jolly sb/sth up to make sb/sth more cheerful: You need jollying up!
6.
gotcha
exclamation
(non-standard) the written form of the way some people pronounce 'I've got you', which is not considered to be correct Help Note: You should not write this form unless you are copying somebody's speech
7.
anonymity:
noun
n.
无名,匿名
8.
hacker:
a person who spends a lot of time using computers for a hobby, especially to look at data without permission
9.
prankster:
A prankster is someone who plays tricks and practical jokes on people. (OLD-FASHIONED)
10.
huckster:
ˈhʌkstə
]
a person who uses aggressive or annoying methods to sell sth
11.
discreetly----
discreet
adjective
careful in what you say or do, in order to keep sth secret or to avoid causing embarrassment or difficulty for sb
12.
ogle:
to look hard at sb in an offensive way, usually showing sexual interest
13.
hangout
If a place is a hangout for a particular group of people, they spend a lot of time there because they can relax and meet other people there. (INFORMAL)
14.
Whereas
conjunction
used to compare or contrast two facts: Some of the studies show positive results, whereas others do not.
◆
We thought she was arrogant, whereas in fact she was just very shy.
15.
snaffle
[VN]
(BrE, informal) to take sth quickly for yourself, especially before anyone else has had the time or opportunity
16.
rebuff
(formal) an unkind refusal of a friendly offer, request or suggestion
17.
classy
adjective
(classier, classiest) (informal) of high quality; expensive and/or fashionable: a classy player
◆
a classy hotel / restaurant
18.
upmarket
adjective
[usually before noun]
designed for or used by people who belong to a high social class: an upmarket brand / restaurant / store
19.
whiff
noun
[usually sing.]
~ (of sth) a smell, especially one that you only smell for a short time: a whiff of cigar smoke
◆
He caught a whiff of perfume as he leaned towards her.
~ (of sth) a slight sign or feeling of sth: a whiff of danger / fear / success
20.
affiliation
noun
[U, C]
(formal)
a person's connection with a political party, religion, etc: He had been detained without trial because of his political affiliation.
one group or organization's official connection with another: Trade unions have a long history of affiliation to the Labour Party.
21.
.
demographic
In business, a demographic is a group of people in a society, especially people in a particular age group. etc: The station has won more listeners in the 25-39 demographic.
22.
uncouth
adjective
(of a person or their behaviour) rude or socially unacceptabl
23.
imperative
noun
(formal) a thing that is very important and needs immediate attention or action: the economic imperative of quality education for all
24.
misbehave
verb
~ (yourself) to behave badly
25.
doggedly
ad.
顽强地,固执地
【
Section two
】
Good phrases and sentences
1.
It's a simple application that
trolls through
the records of Wikipedia,
the publicly editable Web-based
encyclopedia
, and checks on
who is making changes to which entries.
2.
The idea,
such as it was
, seems to have been that the Internet would
free us of
the
burden
of our
public identities
so we could be our true,
authentic
selves
online.
3.
On Facebook, everybody knows you're a dog.(On NET, nobody know you’re a dog)
4.
the most important function of a social network is connecting people and that its second most important function is keeping them apart.
【
Homework
】
1. Please translate the sentence into Chinese.
The Net has anarchy in its DNA; it's always been about anonymity, playing with your own identity and messing with other people's heads.
(20 HY)
2.Try to understand and
Explain this sentence:”
Sometimes it's people who shouldn't be
”
in paragraphI. ( shouldn’t be what? and why?)
(30 HY)
3. Make a sentence using the one of the good usages(marked with
red color)
mentioned in Analysis section?
(50 HY)
4. Have you ever loginned in websites like Facebook(such as
校内网
)? What do you think of them? Do you think they have bad effect on privacy?
(50 HY)
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