Which quotations from the excerpt provide evidence to support the claim that governments have responded to criticism delivered through social media? Select three options. “Security forces arrested three people who administered nearly two dozen Facebook pages.” “It [Egypt] also detained activists who had been involved in prior protests.” “Facebook’s Free Basics service . . . had offered free Internet services to Egyptians on mobile phones.” “More than 3 million people had signed up for the program in just two months.” “Meanwhile Turkey has made 805 requests for tweets to be removed since 2012.”
Question
Which quotations from the excerpt provide evidence to support the claim that governments have responded to criticism delivered through social media? Select three options.
“Security forces arrested three people who administered nearly two dozen Facebook pages.” “It [Egypt] also detained activists who had been involved in prior protests.” “Facebook’s Free Basics service . . . had offered free Internet services to Egyptians on mobile phones.” “More than 3 million people had signed up for the program in just two months.” “Meanwhile Turkey has made 805 requests for tweets to be removed since 2012.”
Solution
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"Security forces arrested three people who administered nearly two dozen Facebook pages." This quote shows that the government is actively monitoring social media and taking action against those who use it to criticize them.
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"It [Egypt] also detained activists who had been involved in prior protests." This quote provides evidence that the government is not only monitoring social media, but also using it to identify and detain individuals involved in anti-government activities.
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"Meanwhile Turkey has made 805 requests for tweets to be removed since 2012." This quote shows that the government is actively trying to control the narrative on social media by requesting the removal of content they find unfavorable.
Similar Questions
Identify which of the following 2 excerpts is critical writing.Group of answer choicesSmith (2018) states that social media is an effective tool for encouraging intercultural communication. Jones (2020) suggests that social media has changed the way we use language.Whether or not social media is a beneficial tool is greatly contested. Some suggest it is beneficial because it allows people to see a variety of perspectives on issues that are important to them (Smith, 2018). However, others are concerned that social media encourages users to respond with aggression and bullying to opinions they do not agree with (Jones, 2020).
Even when activists are able to get their messages out, they have trouble galvanizing people to actually take action. The sentiments that gain the largest audiences often contain religious elements, according to Mansour Al-hadj, who is a director at the Middle East Media Research Institute. "The message by itself without any religious element in it, wouldn’t work in the long run,” he says. "The activists’ accounts on Twitter and Facebook are very active and they have a lot of followers, but they cannot drive masses,” he says, because their sentiments are more moderate. Laced through media coverage of the Arab Spring was what turned out to be the naïve hope that people were inherently, unequivocally good and that unleashing their collective consciousness via social media would naturally result in good things happening. But it turns out that consciousness was not so collective after all. The tools that catalyzed the Arab Spring, we've learned, are only as good or as bad as those who use them. And as it turns out, bad people are also very good at social media. Militant groups like the Islamic State have been reported to recruit converts using Facebook and Twitter and use encrypted communications technology to coordinate attacks. What reasons does the author give to support the claim that it is difficult for a message to move people to take action? Select two options. an opinion from an expert on what types of messages inspire people to make changes a description of how the Islamic State and other militant groups fail to effect change an explanation of why social media messages that are not extreme are sometimes ineffective a quotation from an expert on why postings without religious elements work in the short term a clarification that social media outlets such as Twitter generally help create positive changes
PART B: Which of the following quotes best supports the answer to Part A?A. "Most people don't click on posts that they disagree with, explains Dean Eckles, a Stanford Ph.D. candidate studying social networks." (Paragraph 5)B. "Facebook and Twitter can act as echo chambers where you interact primarily with others who have similar interests and politics." (Paragraph 6)C. "That the show is still on the air today is thanks in part to its fans on Twitter." (Paragraph 7)D. "'I'm meeting strangers,' she says — two in the last two weeks, in fact. 'I met them and I felt like, 'This is my tribe.'" (Paragraph 13)
Five years ago this week, massive protests toppled Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, marking the height of the Arab Spring. Empowered by access to social media sites like Twitter, YouTube and Facebook, protesters organized across the Middle East, starting in December 2010 in Tunisia, and gathered together to speak out against oppression, inspiring hope for a better, more democratic future. Commentators, comparing these activists to the US peace protesters of 1968, praised the effort as a democratic dawn for an area that had long been populated by autocracies. In a photo collection published by the New York Times a few months later, Irish writer Colum McCann wrote: "The light from the Arab Spring rose from the ground up; the hope is now that the darkness doesn’t fall.” The darkness has fallen. Half a decade later, the Middle East is roiling in violence and repression. Activists are being intimidated into restraint by governments that are, with the exception of Tunisia, more totalitarian than those they replaced, if any government as such really exists at all. Meanwhile, militants have harnessed the same technology to organize attacks and recruit converts, catapulting the world into instability. Instead of new robust democracies, we have a global challenge with no obvious solution. The Arab Spring carried the promise that social media and the Internet were going to unleash a new wave of positive social change. But the past five years have shown that liberty isn't the only end toward which these tools can be turned. Activists were able to organize and mobilize in 2011 partly because authoritarian governments didn’t yet understand very much about how to use social media. They didn’t see the potential, says NYU professor of politics Joshua Tucker, a [principal] investigator at the Social Media and Political Participation Lab at New York University. "There are a lot of reasons the people in power were slow to pick up on this,” he adds. "One of the things about not have a free press is it is harder to learn what was going on in the world.” Which statement best evaluates the evidence in this excerpt? The author uses verifiable facts and expert testimony to support her argument effectively, but the excerpt would be stronger if she deleted references to a past protest. The author uses specific data, reasons, and quotations to support her argument effectively, but the excerpt would be stronger if she included eyewitness testimony or personal stories. The author uses quotations and data about historical instances to support her argument effectively, but the excerpt would be stronger if she included verifiable facts. The author uses eyewitness testimony and personal stories to support her argument, but the argument would be stronger if she deleted the quotations from experts.
The government of __________ blocks citizens' access to popular new media sites like Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter.Question 16Select one:a.Chinab.Indiac.Afghanistand.Australia
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