一起听英语 22 网络战争
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    未来的战争将不再是真枪实弹的战争,未来的战争将是科技的较量,战争爆发的场地是网络....

    Dima: Hi, welcome to this edition of 6 Minute English with me, Dima Kostenko

    Rebecca: and me, Rebecca Byrne, hello. And today our topic is – virtual conflict, or ewars.

    Dima: E-wars? I don’t think I’ve heard that one before – presumably it’s one of the

    many words with the prefix ‘e-‘ that have been mushrooming in recent years.

    Rebecca: that’s right

    Dima: Rebecca, perhaps you could do me a favour and begin by explaining what that

    prefix means and where it comes from.

    Rebecca: explains (started with e-mail, short for electronic, or virtual mail; later began

    to mean anything that goes on online, in the cyberspace, giving rise to a great

    number of new nouns like e-books, e-tickets, e-commerce, even e-government)

    Dima: OK, it’s true that in this series we regularly discuss all things digital, but why

    e-wars?

    Rebecca: Well it’s because recently some senior officials in the field of

    telecommunications have been giving a rather grim warning - that the next

    world war could take place online. One of them is the head of the International

    Telecommunication Union Dr Hamadoun Touré. He says cyber-attacks could

    potentially be as damaging as natural disasters - and that our increasing

    reliance on e-communications makes even the most developed countries

    vulnerable to an attack by online criminals. We’ll hear from Dr Touré in a

    6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2009

    Page 2 of 4

    moment but first, it’s this week’s question for you Dima. In the next extract Dr

    Touré mentions four e-words: e-commerce, e-government and two others. The

    question is: which one of the following three do you think he does NOT

    mention? Is it

    a) e-education;

    b) e-health or

    c) e-transportation?

    Dima: Guesswork

    Rebecca: We’ll check your guess in a minute, once we’ve listened to Dr Touré. Don’t

    forget to listen out for the four e-words, and also for the following language: ‘a

    tsunami’, which is a huge destructive wave that is usually produced as a result

    of an earthquake; and ‘dependent on cyberspace’, meaning completely relying

    on being connected to the online network’.

    Dima: That’s ‘a tsunami’, ‘dependent on cyberspace’ and four words with the prefix

    ‘e-‘. Ready? Here’s Dr Touré:

    Clip 1 0'17"

    It's worse than a tsunami - look how dependent we are on the cyberspace today. If we are cut

    off from the network today, there are some patients that will die in the hospital. We will not

    have education without e-education, health without e-health, commerce without e-commerce

    and government without e-government.

    Dima: Well he does talk about e-education, e-commerce, e-government and even ehealth

    (whatever that means!) But there’s no mention of e-transportation…

    Which means that my earlier guess was right/wrong…

    Rebecca: congratulations/better luck next time

    6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2009

    Page 3 of 4

    Dima: Well, never mind e-transportation. You’d better tell me what we do about it –

    how do we protect ourselves from online attacks, or e-wars?

    Rebecca: Well Dr Touré says there are a number of various safeguards already in place.

    Dima: ‘Safeguards’ – in other words, security measures, or restrictions aimed at

    protecting someone from harm.

    Rebecca: That’s right. For example, it's already possible to track individual users through

    internet addresses, including those suspected of committing online crimes.

    Dima: That’s good to know, but I would think it’s not always an easy task to

    determine straight away if someone's involved in cybercrime or not... My

    question is, isn’t there a danger then that these restrictions – these safeguards –

    could sometimes be applied mistakenly?

    Rebecca: Well Dr Touré specifically warns that any measures to protect against

    cybercrime must not lead to a curtailing of legitimate internet use. As you

    listen to him, look out for these word combinations: ‘invading their privacy’…

    Dima: …meaning watching and/or recording what people do in their own space and

    time;

    Rebecca: ‘denying them that basic human right’…

    Dima: …that’s not giving people the opportunity to enjoy what they are entitled to;

    Rebecca: and – ‘access to information’…

    Dima: … meaning the means, or the possibility to find things out. Let’s listen:

    6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2009

    Page 4 of 4

    Clip 2 0'13"

    We have to be sure that protecting people in cyberspace does not mean invading their privacy,

    does not mean denying them that basic human right of access to information.

    Rebecca: That was the head of the International Telecommunication Union Dr

    Hamadoun Touré.

    Dima: And you can find out more about this story – and about words with the prefix

    ‘e-‘ – simply by following the links from our website, bbclearningenglish.com.

    But before we go, here’s another chance to go through some of today’s key

    vocabulary.

    Rebecca: We talked about the expression ‘dependent on cyberspace’, meaning relying a

    lot on being connected to the internet. We said that a cyber-attack could

    potentially be worse than ‘a tsunami’, a huge destructive wave that is usually

    produced as a result of an earthquake. Then there was the word ‘a safeguard’,

    meaning a security measure, sometimes of a restrictive nature. We also had

    these word combinations: ‘invading their privacy’, meaning watching and/or

    recording what people do in their own space and time; ‘denying them that basic

    human right’, which is another way of saying ‘not giving people the

    opportunity to enjoy what they are entitled to’; and – ‘access to information’,

    meaning the means, or the possibility to find things out. And of course we

    discussed some of the words that are formed by adding the prefix ‘e-‘, meaning

    electronic, or virtual, to an existing noun.

    Dima: I'm afraid that's all we have time for today. Until next week.

    Both: Goodbye!

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