Deck 15: Mass Media Globalization

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Question
Tense relations between the Afgahan government and the Tolo TV network in Afghanistan included all of the following EXCEPT

A) Afghan President Hamid Karzi told the network CEO, "You better fix up your TV station.".
B) fifty police officers raided the network, took three staff members away, and beat others .
C) Taliban purists forced the network to air nothing but calls to prayer and chanting on TV.
D) the vice president's personal bodyguards had an armed stand-off with the police force.
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Question
The changing conditions faced by mass media around the world are evident in Afghanistan's new constitution which was written in 2003 and

A) affords unlimited freedom to the Internet but puts very restrictive limits on broadcast media.
B) establishes strict government control of all mass media.
C) includes a constitutional guarantee against government interference with mass media.
D) requires that at least 50 percent of all media content promote religious or cultural values.
Question
Throughout mass media history, what political systems with top-down governances have been most common?

A) Authoritarian
B) Democratic
C) Republican
D) Sovereign
Question
King Henry VIII who cracked down on printed materials headed a political system classified as

A) democratic.
B) authoritarian.
C) libertarian.
D) empirical.
Question
What type of government system prevents mass-media criticism of its policies with numerous methods?

A) Democratic
B) Libertarianism
C) Authoritarian
D) Global
Question
The two countries with Marxist-Leninist regimes that are ranked by Freedom House as being among the worst-rated countries for press freedom are

A) Peru and Libya.
B) Cuba and North Korea.
C) Brazil and Iran.
D) Haiti and South Korea.
Question
King James of Scotland and later of England advocated the divine right of kings which claimed that legitimate monarchs were

A) elected by the people.
B) anointed by the Almighty.
C) entitled to their crowns by birthrights.
D) were voted on by parliament.
Question
The authoritarian line of reasoning justifies suppression of ideas and information on the grounds that

A) truth is a monopoly of the regime.
B) the people should determine the truth.
C) democracy involves all the people.
D) the ruling class needs input from common folk.
Question
Libertarian thinkers have faith in the ability of

A) individuals to make decisions based on reason.
B) royalty to guide the country.
C) the divine right of kings to rule the land.
D) government to make all decisions.
Question
English writer John Milton argued for a free and open exchange of information known as the

A) right of kings.
B) marketplace of ideas.
C) democratic system.
D) idea community.
Question
Libertarians believe that people sometimes err in sorting out alternatives, but those flawed ideas can be replaced with better ones, which is known as

A) democratic reason.
B) value driven thinking.
C) the self-righting process.
D) indigenous values
Question
The free expression section of the U.S. Constitution is called

A) the Fifth Amendment.
B) the First Amendment.
C) the right to bear speech.
D) Article I. .
Question
Since the U.S. Constitution was written,

A) no limits have ever been placed on free speech and expression.
B) minor modifications to the right to free speech and expression in the 17th amendment.
C) courts have consistently ruled that no limits can be imposed.
D) some limits have, of necessity, been imposed on free speech and expression.
Question
The government of India appears to have taken the lead in using computers and mobile communications devices to link its people, even those in remote villages, with the rest of the world. Its accomplishments include all of the following EXCEPT

A) designing and releasing $35 Linux-based laptop computers for students and citizens.
B) doing daily polls of citizens via the Internet to assess their satisfaction with elected officials.
C) having distant doctors diagnose illness and plan treatments through tele-medicine systems.
D) providing Internet-connected knowledge and bill-payment centers for 237,000 villages.
Question
During which war did reporters routinely submit their stories to censors to delete sensitive military matters?

A) Civil War
B) World War I
C) World War II
D) Vietnam
Question
During which conflict were U.S. reporters dressed in officers' uniforms and often assigned a vehicle and driver?

A) the Civil War
B) World War II
C) the Vietnam War
D) the 2003 invasion of Iraq
Question
Uncensored field reporting from the Vietnam War was dubbed

A) grass-roots reporting.
B) Viet journalism.
C) jungle jive.
D) rice-roots reporting.
Question
During which military action were the U.S. news media prevented from covering combat operations?

A) World War I
B) the earliest portion of the Vietnam War
C) the U.S. invasion of Grenada
D) the 2003 invasion of Iraq
Question
How does a pool system work?

A) The military keeps a pool of journalists in the front lines to ensure 24/7 coverage.
B) Reporters live and travel with military units at all times.
C) Journalists have no specific contact with the military but are allowed to accompany them at will.
D) Reporters are chosen on a rotating basis to cover limited-access events and share the story.
Question
Reporters who are assigned to a specific military unit are said to be

A) volunteers.
B) assignees.
C) embedded.
D) attached.
Question
About how many reporters were mortally wounded in the Iraq War?

A) less than 25
B) about 50
C) roughly 75
D) more than 100
Question
WikiLeaks.org has been presented as an illustration of the Internet's potential "to force humans into new governance structures" because it has done all of the following EXCEPT

A) being a thorn in the side of governments around the world since its founding in 2006.
B) encouraging those aware of government wrong-doing to post documentary proof on the site.
C) notifying the SEC about illegal insider trading that affected the value of U.S. stocks.
D) telling everyone that revealing government secrets is "principled leaking".
Question
WikiLeaks.org has been praised for fearlessly revealing government secrets that have included all of the following EXCEPT

A) financial assistance going to the Taliban and rampant war-profiteering in Pakistan.
B) information that led to changes in Kenya's constitution and a more open government.
C) more than a half-million classified U.S. documents on the war in Iraq and Afghanistan.
D) secret plans by the Canadian government to smuggle illegal aliens into Alaska.
Question
The Australian founder and driving force behind WikiLeaks is

A) John Milton.
B) Julian Assange.
C) Rupert Murdoch.
D) Victoria Clarke.
Question
The role of the U.S. in Afghanistan's mass media after its government was overthrown in 2001 and began rebuilding has included all of the following EXCEPT

A) conducting "soft diplomacy" by creating ways to get pro-U.S. messages directly to the people.
B) producing Soothing Sounds, a radio show to introduce them to the best in American music.
C) sponsoring On the Road, a TV show to build nationalism by showing viewers their own country.
D) USAID funding of $228,000 to start the country's first privately-owned radio station.
Question
Among the US-supported trans-border mass media which try to get messages into countries that don't want U.S. media reaching their people are all of the following EXCEPT

A) Radio Farda which broadcasts in the Farsi language and is aimed into Iran and Iraq .
B) Radio Liberty which beams its signals into Central Europe and Russia.
C) Silver Splinter, Internet programming designed to penetrate China's Golden Shield firewall.
D) Television Marti which broadcasts into Cuba from blimps and planes flying near the island.
Question
Foreign governments have make all of the following attempts to stop or block U.S. efforts to disseminate trans-border messages EXCEPT

A) establishing a very-effective Golden Shield firewall to filter Chinese Internet traffic .
B) filing complaints with the International Telecommunications Union, a part of the United Nations.
C) jamming radio transmissions with their own high-powered distortion signals.
D) shooting down a blimp carrying the Television Marti transmitter.
Question
What U.S. government-funded broadcast service is sent into nations with state-controlled media to articulate U.S. policies directly to the people?

A) CNN
B) Voice of America
C) National Public Radio
D) U.S. Global
Question
Voice of America was created

A) after World War I.
B) during World War II.
C) at the start of the Vietnam War.
D) in conjunction with the Public Broadcasting Systems.
Question
Al-Jazeera was modeled after

A) the BBC.
B) CNN.
C) the Associated Press.
D) Fox News.
Question
What kind of content does Qatar-based Al- Jazeera emphasize?

A) U.S.
B) British
C) Hispanic
D) Arab
Question
What quasi-government agency is creating a Mideast entertainment production center?

A) Dubai Media Incorporated
B) Arab News One
C) Al-Jazeera
D) BBC
Question
Islamic radicals, including Al-Qaeda, have adapted this media technology to meet their needs and promote their cause to a global audience.

A) direct satellite television
B) the telegraph
C) low-cost digital media
D) remote publishing
Question
What country suppressed challenges to government authority with the most labor-intensive censorship initiative in history?

A) Iran
B) Iraq
C) India
D) China
Question
To rein in unrestrained journalism, China proposed an Emergency Response Law to

A) limit news reporting of disasters and thus ensure social stability.
B) promote fair and balanced coverage.
C) promote news competition.
D) better inform the people about events.
Question
What was the stated purpose for China to propose the Emergency Response Law?

A) to provide Chinese citizens all the facts
B) to ensure only the true facts are released
C) to censor information
D) to ensure social stability
Question
Recently, the Chinese government has expended major resources to limit exposure to what medium?

A) radio
B) Internet
C) television
D) newspaper
Question
What is the name of the Chinese system to control internal Internet communications?

A) the Golden Shield
B) the Social System
C) Falun Gong
D) United System
Question
When government reviews content before dissemination, it's called

A) pre-publication censorship.
B) post-publication sanctions.
C) instituting a firewall.
D) preventative protocols.
Question
Bloggers in China

A) operate about the same way as those in the U.S.
B) must register with the government.
C) must have their content screened by the government before publication.
D) are subject to semi-annual reviews of their sites.
Question
The Chinese government uses all of the following ways to monitor and control Internet communications EXCEPT

A) automated scanning to detect prohibited words and phrases.
B) chatroom coordinators who guide the discussions in politically acceptable directions.
C) government-issued passwords are required to enter an Internet café.
D) Internet users must log on using their government-issued ID numbers.
Question
Both the news and entertainment offered by Afghanistan's Tolo TV network reflect the press freedom guaranteed by the country's new constitution which was written in 2003.
Question
When religious purists associated with the Taliban ran Afghanistan, radio was allowed to broadcast nothing by calls to prayer and unending religious chants.
Question
In establishing his Tolo TV network, Saad Mohseni wanted to remain true to the long-standing feudal traditions of his homeland.
Question
A major challenge to launching Tolo TV in Afghanistan was the fact that the country's national economy lacked the solid base of advertisers who are normally needed to support mass media.
Question
Mass media reflect a nation's political system.
Question
King Henry VIII was the British monarch who began cracking down on print materials in 1529.
Question
Authoritarianism is "top-down governance," such as a monarchy or dictatorship.
Question
Censorship is one way libertarian governments control mass media.
Question
Freedom House, an organization that monitors press freedom, lists 45 nations that deny a broad range of freedoms.
Question
The divine right of kings promoted the idea that the people should elect the ruler of the land.
Question
An authoritarian believes that truth is a monopoly of the regime.
Question
Libertarianism emphasizes the individual's ability to reason his or her way to right decisions.
Question
Libertarian forms of government have been the most common throughout history.
Question
The marketplace of ideas was an authoritarian concept.
Question
John Milton was a pioneer libertarian.
Question
Areopagitica was the name of Milton's landmark tract explaining the marketplace of ideas.
Question
People sometimes make mistakes, but libertarians believe that because truth-seeking is a lifelong pursuit, flawed ideas will be corrected in the self-righting process.
Question
The Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution ensures freedom of speech.
Question
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev started and maintains a daily blog to keep in two-way touch with citizens and encourage public debate.
Question
Entrepreneurs in China moved faster than the government did and established more than 140,000 Internet cafes before the government had developed ways to censor Internet traffic.
Question
Low-cost digital media have accelerated economic development in many countries where the governments have been forward-thinking enough to make them available to their citizens.
Question
The Internet and mobile digital devices have been a boon to authoritarian governments who want to maintain a tight rein on mass media and free speech in their countries.
Question
It can be inferred from the book that journalism has been trying to find a balance between unrestricted coverage and government interference since the U.S. Civil War.
Question
The Union Secretary of War organized Civil War censorship of sensitive military issues.
Question
The Spanish-American War was the first U.S. war that had a large contingent of reporters accompanying the armies.
Question
During World War II, news reporters were picked from a pool and embedded with companies.
Question
"Rice-roots reporting" was a term used to describe field reporting from the battles with Japan during World War II.
Question
The footage an embedded reporter can provide is extremely limited and closely controlled by the military.
Question
News reporters who are assigned to and stay with a particular military unit while it conducts its missions are "embedded."
Question
WikiLeaks.org may be able to use the Internet to force humans to adopt new governance structures by encouraging people who are aware of government wrong-doing to post documentary evidence proving it on their site.
Question
WikiLeaks claims that those who provide classified or other secret information for its site are engaged in "principled leaking".
Question
One danger of WikiLeaks is that the information posted there has never been verified; it's accepted at face value and posted as is.
Question
Among the accomplishments of WikiLeaks was posting evidence of corruption that led to changes in Kenya's constitution and a more open government.
Question
WikiLeaks was also the first to reveal the Canadian government's secret plans to let illegal aliens sneak across its border into Alaska.
Question
Julian Assange, the driving force behind WikiLeaks, believes that powerful organizations, particularly governments and corporations, should operate openly.
Question
Julian Assange, who heads WikiLeaks, believes governments and corporations should avoid transparency because it only leads to secrecy, fraud, and abuse.
Question
Major corporations make huge lobbying investments to influence U.S. laws and regulations.
Question
Traditional mass media have done a great job of getting inside major corporations to tell the real story of what they're doing and expose corporate excesses.
Question
Unlike the traditional news media, the Internet has opened new avenues for well-motivated corporate insiders to blow the whistle on mismanagement and other wrong-doing.
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Deck 15: Mass Media Globalization
1
Tense relations between the Afgahan government and the Tolo TV network in Afghanistan included all of the following EXCEPT

A) Afghan President Hamid Karzi told the network CEO, "You better fix up your TV station.".
B) fifty police officers raided the network, took three staff members away, and beat others .
C) Taliban purists forced the network to air nothing but calls to prayer and chanting on TV.
D) the vice president's personal bodyguards had an armed stand-off with the police force.
Taliban purists forced the network to air nothing but calls to prayer and chanting on TV.
2
The changing conditions faced by mass media around the world are evident in Afghanistan's new constitution which was written in 2003 and

A) affords unlimited freedom to the Internet but puts very restrictive limits on broadcast media.
B) establishes strict government control of all mass media.
C) includes a constitutional guarantee against government interference with mass media.
D) requires that at least 50 percent of all media content promote religious or cultural values.
includes a constitutional guarantee against government interference with mass media.
3
Throughout mass media history, what political systems with top-down governances have been most common?

A) Authoritarian
B) Democratic
C) Republican
D) Sovereign
Authoritarian
4
King Henry VIII who cracked down on printed materials headed a political system classified as

A) democratic.
B) authoritarian.
C) libertarian.
D) empirical.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
What type of government system prevents mass-media criticism of its policies with numerous methods?

A) Democratic
B) Libertarianism
C) Authoritarian
D) Global
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The two countries with Marxist-Leninist regimes that are ranked by Freedom House as being among the worst-rated countries for press freedom are

A) Peru and Libya.
B) Cuba and North Korea.
C) Brazil and Iran.
D) Haiti and South Korea.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
King James of Scotland and later of England advocated the divine right of kings which claimed that legitimate monarchs were

A) elected by the people.
B) anointed by the Almighty.
C) entitled to their crowns by birthrights.
D) were voted on by parliament.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
The authoritarian line of reasoning justifies suppression of ideas and information on the grounds that

A) truth is a monopoly of the regime.
B) the people should determine the truth.
C) democracy involves all the people.
D) the ruling class needs input from common folk.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Libertarian thinkers have faith in the ability of

A) individuals to make decisions based on reason.
B) royalty to guide the country.
C) the divine right of kings to rule the land.
D) government to make all decisions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
English writer John Milton argued for a free and open exchange of information known as the

A) right of kings.
B) marketplace of ideas.
C) democratic system.
D) idea community.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Libertarians believe that people sometimes err in sorting out alternatives, but those flawed ideas can be replaced with better ones, which is known as

A) democratic reason.
B) value driven thinking.
C) the self-righting process.
D) indigenous values
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The free expression section of the U.S. Constitution is called

A) the Fifth Amendment.
B) the First Amendment.
C) the right to bear speech.
D) Article I. .
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Since the U.S. Constitution was written,

A) no limits have ever been placed on free speech and expression.
B) minor modifications to the right to free speech and expression in the 17th amendment.
C) courts have consistently ruled that no limits can be imposed.
D) some limits have, of necessity, been imposed on free speech and expression.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The government of India appears to have taken the lead in using computers and mobile communications devices to link its people, even those in remote villages, with the rest of the world. Its accomplishments include all of the following EXCEPT

A) designing and releasing $35 Linux-based laptop computers for students and citizens.
B) doing daily polls of citizens via the Internet to assess their satisfaction with elected officials.
C) having distant doctors diagnose illness and plan treatments through tele-medicine systems.
D) providing Internet-connected knowledge and bill-payment centers for 237,000 villages.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
During which war did reporters routinely submit their stories to censors to delete sensitive military matters?

A) Civil War
B) World War I
C) World War II
D) Vietnam
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
During which conflict were U.S. reporters dressed in officers' uniforms and often assigned a vehicle and driver?

A) the Civil War
B) World War II
C) the Vietnam War
D) the 2003 invasion of Iraq
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Uncensored field reporting from the Vietnam War was dubbed

A) grass-roots reporting.
B) Viet journalism.
C) jungle jive.
D) rice-roots reporting.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
During which military action were the U.S. news media prevented from covering combat operations?

A) World War I
B) the earliest portion of the Vietnam War
C) the U.S. invasion of Grenada
D) the 2003 invasion of Iraq
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
How does a pool system work?

A) The military keeps a pool of journalists in the front lines to ensure 24/7 coverage.
B) Reporters live and travel with military units at all times.
C) Journalists have no specific contact with the military but are allowed to accompany them at will.
D) Reporters are chosen on a rotating basis to cover limited-access events and share the story.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Reporters who are assigned to a specific military unit are said to be

A) volunteers.
B) assignees.
C) embedded.
D) attached.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
About how many reporters were mortally wounded in the Iraq War?

A) less than 25
B) about 50
C) roughly 75
D) more than 100
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
WikiLeaks.org has been presented as an illustration of the Internet's potential "to force humans into new governance structures" because it has done all of the following EXCEPT

A) being a thorn in the side of governments around the world since its founding in 2006.
B) encouraging those aware of government wrong-doing to post documentary proof on the site.
C) notifying the SEC about illegal insider trading that affected the value of U.S. stocks.
D) telling everyone that revealing government secrets is "principled leaking".
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
WikiLeaks.org has been praised for fearlessly revealing government secrets that have included all of the following EXCEPT

A) financial assistance going to the Taliban and rampant war-profiteering in Pakistan.
B) information that led to changes in Kenya's constitution and a more open government.
C) more than a half-million classified U.S. documents on the war in Iraq and Afghanistan.
D) secret plans by the Canadian government to smuggle illegal aliens into Alaska.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The Australian founder and driving force behind WikiLeaks is

A) John Milton.
B) Julian Assange.
C) Rupert Murdoch.
D) Victoria Clarke.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The role of the U.S. in Afghanistan's mass media after its government was overthrown in 2001 and began rebuilding has included all of the following EXCEPT

A) conducting "soft diplomacy" by creating ways to get pro-U.S. messages directly to the people.
B) producing Soothing Sounds, a radio show to introduce them to the best in American music.
C) sponsoring On the Road, a TV show to build nationalism by showing viewers their own country.
D) USAID funding of $228,000 to start the country's first privately-owned radio station.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Among the US-supported trans-border mass media which try to get messages into countries that don't want U.S. media reaching their people are all of the following EXCEPT

A) Radio Farda which broadcasts in the Farsi language and is aimed into Iran and Iraq .
B) Radio Liberty which beams its signals into Central Europe and Russia.
C) Silver Splinter, Internet programming designed to penetrate China's Golden Shield firewall.
D) Television Marti which broadcasts into Cuba from blimps and planes flying near the island.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Foreign governments have make all of the following attempts to stop or block U.S. efforts to disseminate trans-border messages EXCEPT

A) establishing a very-effective Golden Shield firewall to filter Chinese Internet traffic .
B) filing complaints with the International Telecommunications Union, a part of the United Nations.
C) jamming radio transmissions with their own high-powered distortion signals.
D) shooting down a blimp carrying the Television Marti transmitter.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
What U.S. government-funded broadcast service is sent into nations with state-controlled media to articulate U.S. policies directly to the people?

A) CNN
B) Voice of America
C) National Public Radio
D) U.S. Global
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Voice of America was created

A) after World War I.
B) during World War II.
C) at the start of the Vietnam War.
D) in conjunction with the Public Broadcasting Systems.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Al-Jazeera was modeled after

A) the BBC.
B) CNN.
C) the Associated Press.
D) Fox News.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
What kind of content does Qatar-based Al- Jazeera emphasize?

A) U.S.
B) British
C) Hispanic
D) Arab
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
What quasi-government agency is creating a Mideast entertainment production center?

A) Dubai Media Incorporated
B) Arab News One
C) Al-Jazeera
D) BBC
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Islamic radicals, including Al-Qaeda, have adapted this media technology to meet their needs and promote their cause to a global audience.

A) direct satellite television
B) the telegraph
C) low-cost digital media
D) remote publishing
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
What country suppressed challenges to government authority with the most labor-intensive censorship initiative in history?

A) Iran
B) Iraq
C) India
D) China
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
To rein in unrestrained journalism, China proposed an Emergency Response Law to

A) limit news reporting of disasters and thus ensure social stability.
B) promote fair and balanced coverage.
C) promote news competition.
D) better inform the people about events.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
What was the stated purpose for China to propose the Emergency Response Law?

A) to provide Chinese citizens all the facts
B) to ensure only the true facts are released
C) to censor information
D) to ensure social stability
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Recently, the Chinese government has expended major resources to limit exposure to what medium?

A) radio
B) Internet
C) television
D) newspaper
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
What is the name of the Chinese system to control internal Internet communications?

A) the Golden Shield
B) the Social System
C) Falun Gong
D) United System
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
When government reviews content before dissemination, it's called

A) pre-publication censorship.
B) post-publication sanctions.
C) instituting a firewall.
D) preventative protocols.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Bloggers in China

A) operate about the same way as those in the U.S.
B) must register with the government.
C) must have their content screened by the government before publication.
D) are subject to semi-annual reviews of their sites.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
The Chinese government uses all of the following ways to monitor and control Internet communications EXCEPT

A) automated scanning to detect prohibited words and phrases.
B) chatroom coordinators who guide the discussions in politically acceptable directions.
C) government-issued passwords are required to enter an Internet café.
D) Internet users must log on using their government-issued ID numbers.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Both the news and entertainment offered by Afghanistan's Tolo TV network reflect the press freedom guaranteed by the country's new constitution which was written in 2003.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
When religious purists associated with the Taliban ran Afghanistan, radio was allowed to broadcast nothing by calls to prayer and unending religious chants.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
In establishing his Tolo TV network, Saad Mohseni wanted to remain true to the long-standing feudal traditions of his homeland.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 153 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
A major challenge to launching Tolo TV in Afghanistan was the fact that the country's national economy lacked the solid base of advertisers who are normally needed to support mass media.
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46
Mass media reflect a nation's political system.
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47
King Henry VIII was the British monarch who began cracking down on print materials in 1529.
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48
Authoritarianism is "top-down governance," such as a monarchy or dictatorship.
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49
Censorship is one way libertarian governments control mass media.
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50
Freedom House, an organization that monitors press freedom, lists 45 nations that deny a broad range of freedoms.
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51
The divine right of kings promoted the idea that the people should elect the ruler of the land.
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52
An authoritarian believes that truth is a monopoly of the regime.
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53
Libertarianism emphasizes the individual's ability to reason his or her way to right decisions.
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54
Libertarian forms of government have been the most common throughout history.
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55
The marketplace of ideas was an authoritarian concept.
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56
John Milton was a pioneer libertarian.
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57
Areopagitica was the name of Milton's landmark tract explaining the marketplace of ideas.
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58
People sometimes make mistakes, but libertarians believe that because truth-seeking is a lifelong pursuit, flawed ideas will be corrected in the self-righting process.
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59
The Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution ensures freedom of speech.
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60
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev started and maintains a daily blog to keep in two-way touch with citizens and encourage public debate.
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61
Entrepreneurs in China moved faster than the government did and established more than 140,000 Internet cafes before the government had developed ways to censor Internet traffic.
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62
Low-cost digital media have accelerated economic development in many countries where the governments have been forward-thinking enough to make them available to their citizens.
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63
The Internet and mobile digital devices have been a boon to authoritarian governments who want to maintain a tight rein on mass media and free speech in their countries.
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64
It can be inferred from the book that journalism has been trying to find a balance between unrestricted coverage and government interference since the U.S. Civil War.
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65
The Union Secretary of War organized Civil War censorship of sensitive military issues.
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66
The Spanish-American War was the first U.S. war that had a large contingent of reporters accompanying the armies.
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67
During World War II, news reporters were picked from a pool and embedded with companies.
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68
"Rice-roots reporting" was a term used to describe field reporting from the battles with Japan during World War II.
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69
The footage an embedded reporter can provide is extremely limited and closely controlled by the military.
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70
News reporters who are assigned to and stay with a particular military unit while it conducts its missions are "embedded."
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71
WikiLeaks.org may be able to use the Internet to force humans to adopt new governance structures by encouraging people who are aware of government wrong-doing to post documentary evidence proving it on their site.
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72
WikiLeaks claims that those who provide classified or other secret information for its site are engaged in "principled leaking".
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73
One danger of WikiLeaks is that the information posted there has never been verified; it's accepted at face value and posted as is.
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74
Among the accomplishments of WikiLeaks was posting evidence of corruption that led to changes in Kenya's constitution and a more open government.
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75
WikiLeaks was also the first to reveal the Canadian government's secret plans to let illegal aliens sneak across its border into Alaska.
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76
Julian Assange, the driving force behind WikiLeaks, believes that powerful organizations, particularly governments and corporations, should operate openly.
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77
Julian Assange, who heads WikiLeaks, believes governments and corporations should avoid transparency because it only leads to secrecy, fraud, and abuse.
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78
Major corporations make huge lobbying investments to influence U.S. laws and regulations.
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79
Traditional mass media have done a great job of getting inside major corporations to tell the real story of what they're doing and expose corporate excesses.
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80
Unlike the traditional news media, the Internet has opened new avenues for well-motivated corporate insiders to blow the whistle on mismanagement and other wrong-doing.
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