Three hundred years ago news travelled by word of mouth or letter, and circulated in pubs and coffee houses in the form of pamph

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问题     Three hundred years ago news travelled by word of mouth or letter, and circulated in pubs and coffee houses in the form of pamphlets, newsletters. Everything changed in 1833 when the first mass-audience newspaper, The New York Sun, pioneered the use of advertising to reduce the cost of news, thus giving advertisers access to a wider audience.
    Now, the news industry is returning to something closer to the coffee house. The Internet is making news more participatory, social, diverse and partisan(党派的). reviving the loose ethos of the era before mass media. Ordinary people are increasingly involved in compiling, sharing, filtering, discussing and distributing news through, like Twitter, Mobile-phone and some Social-networks.
    The web has allowed new providers of news, from individual bloggers to sites such as The Huffington Post, to rise to prominence in a very short space of time. And it has made possible entirely new approaches to journalism, which provides an anonymous way for whistle blowers to publish documents. The news agenda is no longer controlled by a few press barons and state outlets, like the BBC.
    In principle, every liberal should celebrate this. A more participatory and social news environment, with a remarkable diversity and range of news sources, is a good thing. So what, many will say, if journalists have less stable careers? All the same, two areas of concern stand out.
    The first worry is the loss of "accountability journalism", which holds the powerful to account. Shrinking revenues have reduced the amount and quality of investigative and local political reporting in the print press.
    But old-style journalism was never quite as morally upstanding as journalists like to think. Meantime, the Internet is breeding new forms of accountability. A growing band of non-profit outfits such as ProPublica. the Sunlight Foundation and WikiLeaks are helping to fill the gap left by the decline of watchdog media. This is still a work in progress, but the degree of activity and experimentation provides cause for optimism.
    The second concern has to do with partisanship. In the mass-media era local monopolies often had to be relatively impartial to maximise their appeal to readers and advertisers. In a more competitive world the money seems to be in creating an echo chamber for people’s prejudices: thus Fox News, a conservative American cable-news channel, makes more profits than its less strident(尖锐的)rivals, CNN and MSNBC, combined.
    What is to be done? At a social level, not much. But as producers of new journalism, they can be cautious with facts and transparent with their sources. As consumers, they can be catholic in their tastes and demanding in their standards. And although this transformation does raise concerns, there is much to celebrate in the noisy, diverse, argumentative and stridently alive environment of the news business in the age of the Internet. The coffee house is back. Enjoy it.  
Why is the news industry closer to the coffee house nowadays?

选项 A、Ordinary people are becoming keener on news from the coffee house.
B、Some social-networks create an atmosphere like in the coffee house.
C、News has more character of participation, diversity and partisanship.
D、Lots of advertisements about coffee houses appear in news today.

答案C

解析 根据题干关键词news industry,closer to the coffee house定位到原文第二段前两句:Now,the newsindustry…the coffee house.The Internet is making news more participatory,social,diverse and partisan,revivingthe loose ethos of the era before mass media.可知,由于互联网的出现,新闻越来越分享化、社会化、多样化和党派化,如今的新闻业逐渐回归咖啡馆时代,故选C)项。选项中participation,diversity,partisanship分别对应原文participatory.diverse和partisan。
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