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学历语言类 | 全国英语等级考试(PETS)

历年真题

2024全国英语等级考试(三级)历年真题04-03

发布时间: 2024-04-03 05:00:24 发布人:
2024全国英语等级考试(三级)历年真题04-03

1、 what does the movie tell us? (单选题)

A. It is never too late to learn.

B. It is hard for the old to learn.

C. Education is beyond the poor.

D. Education leads to a better life.

试题答案:A

2、 Questions 18—21 are based on the following dialogue between a reporter and a health expert.
Who are the research subjects of Dr.Stone’s study? (单选题)

A. Elderly patients.

B. Seriously ill patients.

C. People who never get sick.

D. People who have just recovered.

试题答案:C

3、 第55题选 (单选题)

试题答案:暂无答案

4、 What did the man ask the woman to do? (单选题)

A. Go on a diet.

B. Have a snack.

C. Play some tennis.

D. Stop screaming.

试题答案:B

5、 根据下面资料,回答{TSE}题。
Passwords are everywhere in computer security. All too often, they are also ineffective. A good password has to be both easy to remember and hard to guess, but in practice people seem to pay at-tention to the former. Names of wives, husbands and children are popular. "12356" or "12345" are also common choices.
That predictability lets security researchers (and hackers) create dictionaries which list com-mon passwords, useful to those seeking to break in. But although researchers know that passwords are insecure, working out just how insecure has been difficult. Many studies have only small sam-ples to work on.
However, with the co-operation of Yahoo!, Joseph Bonneau of Cambridge University obtained the biggest sample to date--70 million passwords that came with useful data about their owners.
Mr Bonneau found some interesting variations. Older users had better passwords than young ones. People whose preferred language was Korean or German chose the most secure passwords;those who spoke Indonesian the least. Passwords designed to hide sensitive information such as credit-card numbers were only slightly more secure than those protecting less important things, like access to games. "Nag screens" that told users they had chosen a weak password made virtually no difference. And users whose accounts had been hacked in the past did not make more secure choices than those who had never been hacked.
But it is the broader analysis of the sample that is of most interest to security researchers. For, despite their differences, the 70 million users were still predictable enough that a generic password dictionary was effective against both the entire sample and any slice of it. Mr Bonnean is blunt:
"An attacker who can manage ten guesses per account will compromise around 1% of accounts. "And that is a worthwhile outcome for a hacker.
One obvious solution would be for sites to limit the number of guesses that can be made before access is blocked. Yet whereas the biggest sites, such as Google and Microsoft, do take such meas-ures, many do not. The reasons of their not doing so are various. So it´ s time for users to consider the alternatives to traditional passwords.
{TS}People tend to use passwords that are__________. (单选题)

A. easy to remember

B. hard to figure out

C. random numbers

D. popular names

试题答案:A

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