The Internet is full of headlines that grab your attention with buzzwo的中文翻譯

The Internet is full of headlines t

The Internet is full of headlines that grab your attention with buzzwords (流行词). But often when we click through, we find the content hardly delivers and it wastes our time. We close the page, feeling we've been cheated. These types of headlines are called "click bait".
A headline on Busin,esslnsider.com reads:  "This phrase will make you seem more polite". First, when you click through, you find another headline: "Four words to seem more polite." Then, on reading the article, you find it's actually an essay about sympathy. And what are the four words? They're  "Wow, that sounds hard." On some video websites, you might encounter headlines such as  "Here's what happens when six puppies visited a campus". Turns out it's just some uneventful dog footage (镜头).
Nowadays, with the popularity of social media, many news outlets tweet (推送) click bait links to their stories. These tweets take advantage of the curiosity gap or attempt to draw the reader into a story using a question in the headline. These click bait headlines are so annoying that someone is attempting to save people time by exposing news outlet click bait through social media. The Twitter account @SavedYouAClick, run by Jake Beckman, is one such example.
Beckman's method is to grab tweets linking to a story and retweet them with a click-saving comment. For example, CNET tweeted "So iOS 8 appears to be jailbreakable but...", with a link to its coverage of Apple's product announcements. Beckman retweeted it with this comment attached: "... it hasn't been jailbroken yet."
Since founding the account, Beckman's Twitter experiment has brought him more than 131,000 followers. Beckman said that @SavedYouAClick is  "just my way of trying to help the Internet be less temble." Asked about his goal, he said, "I'd love to see publishers think about the experience of their readers first. I think there's an enormous opportunity for publishers to provide readers with informative updates that include links so you can click through and read more.
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結果 (中文) 1: [復制]
復制成功!
The Internet is full of headlines that grab your attention with buzzwords (流行词). But often when we click through, we find the content hardly delivers and it wastes our time. We close the page, feeling we've been cheated. These types of headlines are called "click bait".A headline on Busin,esslnsider.com reads: "This phrase will make you seem more polite". First, when you click through, you find another headline: "Four words to seem more polite." Then, on reading the article, you find it's actually an essay about sympathy. And what are the four words? They're "Wow, that sounds hard." On some video websites, you might encounter headlines such as "Here's what happens when six puppies visited a campus". Turns out it's just some uneventful dog footage (镜头).Nowadays, with the popularity of social media, many news outlets tweet (推送) click bait links to their stories. These tweets take advantage of the curiosity gap or attempt to draw the reader into a story using a question in the headline. These click bait headlines are so annoying that someone is attempting to save people time by exposing news outlet click bait through social media. The Twitter account @SavedYouAClick, run by Jake Beckman, is one such example.Beckman's method is to grab tweets linking to a story and retweet them with a click-saving comment. For example, CNET tweeted "So iOS 8 appears to be jailbreakable but...", with a link to its coverage of Apple's product announcements. Beckman retweeted it with this comment attached: "... it hasn't been jailbroken yet."Since founding the account, Beckman's Twitter experiment has brought him more than 131,000 followers. Beckman said that @SavedYouAClick is "just my way of trying to help the Internet be less temble." Asked about his goal, he said, "I'd love to see publishers think about the experience of their readers first. I think there's an enormous opportunity for publishers to provide readers with informative updates that include links so you can click through and read more.
正在翻譯中..
結果 (中文) 3:[復制]
復制成功!
互联网上到处都是头条新闻,抓住你的注意力与流行语(流行词)。但通常当我们点击通过,我们发现的内容几乎不提供,它浪费我们的时间。我们关上了网页,感觉我们被欺骗了。这些类型的标题是“单击“诱饵”。
标题上写着: 业务,esslnsider.com”这句话会让你显得更礼貌”。首先,当你点击通过,你会发现另一个标题:“四个词看起来更有礼貌”,然后,在阅读这篇文章,你发现它实际上是一篇关于同情的文章。这四个单词是什么?他们 “哇,听起来很难。”在一些视频网站,你可能会遇到的标题如 ”这就是当六只小狗参观校园”。原来这只是一些平凡的狗的镜头(镜头)。
如今,随着社交媒体的普及,许多新闻媒体微博(推送)点击诱饵链接到他们的故事。这些推文利用了好奇的差距,或试图吸引读者进入一个故事,使用一个问题,在标题。这些点击诱饵标题是如此的令人讨厌,有人试图通过揭露新闻的点击诱饵通过社交媒体来节省人们的时间。savedyouaclick的推特帐户”,由杰克贝克曼,就是这样一个例子。
贝克曼的方法是抓住微博链接到一个故事,转发他们点击保存评论。例如,CNET说“iOS 8似乎越狱但…”,一个链接到它的苹果产品发布覆盖。贝克曼转发与评论附:”…还没越狱呢。自开国以来,贝克曼的推特实验已经给他带来了131000多个追随者。贝克曼说,“savedyouaclick是 ”只是我的方式试图帮助互联网不是件可怕。”当被问及他的目标,他说,“我喜欢看到出版商想体验他们的读者第一。我认为有一个巨大的机会,为出版商提供信息的更新,包括链接,使您可以通过点击阅读更多的读者。
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