Shadowing-Übung: Cyborg Rights: The Next Human Rights Movement | Meow-Ludo Meow-Meow | TEDxSutherland - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

C2
Reviewer.pereen
⏸ Pausiert
Alle Sätze94 Sätze
Wenn Sätze zu kurz oder zu lang sind, klicke auf Edit, um sie anzupassen.
1
Reviewer.pereen
2
I'm at a train station.
3
I tap my hand to the reader because my Opal card is inside my hand.
4
I hear a sound familiar to Sydney commuters.
5
a low beep, a red light, declined.
6
I tap my hand again, same thing.
7
Now let me explain.
8
A few months earlier, I had the chip from an Opal card implanted under my skin.
9
It's very small, about the size of my thumbnail, and I used it to ride the trains every day.
10
Tapping on, tapping off, paying my fares just like everyone else.
11
But Transport for New South Wales had found my chip in their system and switched it off remotely without telling me.
12
They had, and I love this term, bricked my hand.
13
$30 of credit trapped under my skin forever.
14
All right, you might hear this story and say, well, that's what you'd get for putting a train ticket in your hand.
15
Fair enough.
16
But I couldn't stop thinking about how a government agency had reached inside my body and switched something off off without warning me, without telling me?
17
And that's when a question landed that I haven't been able to shake since.
18
When technology is a part of your body, who actually controls it?
19
Before they bricked it, I'd been fined.
20
I was riding a train, ticket inspectors doing their rounds.
21
I tapped my hand to the device.
22
It said, valid tap-on, credit on the card.
23
The inspector looked at his scanner and looked at my hand and said, wow, that's crazy, and then proceeded to find me twice.
24
One was for writing without a valid ticket.
25
One was for failing to produce a ticket, something you can't do when your ticket's under your skin.
26
The system confirmed I'd paid and punished me anyway.
27
This should have been straightforward.
28
You paid.
29
The machine says you paid.
30
End of story.
31
But it wasn't, because the law had no framework for this.
32
No one had ever been in the position I was in.
33
So I took it to court.
34
And I lost.
35
Appealed and then won, sort of.
36
The judge agreed I'd clearly paid my fare, but I still had to pay $1,000 in court costs.
37
And my lawyer said something that I can't stop thinking about.
38
If Australia had a Bill of Rights, you'd probably have had an instant win.
39
We don't have one.
40
And the Human Rights Commissioner said something really strange.
41
He said that if I died with the chip in my body, transport for New South Wales could theoretically claim my body
42
as their property.
43
A government transport card could give a bureaucracy claim over my corpse.
44
Don't worry, I'm in no hurry to test that one out.
45
Now imagine a world where before any of this had happened someone had asked the question, what What rights do people have over the technology in their body?
46
If that question had been asked in law, in policy, in the design of the system, none of this would have ever happened.
47
The tap would have been valid, the fare would have been paid, and we could have all just gone on with our lives.
48
But that question wasn't asked.
49
Not for me, not for anyone.
50
My lawyer called my case the thin end of the wedge.
51
And he was right.
52
Because while I was dealing with a $30 train ticket, a company called Second Sight was selling people bionic eyes, retinal implants.
53
They gave sight to people that had none.
54
And then the company went bankrupt.
55
And 350 people were left with dead video cameras in their eyes.
56
No support, no repairs, no one to call.
57
The implants are still in their eyes.
58
But the company is gone.
59
Here's the thing.
60
We have language for this.
61
You've heard of the right to repair.
62
The idea that if you buy a tractor or a phone, that you have the right to fix it without asking the manufacturer's permission.
63
And this movement is winning.
64
is passing around the world, and Australia is a part of that conversation.
65
But no one is asking the next question, which is, do we have the right to repair when the thing we want to fix is under our skin?
66
Right to repair doesn't stop at the skin.
67
We need the right to control, maintain and understand the technology inside our body.
68
Not just the technology we own, the technology we are.
69
This isn't about me and my train ticket.
70
It's about the person sitting in this room with a pacemaker.
71
The kid that will get a cochlear implant next year.
72
And eventually, the person with a neural interface.
73
And it gets me thinking what thriving actually means, the theme of the day.
74
Thriving means directed growth.
75
It means flourishing.
76
Flourishing doesn't happen when a company can switch off your hearing because you violated their terms of service.
77
and it doesn't happen when bankruptcy can leave you in the dark, literally.
78
Flourishing happens when your body belongs to you, when the technology inside you serves you, not a shareholder, not a terms of service agreement,
79
and not a bureaucrat at a transport agency.
80
Before you leave this room, decide something.
81
Your body is not a product.
82
It is not a subscription.
83
It is not for sale or to be rented, tracked, or quietly taken away from you.
84
It is yours.
85
And that truth doesn't defend itself.
86
So don't just agree with it.
87
Act on it.
88
Challenge what violates it.
89
Refuse what diminishes it.
90
Support those fighting for it.
91
Build a world where this is non-negotiable.
92
Because this only stays true if we make it true, together, for all of us.
93
Thank you.
94
Thank you.

App herunterladen

KI-Bewertung für jeden gesprochenen Satz

TRENDING

Beliebt

4.9/5 im App Store & Google Play

Shadowing English Auf dem Handy

Lernen Sie Englisch jederzeit und überall mit der Shadowing English App. Verbessern Sie heute Ihre Kommunikationsfähigkeiten!

Verfolgen Sie Ihren Lernfortschritt
KI-Bewertung und Fehlerkorrektur
Umfangreiche Videobibliothek
Shadowing English Mobile App

Über diese Lektion

In dieser Lektion wirst du die Möglichkeit haben, dein Englisch sprechen zu üben, indem du die faszinierenden Themen des Videos über Cyborg-Rechte und Technologie diskutierst. Du wirst die Fähigkeit entwickeln, komplexe Ideen klar auszudrücken und kritisch über die Rolle der Technologie im menschlichen Leben nachzudenken. Diese Lektion eignet sich hervorragend, um deine englische Aussprache zu verbessern und dich auf interessante Gespräche vorzubereiten.

Wichtige Vokabeln und Phrasen

  • chip - ein kleiner elektronischer Bestandteil, der implantiert werden kann
  • bricked - eine Terminologie, die beschreibt, dass etwas deaktiviert oder unbrauchbar gemacht wurde
  • Transport - der Übertragungs- oder Verkehrsdienst, der Personen befördert
  • court - das Gericht, in dem rechtliche Streitigkeiten entschieden werden
  • human rights - Menschenrechte, die jedem Individuum zustehen
  • framework - der rechtliche Rahmen, der gewisse Regeln definiert
  • valid - gültig oder rechtmäßig
  • claim - einen Anspruch erheben

Übungstipps

Um die Inhalte des Videos effektiv zu verinnerlichen und deine Sprachfähigkeiten zu verbessern, empfehle ich dir, shadowing zu nutzen. Diese Technik beinhaltet das Nachsprechen der gesprochenen Worte in Echtzeit, was dir helfen wird, deine Englische Aussprache zu verbessern. Achte darauf, die Tonhöhe und den Rhythmus des Sprechers genau zu imitieren. Das Video hat eine moderate Geschwindigkeit, sodass du genügend Zeit hast, um die einzelnen Phrasen zu erfassen und nachzusprechen. Verweile an schwierigen Stellen, um sicherzustellen, dass du die richtige Betonung und Intonation für jeden Satz aufnimmst. Mithilfe dieser shadowing site wirst du in der Lage sein, dein Englisch sprechen zu üben und deine Hörverständnisfähigkeiten gleichzeitig zu schärfen.

Nutze auch die Möglichkeit, das Video mehrmals anzusehen. Dies gibt dir die Gelegenheit, regelmäßig Englisch zu lernen mit YouTube, während du die wesentlichsten Informationen verinnerlichst. Denke daran, offen für Fehler zu sein und mich nicht unter Druck zu setzen! Jeder Schritt in diesem Prozess ist wertvoll für dein Lernen.

Was ist die Shadowing-Technik?

Shadowing ist eine wissenschaftlich fundierte Sprachlerntechnik, die ursprünglich für die professionelle Dolmetscherausbildung entwickelt und durch den Polyglotten Dr. Alexander Arguelles populär gemacht wurde. Die Methode ist einfach aber wirkungsvoll: Du hörst englisches Audio von Muttersprachlern und wiederholst es sofort laut — wie ein Schatten, der dem Sprecher mit nur 1–2 Sekunden Verzögerung folgt. Anders als passives Hören oder Grammatikübungen zwingt Shadowing dein Gehirn und deine Mundmuskulatur, gleichzeitig echte Sprachmuster zu verarbeiten und zu reproduzieren. Studien zeigen, dass es Aussprachegenauigkeit, Intonation, Rhythmus, verbundene Sprache, Hörverständnis und Sprechflüssigkeit signifikant verbessert — was es zu einer der effektivsten Methoden für die IELTS Speaking-Vorbereitung und reale englische Kommunikation macht.

Kauf uns einen Kaffee