1.Who put the proposed tax on hold?
a) the European Union
b) the Telecommunications Agency
c) Hungary's Internet Minister
d) Hungary's leader
2.From whom did the proposed tax face opposition?
a) online companies
b) the public and businesses
c) Internet service providers (ISPs)
d) lawyers
3.What took place in the streets in Budapest?
a) a huge traffic jam
b) a carnival
c) an online conference
d) protests
4.Whose warnings about the tax did Hungary's leader listen to?
a) his Finance Minister
b) the head of the World Wide Web
c) the European Union
d) a private consultancy firm
5.What did the leader say about the tax in its current form?
a) it had no form
b) it needed radical change
c) it was perfect
d) it could not be introduced
6.What is not yet a victory for the Hungarian people?
a) high-speed Internet
b) the upcoming meeting
c) the government's U-turn
d) the street protests
7.When are people meeting to talk about generating tax revenue?
a) January
b) February
c) March
d) April
8.How much tax did the government want for every gigabyte of data?
a) 16 cents
b) 66 cents
c) 60 cents
d) 61.5 cents
9.What were opponents worried the tax would limit?
a) tax curbs
b) freedom of expression
c) bandwidth
d) traffic
10.How many Likes on Facebook does an anti-tax page have?
a) more than a quarter-of-a-million
b) exactly 250,000
c) twenty-five thousand
d) slightly less than 200,000