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Americans And Chinese Internet Censorship

chowbok writes: "The Weekly Standard writes that despite expectations, the Chinese Government has been very successful in suppressing free internet access for their citizens. Key to this success was the assistance of Cisco, who built a giant firewall tailored to the state's needs, Yahoo (who helpfully censors search results and monitors online chats), and other Western companies."

43 of 626 comments (clear)

  1. Why? by dj28 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It always amazed me why China connected to the public internet anyways if they are going to censor everything except the stuff _they_ want their citizens to see. Wouldn't it have been much more efficient to build the network and not connect it to the public internet? All they would have to do then is place information on their network they want their citizens to see. In any even, it's pretty screwed up.

    1. Re:Why? by fishebulb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      take a history class. Censorship is a common practice in the US.

      Lets see, WWI, its illegal to hinder the war effort. One man was arrested for distrubiting flyers to draftees. Freedom of speech, apparently not. And now you say but that was then.

      we have so many laws in the US that effectively controls most forms of speech. These laws have legit purposes, but they have been and will continue to control unpopular speech.

      Want to get on a soap box downtown in a peaceful, way (ie not shouting at the top of your lungs). Well thats loitering, disturbing the peace.

      Free speech seems to be one of those values in the US that is only really protected, as long as its what your saying is popular.

      atleast written and digital censorship is a little less existant. but its amazing what laws are out there.

      I find it funny and disturbing that there are NO LOITERING signs at out public parks.

    2. Re:Why? by volsung · · Score: 3, Funny

      I propose we just make a moderation called "Stupid" that will be more multipurpose. Otherwise, we'll really need additional moderations like "Incoherent", "Axe-grinding", "Talking out of posterior".

    3. Re:Why? by fishebulb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      what was that quote: "freedom of the press is limited to those who own one"
      Permits have often been used as a method of denying legit rallies. Its quite easy to "lose the paperwork" etc.

      Censorship of free speech has no purpose at any time. This is distinct from say not allowing the media to broadcast the plans of invasion before it happens.

      Basically you have to ask the govt, why is a war needed if a speech can shake people's belief in the purpose of that war.

      in response to the carnivore comment. The weight is now put on me to hide what i am saying so the govt cant read it? yes what a free society we live in. There shouldnt be ways around it, simply because there should be no NEED for it.

      How would someone questioning the govt's involvement in the war (specifically WWI and II) allow the conquest of Europe?

      Every action the Govt and leaders take need to be questioned for motive. Trust must also be present. Sounds like a contradiction? maybe, but i cannot trust a leader/govt if i do not look at their motives.

      You know how many of those restrictions get lifted? they are declared unconstitutional. as in they shouldnt be laws in the first place.

      Dont get me wrong, I do believe the US is a more free society than many other countries in the world. (not all etc). But just because its good, doesnt mean it cant be improved, and that it cant slide down to bad.

    4. Re:Why? by maxpublic · · Score: 5, Informative

      Although it seems rather silly to point this out, government is not a neutral entity that will impartially issue you permits and provide information no matter what group or interest you represent. Having worked for government I saw countless examples of information getting 'lost' until it was too late to be useful, permits denied for a variety of reasons (e.g., lost the paperwork, paperwork incomplete, 'anonymous threats', etc.), peaceful gatherings raided by police using the quite illegal 'hold and release' tactic, intimidation by forming up riot lines against a rally (somewhat amusing when there are more police than folks at the rally), documents destroyed or altered against all records laws when said documents might lead to problems, etc. etc.

      The list of abuses I personally witnessed is a long one. Very few people in government at *any* level give a rats ass about the law; if you think otherwise I suggest you stop deluding yourself. Government is interested only in furthering its own goals (whatever they might be) and the law doesn't amount to a hill of beans if it interferes with the pursuit of those goals. The average citizen, especially a citizen that objects to government action, is held in utter contempt.

      The playing field isn't at all level and nothing about it is fair. Censorship in the U.S. is quite real and happens regularly, even if you, the guy on the street, has no idea it's happening. It isn't what's going on in China, but it's alot worse than what you might think.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    5. Re:Why? by Claudius · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Censorship of free speech has no purpose at any time.

      This is a bit naive. Political canvassing outside polling places, for example, is censored speech in the U.S., an abridgement of civil liberties for the distinct purpose of supporting democracy through fair elections. As another example, one who has access to national security information (take nuclear weapons information, for example) cannot share this information without going to jail. This has the distinct purpose (we may quibble about the validity of the purpose, but it is a purpose nonetheless) of preserving U.S. sovereignty and the safety of its citizens and allies. However, it entails an abridgement of civil liberties for those "in the know." One cannot stand up in synagogue and scream "Death to kikes!" without some expectation of legal recourse.

      Freedom of speech is a lofty goal, and indeed it is treated with more reverence in the U.S. than in most other countries, but it is not and cannot be considered an absolute. Even now, with the "War on Terror," this freedom is being curtailed in the name of "national security" in ways we may well have considered impossible just one year ago. China, for reasons of its own national security, has even more severe restrictions on speech.

      Personally, the most alarming aspect of this is that these companies were able to produce technology which satisfies, to a large degree, the rather tight-fisted control of information required by the PRC government. This bodes badly for those who hoped that the practical, technical difficulties of censorship would effectively block attempts to censor speech in the U.S.

    6. Re:Why? by Pii · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Ok, I'll say it...

      You are wrong.

      If a society does not allow a person to exercise their right of conscience, to articulate a belief or a point of view that runs contrary to sanctioned doctrine, or to engage in self-determination, then that society is wrong, and no amount of double-thinking left-leaning uber-tolerance changes that fact.

      Nobody is talking about forcing Chinese citizens to abandon their long-held culture, or turn them into good little capitalist consumers like the rest of us. If they choose to live in impoverished little communes, renouncing all forms of material wealth, so be it.

      What we are talking about is giving them a choice.

      Is a Chinese person less entitled to pornography than you? Are they less entitled to worship the God of their choosing? How about deciding for themselves if they can or can't support several children, more than one of which might be female? (Perish the thought...)

      In short, get out of the classroom, get a goddamn job, and take a fucking stand for something, even if it is only here on Slashdot.

      --
      For those that would die defending it, Freedom
      has a sweet taste that the protected will never know.
    7. Re:Why? by Computer! · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If a society does not allow a person to exercise their right of conscience, to articulate a belief or a point of view that runs contrary to sanctioned doctrine, or to engage in self-determination, then that society is wrong[...]

      Sorry, but a giant says you to that one. We've had this discussion a million times on /. before (as I'm sure someone w/ a 4-digit UID knows), but the argument that there is a universal wrong way to run your government is useless without some sort of universal judge. Since the Chinese government doesn't acknowlege the existance of God, they can't acknowlege the existence of right or wrong, only benificial and detrimental to the well-being of their people. The judgement of detrimental vs. benificial is made by the Chinese, as a whole, just like the decision to adopt Socialism in the first place. They are the only ones they deem capapble of making value judgements on their society. Until you start paying their bills, you get no say.

      Now, of course, if you were to say that God wants Man to have free will, and the idea of an authoritarian state is an affront to God and a sin in and of itself, you'd have a very valid point. Of course, you'd never say that, because everyone on /. knows, only stupid folks believe in that "fairy tale".

      What I'm trying to say is that I agree with you, China's government is wrong. Unfortunately, we have placed ourselves in a position where we cannot argue without risking our cherished freedom from objectivity.

      --
      If you fall off a building, go real limp, because maybe you'll look like a dummy and people will be like hey, free dummy
  2. SPAM? by homer_ca · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If these firewalls are so good why do I get so much porn and get-rich-quick spam through Chinese open relays? If nothing else, the spam would be a good channel for steganographic messages to and from dissidents.

  3. China is still reaching critical mass by jACL · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There was a very insightful (and long) article that I came across on the Atlantic Monthly's site a while back. Called 'Was Democracy Just a Moment', its central point was that economic development and a strong middle class needs to develop in a country before democracy can succeed. The article predicts that democracy, were it to 'break out' today in China, would at the very least cause a split of the country:

    "Under its authoritarian system China has dramatically improved the quality of life for hundreds of millions of its people. My point, hard as it may be for Americans to accept, is that Russia may be failing in part because it is a democracy and China may be succeeding in part because it is not. Having traveled through much of western China, where Muslim Turkic Uighurs (who despise the Chinese) often predominate, I find it hard to imagine a truly democratic China without at least a partial breakup of the country. Such a breakup would lead to chaos in western China, because the Uighurs are poorer and less educated than most Chinese and have a terrible historical record of governing themselves. Had the student demonstrations in 1989 in Tiananmen Square led to democracy, would the astoundingly high economic growth rates of the 1990s still obtain? I am not certain, because democracy in China would have ignited turmoil not just in the Muslim west of the country but elsewhere, too; order would have decreased but corruption would not have. The social and economic breakdowns under democratic rule in Albania and Bulgaria, where the tradition of pre-communist bourgeois life is weak or nonexistent (as in China), contrasted with more-successful democratic venues like Hungary and the Czech Republic, which have had well-established bourgeoisie, constitute further proof that our belief in democracy regardless of local conditions amounts to cultural hubris."

    Heady stuff, and something that really made my head spin -- wasn't democracy good in all situations and all cases? The author would probably assert that censorship will continue to occur in China until a stable economy and strong middle class break open China to democracy, at which point it will end.

    --
    "It remains to be seen if the human brain is powerful enough to solve the problems it has created." Dr. Richard Wallace
    1. Re:China is still reaching critical mass by 1010011010 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      economic development and a strong middle class needs to develop in a country before democracy can succeed

      Balls. The U.S. was more or less a third world country when it got started, and it succeeded.

      A country that believes it must have a controlled society and few freedoms until it can "afford them," will never NEVER be able to "afford" them.

      Once they have economic development, if they ever do on a wide scale, they will point to their success under a repressive regime and say, "see, it works!" I don't think it will work.

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    2. Re:China is still reaching critical mass by meggito · · Score: 5, Funny

      No, democracy IS good in all situations and all places. Just go read the history books they give you in school. THe United States is never wrong. We didn't invade Mexico, they attacked us! We didn't destroy the way of life in the Philipines, we helped them grow as a country. The US is never wrong and democracy is always right. Damn that Marx fellow and all his clever ideas about working together for a common good. Damn that country that rules over a billion people and manages to do a good job. Its all bullshit commie lies.

    3. Re:China is still reaching critical mass by cygnusx · · Score: 5, Interesting

      One of the better /. stories in a long time. My two bits: when India was freed from British rule in 1947, there were quite a few naysayers: "how could India, where thousands die for lack of food, afford the luxury of a *democracy*? Elections cost money, dammit!" But elections are held every 5 years (sooner if the government resigns and no alternative can be found), and a (usually) effective opposition ensures that the government of the day can never pass a day without some oppsotion party trying to cause them some grief.

      Does it work perfectly? No. A lot of Indians, ~30% of them, mostly in villages, are illiterate: they tend to get swayed by things like caste which an enlightened voter wouldn't consider. Then there are some parties with agendas so venal I wish they wouldn't exist.

      But in spite of all of this, it works, and we have a pretty good judicial system to back it up (the anglo-saxon system of jurisprudence -- probably the best thing the Brits left behind) and pull up offenders.

      So: yeah, India hasn't been as successful as China in increasing the quality of life -- especially for its villages (the cities do pretty well), but I would rather have this than an authoritarian regime breathing down my neck.

      So, yeah, democracy *is* good in all situations and all cases -- for people who believe in it. If India can make it work with one billion people (and some of them very poor), and with a cultural diversity that exceeds Europe, then there is no question in my mind that it can work in any place.

    4. Re:China is still reaching critical mass by mizhi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Having traveled through much of western China, where Muslim Turkic Uighurs (who despise the Chinese) often predominate, I find it hard to imagine a truly democratic China without at least a partial breakup of the country. Such a breakup would lead to chaos in western China, because the Uighurs are poorer and less educated than most Chinese and have a terrible historical record of governing themselves."

      Keep this in mind, when reading about Uyghur history, especially in the Xinjiang province: The history is very politically charged. There are Uyghurs who wish to see an East Turkestan established, the Chinese, and the Russians both have interests in not seeing an independent nation established. The history of both sides is tailored to meet these needs. China maintains that Xinjiang was, and always has been, a part of China. The Uyghurs maintains that this is false. I tend to fall on the side of the Uyghurs, but I also believe that they are little better than the communists in manipulating historical record. Thus, the history has become, I think, permanently distorted, at least until archeologists can get into the region and do some serious excavating.

      A couple of points to your otherwise insightful post. 1) The Uyghurs are poorer, but they have a very interesting history and, at least in the Northwestern Xinjiang-Uyghur Autonomous Region, actually managed to establish a kingdom that was at relative peace for 1000 years, aside from a brief 200 year voluntary stint under the Mongul empire. China was attempting an annexation of Xinjiang since 104BC, and each time was expelled until 1867 when the Manchurians finally firmly implanted themselves. Even at this juncture, they were expelled in 1933 and Xinjiang was never really taken over until 1949. I most certainly doubt that the Uyghurs were an exceptionally poor people during this time, considering the Silk Road runs right through their land. I am not sure about this last statement, that is speculation on my part. 2) The Uyghurs are the majority ethnic group in Xinjiang. Just to make sure people realize that they aren't a minority with dense pockets here and there.
      3) China will never willingly give up Xinjiang. The region is far too rich in natural gas and oil. Look up the gas pipeline. It's the second largest infrastructure project next to the three gorges dam project. China has sunk an amazing amount of capital in terms of utilizing it's vast stores there, and is set to recieve a tremendous amount of foreign investment into the region because of this. A split in China? Don't hold your breath. :-)

      --
      Humorless sig goes here.
    5. Re:China is still reaching critical mass by MrFredBloggs · · Score: 3, Insightful

      People who dont live in a democracy often seem to wish they do. How many people living in a democracy wish they were living in a dictatorship?

      Also, if people living under a democracy want to do things for the common good, they would. Manifestly they dont - they want to look out for themselves. Imposing a dictatorship on such people will hardly make them happier.

    6. Re:China is still reaching critical mass by Paul+Komarek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Here's my token response, that I feel inclined to write everything discussions of governmental systems arises.

      1) The United States is still on course for Marx's communisum. Witness the anti-globalisation protests, and the prospect if increased worker protections because of better communication. The Soviet Union did not follow Marx's theory, and Lenin was rebuked by Marx.

      2) Socialism can (and I believe should) be defined in a manner that has nothing to do with communism: socialism is a system which places society above the individual, i.e. the good of the many versus the good of one. There are many socialist systems of various sizes (including nations whose town populations rival our state populations) surviving quite well. Socialism is a statement about priorities, not a blueprint for an economy. Americans (like myself) have a tough time separating society and economy, because in the United States they are joined at the hip.

      3) Greed and sloth (laziness) occur in every culture. Capitialism in the US is fairly robust to sloth, but suffers hugely because of greed. Socialist systems are more likely to resist greed (which depends on individualism), but less likely to resist sloth.

      4) Capitalism does not guarantee, or even make stipulations, that a hard worker will advance over his peers. Fairness is not built-in to capitalist economies. "The American Dream is only a dream," to quote Gordon Gano.

      5) The asshole factor is clearly at work in both the US capitalist economy, as well as the US Federal Republic governmental system.

      In short, the parent post doesn't hold water, and is libelous to Socialist and Communist systems. Furthermore, it similarly propogates ridiculous stereotypes about Capitialist economies.

      -Paul Komarek

  4. The Ovens of Corporate America by hyrdra · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Of all the rhetoric in this very disturbing piece of how western companies are helping censorship overseas, I found this comment most interesting:

    "We don't care about the [Chinese government's] rules. It's none of Cisco's business."

    Similar to how Mercedes or BMW didn't care much for what those giant ovens were used for in NAZI Germany, because it was none of their business. Oh how the ashes fall.

    Disgusting. I can say I will never think of Cisco the same way again. What if the US decided they needed to "monitor" citizen Internet communications? Would Cisco step up with one of their enterprise level solutions?

    Right next to Oracle with bids for a national ID card...

    --


    "I'll just chip in a bit for RedHat: I actually have that installed on my university machine." - Linus, '95
    1. Re:The Ovens of Corporate America by Eloquence · · Score: 3, Informative
      Corporations are amoral. Their only purpose is to maximize shareholder value, i.e. sales and profits. If they act in a way that reduces their shareholder value, e.g. by acting "morally responsible", they can even be sued by their shareholders under certain circumstances.

      The same corporations that create airplanes also manufacture weapons that are sold into the third world. The insurance companies lobby for safer cars, but also for less privacy to create better consumer profiles. The clothes corporations employ kids under deplorable conditions. The oil corporations support corrupt regimes in order to get drilling rights. And so on ad infinitum. Cisco supplying tools that can be used for censorship is hardly the worst crime that corporations can be accused of. The whole arms industry thrives of death and suffering, and it is in their corporate interest to create more of it.

      That's why corporations need to be regulated. You just can't expect them to do the right thing, that would not only be idiotically naive, it would be fatal.

    2. Re:The Ovens of Corporate America by gilroy · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Cisco is out to make money, if they didnt build the firewall someone else would've.

      That is such an ethical non-starter. The fact that someone else -- over whom you have no control -- will do something awful never justifies doing it yourself. You are responsible for your own actions.


      It is not always -- perhaps not even often -- possible to stop evil from being done. But at all times, you have the power to say, "I, at least, will not do evil." You aren't responsible if someone else does what you have renounced ... but they don't justify you doing it, either.


      We'll pass only briefly over the idea that, if everyone conducted themselves ethically and no one took this moral short-cut, then in fact the Great Firewall of China is a far from inevitable fact. In other words, the poster did not offer a justification, only a rationalization -- an excuse for doing something known (by the doer) to be wrong.

    3. Re:The Ovens of Corporate America by Wateshay · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is a common misconception that I hear on Slashdot all the time, and it simply isn't true. Yes, corporate execs do have a fiduciary responsibility to the company, but that does not in any way preclude ethical or moral behavior. I would be quite surprised if you could find a case where a corporate exec was successfully sued for not exploiting people in order to increase profits. Corporations are run by people, and those people are either moral or immoral, ethical or unethical. Laws exist to protect against the immoral and unethical, but there is nothing about the structure of a company that will make a moral, ethical person do immoral and unethical things.

      You are absolutely correct that all of the downright evil acts by corporations that you sited do really occur. They occur, though, because the people in charge of those corporations have low ethical standards. Not every airplane manufacturer, though, manufactures and sells weapons to the third world. Not every insurance company seeks to eliminate personal privacy. Not every clothing manufacturer employs kids in deplorable conditions. Not every oil corporation supports corrupt regimes.

      I'm not sure exactly what you are calling for when you say that corporations should be regulated, so I won't directly accuse you of any particular beliefs. However, I will say (based on what is commonly meant when regulation is refered to) that I don't think regulation per se is the answer. The answer is instead (as I see it) to criminalize unethical behavior and punish those responsible.

      --

      "If English was good enough for Jesus, it's good enough for everyone else."

  5. Chinese IP Space by cluge · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Almost 1/3 of the SPAM sourcees I've encountered recently have been chinese. My ids LOGS regular ping sweeps and other probes coming from chinese held IP addresses. Chinese alerts account for about 24% of the IDS alerts. Some of these sweeps even originate in chinese government offices (since blocked because I'm tired of HUGE ping packets in my network from the beaurearu of statistics)

    Considering the crap thats been spewing out of Chinese controlled IP space, I wouldn't be adverse to some reverse censorship. i.e. no chinsese IP's allowed in my network. The Chinese may not like what the NET has to offer their people, but they sure seem to dish out pretty silly stuff for the rest of us (My penis is much to big NOW, no more PLEASE).

    I wonder if there was an easy way to blackhole all of mainland China? I wonder if the Chinese would consider THAT censorship?

    I'm not saying that anyone should do this mind you, I'm just saying what goes around eventually comes around.

    --
    "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
  6. Capitalist by Bolen · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Wasn't it Joseph Stalin who said (paraphrasing here), "If you want to hang a capitalist, you can easily find another capitalist willing to sell you the rope."

    Thanks a lot, Cisco.

    1. Re:Capitalist by dgroskind · · Score: 5, Interesting

      There are innumerable variations of this quote, which is attributed to Lenin.

      Unfortunately, no source for these quotations has ever been found in Lenin's collected works.

      It may have been fabricated originally by the John Birch Society 40 years ago as part of their anti-Communist propaganda.

      Curiously, Lenin actually said some things the John Birch Society might agree with: "While the State exists there can be no freedom; when there is freedom there will be no State."

  7. China by Renraku · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I can see where the Chinese government is coming from here. They don't want anyone to get any bright ideas or fall for other countries' propaganda. Perfectly logical. However, the evil of the plan comes out when you see that the Chinese are terribly oppressed, and that the censorship cloud covers everything that the government doesn't like. Which would be a lot of things. Maybe the U.S. is trying to see if it works well, so they could possibly instate a similar system in the future...

    --
    Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
  8. Its not so bad by mcdirmid · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I can view almost all internet sites from China. I'm posting this from Beijing right now from a major Chinese University. I can access most websites except for a few free content sites (geocities) and some news sites (cnn.com). Its strange, they block CNN but not New York Times, which, IMHO, is more critical of the Chinese government. Notice that Slashdot isn't blocked and its critical of almost everyone! So there filtering is not very consistent. They could get rid of the firewall tommorow and I think it would hardly change things.

    I don't know about Chinese sites, I can only care about sites in English. As for spam, surely this is just b/c the networks in China are just not that well managed yet (e.g., like @Home networks once were...).

    As for Cisco and Yahoo, they are doing business in China, and they are following Chinese laws. So what is the problem? Idealism and making money are mostly incompatible.

  9. Please... by Stickerboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am Chinese, and frankly, you don't make a lot of sense. To further extend your argument, when China becomes "free", Chinese citizens will blame the Russians for selling them tanks and warplanes that fill the arsenal of the People's army, blame the Chinese newspaper editors for writing articles that spread Communist Party ideology and blame the Chinese factory workers that manufactured the bullets that shot the democracy protesters at Tianenmen Square.

    I may have grown up in a foreign culture, but I can spot someone with an axe to grind when I see one. Your disgust at "Big Business" and "Big Government" has nothing to do with the rights or attitudes of the Chinese people, but rather with you wanting to blame the what's wrong with the world on those that you don't agree with.

    The Chinese nation will sort themselves out over a long time, and probably peacefully, too - that's the Chinese way, to take the long, nonconfrontational view. The best thing that Clinton and Bush have done, and what you seem so opposed to, is to allow US businesses to continue to invest in China, further stimulating the economy and slowly raising living standards for the Chinese people. With increased living standards, more power to the middle class and greater education, the people of China will ask for more freedom and representation incrementally, and the government of China will grant the inevitable.

    The average Chinese citizen does not want your revolution. They want orderly, nonviolent change. The US companies are just doing business, no more and no less, and that business helps along that change.

    --
    Light a fire for a man and he'll be warm for a day. Light a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
  10. Unfortunately, the blocks are not the problem. by tomshanghai · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First of all, yes, I can luckily read Slashdot from my office & home here in Beijing. I've been living in different cities in China for two-and-a-half years now & I've seen many (kinds of) blocks come and go.

    Sure, CNN.com is blocked & so is BBC.co.uk. No, NYT.com & BBCWORLD.com aren't blocked. So yes, I also don't understand the logic behind the specific blocks themselves. What I do understand, however, is that the blocks unfortunately are not the real issue.

    The real issue is that the majority of people (in this case, internet users) themselves are not interested to actually access this information. If you have a peek into one of the many internet cafes around, the majority of users are merely playing games.

    If they are on the internet, they are always either on Chinese news sites or chatting with each other. If I talk to my colleagues in the office, and ask them why they're not interested in information from a different perspective, they tell me that they simply don't care too much about international opinions. If they do visit international sites they'd rather visit other kinds of sites, mostly of expensive brands like BMW, Gucci & Rolf Benz, just to check out the latest styles. They are also interested in international universities, how to get their MBA & required visas.

    Please remember that this applies to the *majority* of users in China. Obviously there is a group of users that is interested in the information, but I believe people on Slashdot are realistic enough to know that if you want to access the information, there is *always* a way.

    For those of you in China who want to access CNN, simply go to http://robots.cnn.com

  11. Well, lets be honest. by autopr0n · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If anyone out there thinks that the Chinese couldn't have done this on their own, that only Americans can build routers... Well, the seriously need to reevaluate their assumptions.

    China could have done this without outside help, China should have free speech. They don't. Not building firewalls for them isn't going to open their society.

    Since Mao died, the living standards of the average Chinese person has skyrocketed. Deng Xiao Peng created a lot of reforms, economically (saying "It's not bad, to be rich"), and even in terms of free speech and political expression. After Tiananmen they clamped back down. I don't really know if you can blame them either, if you just lived through the cultural revolution, you would probably be very afraid as well. Mid-century China was a veritable case study in how 'harmless' politics and mass youth movements can cause huge problems.

    Maybe Tiananmen was do soon, and the students really blew it. They should have stuck with Op-Ed pages, and built support that way, protesting only set them back, a lot. China today doesn't allow anywhere near the political expression that existed in the 1980s.

    But that said, people who's lives are getting better and better every year are not going to really want to revolt.

    And keep in mind that democracy and freedom of speech is an exception in all of human history. Maybe someday, but don't think it will happen anytime soon. Happy citizens don't revolt.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  12. We would like to thank by Alien54 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    We would like to thank all of the little people who made this all possible.

    Seriously, this is reaching a point where the corporate profit motive is starting to get in the way of pesky things like morals and human rights, etc.

    I remember some Canadian professor going into this in great detail. Basically, the lack on morality in the pure profit motive is going to screw with the log term prospects of the planet

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
  13. I guess I gotta play devil's advocate on this one by sielwolf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And I'll probably get modded down -1 flamebait. But anyway: what is the problem with this? In the democratic world at large we have many standard freedoms including chosing who we do business with.

    I cringe when I read these posts that say "how the hell can they do this?" and "this is just another example of big business...".

    Frankly that is the result of allowing all people to act as they wish. This is not a thought socialist state: you cannot command someone to act a certain way with their freedoms. Cisco and Yahoo seem to think there is nothing wrong with the People's govt of China.

    And what is wrong with this? I saw someone comparing these companies to BMW et al during the Nazi years in Germany. Um, as far as I know Cisco isn't using "subhumans" as slavelabor here.

    Personally there are many things about the Chinese government that I don't like and I'm kind of sad that these companies helped them out. But with or without their help the same paranoia state regime will still be in charge.

    Heck probably the "revolution" that everyone asks for will happen without any one of us knowing. The Chinese middle class will expand, they will wish for a) more leisure and b) more freedom to spend their money. And the government will comply to them because they are the sweet tax center. Hell, that's how all of the US Terrorism law got passed.

    --
    What is music when you despise all sound?
  14. This is not new by truesaer · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Companies can always be trusted to do these kinds of things as long as it means profit. I think in the future at some point they will really be embarassed and regret it.


    I've been meaning to read IBM and the Holocaust. It basically talks about how IBM's punch card machines that they created customly for hitler were "indispensable in rounding up prisoners, keeping the trains fully packed and on time, tallying the deaths, and organizing the entire war effort."


    I should say that although all of this is sad, I don't think there is any malicious intent on any of the companies. Its almost as though the whole takes actions that none of the individuals would.

  15. good point by poemofatic · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Most modern states employ a much more effective filter than anything Cisco could come up with:

    People don't want to criticize their own govt's, or take responsibility for what their leaders do.

    In fact, the "Great Firewall" China is using is a sign of the leadership's political naivete.

    A system in which dissenting views are allowed (limited) exposure -- only to be swamped out by flag-waving and soundbytes -- gives people the illusion that they are living in an open society and participating in an open debate. But as long as vast swathes of history and unpopular facts are not widely known, critics will seem as though they are coming from left field and will be generally ignored, if not hated. Ironically, this small amount of openness serves to "immunize" the populace from taking opposing views seriously.

    Ralph Reed said it best:

    "In public policy, it matters less who has the best arguments and more who gets heard -- and by whom."

    IMNSHO, if the Chinese leadership does a good enough job in K-12 education of instilling patriotism and belief in the fundamental justness of the regime, as well as making sure that the govt. view dominates most "respectable" news outlets and debate forums, then those rare voices arguing for, say, a withdrawal from Tibet will seem like traitorous whackos. Further, pride from allowing dissenting voices to be heard will even further reinforce the fundamental belief that they are the "good guys" in every conflict.

    --

    When in doubt, have a man come through a door with a gun in his hand.

  16. The wisdom of Karl Kaufeld by gilroy · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Early 20th century: Democracy versus Fascism.


    Late 20th century: Democracy versus Communism.


    Early 21st century: Democracy versus... Capitalism?

  17. my servers are blocked by clunis · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I am one of the webmasters for the University of Michigan and my servers have been blocked from China for over a year. First they blocked just the IP addresses of our main servers (http://www.umich.edu/ & http://www-personal.umich.edu/) but when we moved our hosts to other IPs they blocked at least the entire subnet we use for public web servers. We get frantic e-mail from Chinese students all the time looking for access to our site so they can come here to study.

    I hope triangle boy will help with this, but does anyone know of anything more proactive *I* could be doing?

  18. Do you think the US is different? by markj02 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Well, of course, in a certain sense it it: you can talk about a lot more in the US than in China. In the US, you insult politicians, criticize the government, tell people how to cheat on their taxes, and make fun of anybody and everybody. All that is good.

    But the US happens to have its own obsessions of what is permissible. US obsessions are about disparaging foods, certain kinds of pornography, cryptography, and anything that might step on the toes of big media companies. And in the US, the means of enforcing those restrictions are oddball restrictions on any kind of hardware that plays audio and video, throwing people in jail, sending FBI agents to foreign countries to "help" them, trade sanctions, and prohibiting certain goods from being imported.

    Yes, China has different obsessions (although there seems to be some overlap with US obsessions). But both governments are throwing their considerable weight around to prohibit access from the kind of content they consider harmful. When the US abandons restrictions like the DMCA, software patents, baroque rules on pornography, and the various export restrictions on cryptography, the US position on criticizing China would get a lot stronger. Until then, one can only conclude that both countries have haphazard and serious restrictions on speech.

  19. Cisco and Yahoo etc. are *good guys* here by Jarnis · · Score: 4, Insightful
    GUYS! Think for a moment!

    Cisco and Yahoo etc. are doing a good thing here!

    If every related company would tell the chinese govt. "No, we will not do such blocking system. It's impossible/immoral/bad/[insert your favourite reason here].", what do you think chinese govt. would do? It would decide that they cannot control the internet, so they won't allow any internet traffic in/out of the country. They are control freaks, so they need to have the warm and fuzzy feeling of 'controlling' the net.

    Cisco & friends are providing them (at an immense cost, mind ya) a 'filtering system' that gives them that warm & fuzzy feeling that they are 'controlling' their citizen's internet access. It's an illusion at best, but they seem to want it, and are willing to pay for it. You know - the saying about fool and their money... :)

    We all know that there are ways around such blocks. This is nothing but your average broken censorware application with goverment approved blocklist, built into bunch of high end routers. Having somewhat crippled internet connection to the world is by far a better option than no internet at all. You can always work around the blocks, and get what you need, if you really want it.

    Longer those chinese leaders are happily smiling in their ivory towers and thinking 'the citizens have their internet, but only those parts we want - we are in control', the better.

  20. An explanation - this is VERY important to everyon by janimal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, it does... The article does not talk about censorship only. One of the applications of the monitoring is persecution of people who seek freedom. The hairs on my neck stood on end when I read this.. this is _exactly_ the kind of application that IBM was helping with, when the Germans were using IBMs to count Jews. Whether it's by race or by belief, in both instances innocent people are persecuted. The Chinese don't outright kill the dissidents, but I am confident this is happening - the world for a long time was in denial of the use of western counting machines by the Germans. Nobody believed they were actually used to label people for extermination. The Chinese application is horrifyingly close if not exactly the same!

    I used to live in a commie country. In such a regime, the government uses propaganda to spread some positive.. and beatiful message. This is invariably a sophism. In the Chinese case, the message is, "we are all for peaceful change." Killing and persecuting dissidents is NOT peaceful (as some earlier post pointed out). This message is an outright lie; it is easy to believe though..

    Many Chinese believe it. What's even more dangerous is that people in the Western world believe it too. They are often idealists and really like to hear declarations of peaceful change and gradual way to freedom. And that they can help those poor people in China by helping with that change.

    An example of similar such behaviour is how scientists on the Manhattan project during WWII helped the Russians obtain info on how to make the bomb. They believed no single country shoud have the bomb. They gave this secret to Stalin on account of his "socialism"... That was a mistake - as history now tells us, Stalin was a worse murderer than Hitler - if they gave the bomb to Hitler, fewer innocent people would have died (maybe I'm exaggerating, but my point is that it is possible).

    Further, these intelligent people who like the "Chinese way" are placed very high in Western businesses. The guy from Cisco in the article no doubt wants the good of the Chinese people, but this is a fatal mistake on his part. On a large scale (as it is, unfortunately, happening) this behaviour will lead to a China ready to go to war with the west and win.

    Few want to believe this. It is easy to put it out of your mind too. This is not the Chinese way.. right? Wrong. We are talking about China with a legacy of imperialism here - just look at the way they deal with internal problems.

    Forget national ID card, most free countries in the world have them; forget about big evil Microsoft, their crimes are petty. The real threat is collecting its billion people strength on the other side of the globe. This is not too far to consider.

    It is every free person's duty to help the Chinese people and NOT the Chinese government. By supplying the country (and thereby the ruling government) with money, the West is not helping the people. This way, the Chinese government has more and more reasources to continue being the way it is... And this is definitely not good, because as much as they talk about it, these guys do not want to change the balance of power over there.

    So wake the @#$% up!

    Damn, I never thought I would sound like a doomsayer or be one, but with stuff like this goig on, it's difficult not to be.

  21. Again, the emperors fail to learn from history. by jcr · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What the thugs in charge in China don't realize is that it's internal communication that's going to enable the Chinese people to throw off their yoke.

    Back when Deng and his fellow gerontocrats murdered the protestors in Tienanmen square, they had to bring in soldiers from rural areas, who had no idea what was going on in Peking. The local garrison wouldn't have done it.

    Ceacescu was overthrown when the lies broke down, and the Romanian army could see for themselves that the people on the other side of the barricades were their friends, families and neighbors. (Not a handful of evil counter-revolutionaries as state propaganda insisted.)

    When the thug-in-charge ordered them to open fire on the protestors in Bucharest, the army decided that that wasn't what they'd signed up for, and opted instead to kill the bloodthirsty motherfucker.

    When the Chinese are able to communicate widely and nearly instantaneously amongst themselves, it's going to be all over for the Party. I missed the demolition of the Berlin wall, but I sure hope to be in China when they start pulling down the statues of Mao.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  22. Re:The Pentagon Papers by mizhi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "While what you say is more or less true, let's not forget that in the hands of bad people, the US system is not as happy and carefree as you suggest."

    I like to point out to my friends that any government --- democratic, republican, socialist, communist, etc --- is run by people. Made out of the same flesh and blood as the average citizen; and subject to the same idiosyncracies, greed, and lust for power that seems to be a part of every human. To expect that government be good automagically is folly because people get corrupted. The entire POINT of the United States system is some sort of attempt to mitigate these basic truths of human nature by having a system that checks itself. Sure it aint perfect, but it's alot better than in other places.

    My $.02

    --
    Humorless sig goes here.
  23. Re:Yahoo following Chinese laws by Dredd13 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Yahoo DOESN'T filter anything from "The outside" on its way into China.

    Yahoo has servers located in Beijing, and those servers provide the content that is "regulated" (for lack of a better term) by the CN government. Anything "outside" the Beijing data-center is the same that you or I would see from anywhere else in the world, and it's up to the Great Firewall of China to restrict access to it.

    Now, since the Beijing servers geographically, and net-geographically separated from the rest of the net, the standard French argument fails, because the "distinction" (inside vs. outside) is much more easily made.

    If France wants to wall off its country, and have finite known IP space and say "this is the only IP space that French citizens could possibly be in", then I suspect Yahoo would be just as helpful in letting them shut their closed-minded selves off from the world.

    D

  24. Support by LunaKrist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let me start out by saying that I am about as capitalist as a human being can be. I love capitalism and think it's a great idea. I hold alot of respect for big business. I have a huge amount of respect for Bill Gates. I think anyone who can make $40B selling crap deserves a pat on the back. But I still use linux. Because I don't want to help him sell crap. And I won't help cisco build jails either. I'll vote with my dollars.
    And as for the chinese people who posted to say "it's not so bad", it would be alot worse if you had any un-popular thoughts. The government of any country is formed by the people of said country. And all those peoples are responsible for the actions of the government. I don't know, I've never studied Chinese politics (I've got enough problems with my government), but when I read that, I've got to wonder "how many people were killed or imprisoned because they held un-popular beliefs? IIRC, I've read about at least one incident of a Chinese person being imprisoned for disagreeing with the governemt. One is far too many. But you don't care. You think it's "not that bad"?! That's a real person. Going through REAL SUFFERING! Sitting in a real jail, with bars and shitty food and not enough warmth. Dealing with real boredom and real loneliness. And you sit in your nice office with a hot cup of coffee saying "it's not that bad"!? It is that bad. I believe that compassion and empathy are a part of humanity. For you to sit there and not even care degrades us all. You can be apathetic, that's your opinion, here's mine: Not giving a damn about anothers suffering, and in fact helping it along, makes you scum. You are the lowest of the low. I hope you choose to disagree one day and rot in a cell for it.
    Well, you might not care, but I damn well do.So I will now refrain from using cisco products, because I will not help them limit freedom. If I thought that I had in helped them find one more dissident to put in jail, I wouldn't be able to live with myself. If I bought a cisco catalyst, I would have problems sleeping. I'd be kept awake thinking "they spent my money to build a jail". They are capitalists, and I expect them to act in the interest of profit, But anyone who expects me not to act in the interest of freedom is insane. To that end, I will try and make their interest in profit and my interest in freedom coincide. By never using their products (and I was gonna be a CCNA).
    We live in a capitalist society, and in a capitalist society money controls everything. That's good, because money doesn't discriminate, and if we want to make a change, all we have to do is with-hold our money. Fuck Cisco. Fuck their products. Let _them_ do it. I won't help. I'll boycott cisco. Will my change help anything? Maybe not, but it's a start. And 20 years from now, when we're all presenting our national ID's for minimal access to _our_ national cisco firewall, I'll look back and think " I tried". You can look back and think "I helped them do it."

    "The system doesn't care because the system is you. Nothing ever changes because that's what _you_ choose." -- A//Political

    --
    Don't beg for the right to live - take it.
  25. it's called a 'market' by Hylander · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because the West relies on a democractic government and a capitalist market they are often seen as indivisible.

    In reality they are very much seperate. Capitalism is a system in which the purpose of business is wealth creation. Businesses make decisions necessary to make cash for their owners, and we hope that a side-effect of this is innovation, employment and general welfare.

    Democracy, on the other hand, is a system for managing society and government. At it's heart, democracy is the principle that all the people of a state should have a meaningful contribution to how it is governed. No more and no less.

    It is quite possible to have a non-capitalist democracy and a capitalist dictatorship.

    You cannot expect western businesses to defend democracy, when it is completely outside their purview. Very few of Cisco's customers are democracies, the vast majority are other corporations - about as undemocractic as you can get.

    They have no reason to care, and that is how it should be. If you want China to become a democracy, then go tell the Chinese. Ultimately, it is up to them.

    1. Re:it's called a 'market' by uncadonna · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I don't buy it. A non-capitalist democracy requires centralized control of the economy. This means that the individual has no say in the function of the economic system. This is fundamentally opposite to the principal of democracy.

      A capitalist dictatorship is also a self-contradiction. A dictatorship means rule of man instead of rule of law. This means the invisible hand of the market cannot operate.

      Just because you don't 'buy' it doesn't mean it isn't there. A brief excursion into actual history of the past century rather than whatever subset you find convenient will show numerous cases of tyrrany combined with some people getting rich and many others allowed to compete vigorously as long as they don't rock the boat. The fascist states come to mind immediately: not just Nazi Germany but fascist Italy and Franco's Spain.

      Similarly, for non-capitalist democracies, look at Sweden, France, and Kerala, places where there is freedom of expression and information, and tremendous and enthusiastic support for an economy that is predominantly and closely state-controlled. (Of course, such places are at something of a competitive disadvantage with less regulated competitors, but they freely choose to pay that price.)

      Of course, you need not "buy" the evidence. Based on the subset of facts one is able and willing to be exposed to, one can believe just about anything. That's the whole problem here. At least you have a choice which inconvenient information to ignore, such as this report that the most unregulated democracy is exactly the one which is providing the expertise to enforce Chinese suppression of free expression.

      The Chinese don't have such a choice except outside their legal system.

      If this quite plausible story turns out to be true, we see that the unregulated US marketplace treats the repressive Chinese legal system as a customer to the extent that the system can afford services. In other words, this amounts to a collaboration of the most and the least regulated systems to suppress freedom, whether that fits your preconceived notions or not.

      I love the use of the expression 'I don't buy it' in expressing market libertarian preconceptions about the world. Facts are among the things that are not commodities for sale in real life.

      --
      mt