China Cracks Down on Non-Compliant Internet Bars
phreak404 writes: "According to this article on CNN.com, over 197 bars were closed for apparently violating licensing laws that require bars to censor content."
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Many people would be angered about this story because China is screwing it's people and blocking things they don't feel good for thier people. At least in China they aren't bitching about freedom of speech \and at the same time writting crap like DMCA/CIPA/LOL/CPA/PATRIOT. Understand I still don't think this content blocking is good or correct I'm just lossing faith in all governments as of late.
... is Chinese, living in Beijing. He claims that his internet access is not blocked in any way (he's got a computer at home, so doesn't use Internet Cafe's, and he doesn't drink so doesn't go to 'bars'). I think he is probably very niave. He pretty much sucks up the party line; to him, Falong Gong is a subversive, dangerous mob, just like the boss wants him to think. I haven't conversed with him about the crack-down on non-complying internet cafe's yet, but I suspect he think's their, at best, in the wrong and, at worst, criminals. Hey, he's been steeped in this stuff all his life, I'd be kinda surprized if he took an opposing [the government] view. It's taken quite a number of years to get my wife to see her old government's policies as anything other than benevolent.
All things in moderation.
Errr... it is actually the law, you know. The places that were shut down were unlicenced. It's seems like a non-story. CNN - in a typical display of its 'unbiased' reporting - seems to have melded a few facts together.
Look at it this way: In most of the US you can't brew and serve alcoholic drink publicly without some sort of licence. In the Republic of Ireland you have to have a licence to own a TV. In China, you need a licence to run an internet cafe.
In the US you don't need a TV licence if the TV is for private use. In the Republic of Ireland you can brew alcohol if it's for private use(maybe you can in the US as well - I don't know). In Ireland and the US, most internet cafes aren't required by law to restrict access to sites. But a good few places - whether by law or by a policy mandate - do restrict access to porno sites and certains sites with a 'speciality' interest(aren't US libraries required to restrict access to certain sites?). In China, all public internet terminals(including internet cafes) are required to have filtering software. From what I've heard on the 'net, the myth of 'the Yellow Firewall' is just that - a myth. Chinese PC users can access the entire internet from their homes.
8)
Concrete analysis...