Real-Time Testing of China's Internet Filters
mrbnsn writes "The Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School is conducting a study of Internet filtering in countries worldwide. As part of this study, they have put up a web page where you can get a real-time
report on whether any URL you submit is blocked by the Great Firewall. Check whether you'd be able to read your favorite web sites
in Beijing!" I've also heard that there are some "western" hotels that have non-blocked connections. Anyone from China care to tell us what it's like?
...the downfall of Chinese civilisation:
Testing complete for http://www.stileproject.com. Result:
Reported as accessible in China
Extensive testing by worried geeks has shown that slashdot.org is still accessible from the Chinese part of the Internet. Further tests are scheduled for the next couple of days to make sure it stays.
bash$
I would have thought that a country that has a 1-child-per-family law would want to encourage the male population to jack off as often as possible.
"The best argument against democracy is a five minute chat with the average voter."
--Winston Churchill
The Chinese government is reading /. today to find out what good sites they missed.
It's rare that you're presented with a knob whose only two positions are Make History and Flee Your Glorious Destiny.
Stile Project (a haven of rather vile material) and Camwhores got around it just by using standard load-balancing techniques.
Meh, if there's any site worth blocking, it's Stile's.