Slashdot Mirror


Chinese Internet Censorship Proves Difficult

An anonymous reader writes "BBC reports that despite incredible efforts by the Chinese government, online dissent and distribution of censored information continues and even influences government policies."

338 comments

  1. Any Slashdot readers helping out? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How can we help?

    1. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by Grey+Ninja · · Score: 1

      I'm all for that. Surely we can provide servers or something of that sort. I mean, Slashdot readership is HUGE. I don't think that even the Chinese government could block enough of us if we all tried to help dispel the censorship.

    2. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did one of the better known proxies have a product called Triangle Boy, which was a system where anyone could run a proxy, so that keeping up with and blocking them was loads of effort, expensive and unreliable?

    3. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by kfg · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Well, I suppose one of the things you could do is let companies like IBM know you aren't happy doing business with someone providing censorship technologies to China.

      At least it's a start.

      Then maybe put up a Freenet node.

      KFG

    4. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by Texas+Rose+on+Lava+L · · Score: 5, Funny

      We can help each other. We host the political dissent websites and they host the mp3s.

    5. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by Patrik_AKA_RedX · · Score: 1

      We could help by searching their sites and report all those who distribute political incorrect information.
      Or we could help them by providing open source censoring software.
      The US could help them by sharing the RIAA know-how in this matter.

    6. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by iminplaya · · Score: 2

      What a schizophrenic world we've created...How can we resolve things like this...A company presently doing great things for open source at the same time they are providing censorship tech. I don't trust IBM or anybody like them. They play both sides of the "war" for a buck(ok, billions). Personaly I don't think they have changed that much from the "bad ol' days". You watch. They'll turn on us as soon as it is more profitable to do so.

      --
      What?
    7. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by kfg · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I don't think they have changed that much from the "bad ol' days"

      They haven't changed at all, and it's best not to forget that. There's really no way to resolve the issue. If you really want to be proactive about it the only thing you can do is take what they give away for free and use it for your benefit while not actually providing them with direct profit; and letting them know you're doing it.

      Not, I'll note, in the sense of a boycott. Just out of a real sense of personal ethics. Then even if it has no ultimate effect you still "win."

      Ghandi repeatedly tried to point out that nonviolence wasn't a political technique. It was a personal way of life.

      KFG

    8. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by syan2000 · · Score: 1

      CISCO helped chinese goverment. CISCO agreed to add filter techonology in their routers as prerequisite they get the contract from Chinese government.

    9. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely correct. There is no way to resolve it. And with their stock portfolio so diversified, boycotting is no longer an issue. They make some money with every bar of soap or loaf of bread that I buy. Thank god there are drugs(including alcohol) to help me forget the evil I support just by living.

      --
      What?
    10. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by kfg · · Score: 1

      And CISCO now owns Linksys. The webs reach farther and draw tighter all at the same time.

      KFG

    11. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by kfg · · Score: 1

      And who do you think profits from commercial drug trade?

      KFG

    12. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by Threni · · Score: 1

      Me mate Dave, innit.

    13. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      There is at least one drug that I can grow myself. Other than that I'm srewed. That's what the "forget" part is about. I suppose I could brew my own beer, also. I just have to face facts...I don't belong here. Too scared to do anything about that.

      --
      What?
    14. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by kfg · · Score: 1

      There are any number you can grow yourself. All of the traditional drugs are of biological origin. That's why they work upon the biology of the person taking them. Most of the modern synthetics in some way mimic the biological ones.

      You can make alcohol simply by leaving the apple juice out for a while. You can make liqour by freezing the result and skimming the alcohol off the top, since it has a lower freezing point than the water content.

      But I'll note that I said "profit," not make direct charge for, and there are those who profit simply by your getting drunk.

      I've always found clear headed and deliberate nonparticipation with a bit of agent provocatuer to be an overall more effective tactic, both personally and and in the larger scheme of things.

      KFG

    15. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      "I've always found clear headed and deliberate nonparticipation with a bit of agent provocatuer to be an overall more effective tactic, both personally and and in the larger scheme of things."

      I'll drink to that...Seriously I would have to agree.

      --
      What?
    16. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by wan-fu · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's a very good question. How can we help the people in China have better access to information on the Internet? But I think an equally important question that no one seems to have asked yet is, "Are the people of China ready for a democratic, capitalistic system?"

      Don't get me wrong here, I am a full supporter of the individual and the democratic system, but taking a look at the Chinese governments over the past years, and if you look at the Chinese cultural mindset, I might be inclined to say that China isn't quite ready for a fully democratic system in the way that we imagine it. I'm Chinese and I would love nothing more than to see a lot of the people enjoy the same freedoms (speech, press, assocation, etc.) that we do here in the US. However, the Chinese mentality has always been of subservience and obedience. Hierarchy has been one of the fundamental institutions in our way of life. Even today, families form the nuclear unit, but a hierarchy exists spanning generations (the father makes the decisions, the grandfather has an even greater influence, etc.). And during the entire period before the Revolution of 1911, China was governed in a feudal manner (emporer->governors->officials->etc.) Going from what is a bureaucracy of pseudo-feudalism and the control of an oligarchy with certain members having more power than others (e.g. Jiang and the CCP) to a system where everyone can vote and elect officials would be a huge transition that I think most of China will not be able to handle.

      Literacy in China is decent, but education in the countryside is poor. People in the countryside, I feel, are not quite ready to take the big leap. For years, decisions have been made for them. I think collectivization is a good example of how the Communist party has helped the poor, less educated earn better livings for themselves. In the early 1950s, after the Nationalists had fled the country, China implemented mass collectivization of farms and actually increased productivity levels dramatically. It was only the Great Leap Forward and Mao's crazed vision that ruined the whole system. When farms decollectivized, farmers actually saw a decline in farming output. Similarly, I think that the central planning government has many advantages for helping redevelop the countryside and reeducate the people to help get them ready for a democratic system. They just aren't ready yet.

      Of course, I'm not an expert in the politics of China and I'm working off of what I have experienced living there and studying the history of the nation. I do feel that at this point, China is similar (but not the same) to the Taiwan of the late 1980s. It is emerging as a huge source of labor and production, but it is under a government which is not efficient nor understanding of human rights. In Taiwan, the effects were less dramatic under a dictatorship of the Nationalist party, but the effects were there: secret police, one-candidate elections, no freedom of speech, etc. China is in a similar position, but the relative faults are exarcerbated by the size of the country and the bureauracracy involved. But, I think because of these similarities, China has a lot to learn about the way that Taiwan has turned out. After its first true, free election just a few years ago (and its second one coming up), Taiwan has turned into a political nightmare. Political parties are self-destructing, backstabbing occurs on a daily basis, fights break out in the Legislature, etc. etc. This is from a country that was "democratic" since the 1970s and has just recently actually become so. Now, imagine that happening in China going from a communist system to something completely different. The political system could very well implode even more so than Taiwan's political system has. Taiwan is badly off, but it can slowly right its course. Were China to implode, could it ever regain any footing again? Is China ready for democracy?

    17. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn, what a karma-whore question. Just like the Iraq LUG questions article. "How can we help?"

    18. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      don't be scared, leave.

      and I am not saying this in a get up right now and do it sense.

      I had the misfortune of being born in a country whose beliefs and mine just dont seem to be compatible. That is fine, apparently most Americans actually like this country, or the laws, or whatever.

      What you have to remember is that you can not ever truly change people. So save up a little money, find a place you want to live, and go there. Remember that that is how most people got here in the first place.

    19. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by kfg · · Score: 1

      don't be scared, leave.

      Yes, this a very valid option.

      In fact the true failure of the modern Marxist state was their totalitarianism. They didn't allow dissenters to simply go elsewhere. If they had there would have been far less internal dissent to gum up the system.

      KFG

    20. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      I wasn't talking any particular country. For the most part they're all the same. I already left the states, and the very first I noticed was how much alike we all are. I was talking about the planet. Maybe I took that movie about Marat a little too seriously

      --
      What?
    21. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.invisiblenet.net

    22. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by srcosmo · · Score: 1
      They didn't allow dissenters to simply go elsewhere. If they had there would have been far less internal dissent to gum up the system.

      ...And no system left to be gummed up.
      Traffic across the Berlin wall, remember, was all one-way.

      --
      free speach
      Did you mean: free speech
    23. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by kfg · · Score: 1

      Not entirely, but close enough. Of course in that case they were going from Germany to Germany. Returning to the homeland as it were.

      In Russia they were already in the homeland. In China they still are. That makes a difference.

      And if a 100 million left, well, they killed that many anyway, but generated a rather large resentment.

      No, if they weren't totalitarian there would have been less reason to leave in the first place, and if they began to be concerned about people leaving they would have had to be more responsive to the issue instead of just killing people right and left and if they weren't totalitarian the traffic wouldn't have been anywhere near one way.

      And like it or not there are still Russians who miss the old days and would prefer to go back to them.

      KFG

    24. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by chenyu · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The trouble is that the censorship technologies are pretty much the same as the non-censorship technologies. It's not that Cisco sells the Chinese government special censorship routers, the technology that the Chinese government uses is basically the same comodity technology that everyone else uses. The router has no way of knowing if its the Chinese government trying to censor political sites or a company trying to keep its intranet isolated.

      But I also don't understand the logic behind some of the posts. It seems to me that it is far, far better for Western companies help the Chinese government get a censored internet than to take the moral high ground, and not sell the Chinese the technology at all.

      Think of the Trojan horse. If you don't sell the Chinese these sorts of technologies, they are going to be less likely to develop internet infrastructure. If you sell the Chinese these sorts of technologies, yes the Chinese government will try to censor the content, but they'll fail miserably at it.

    25. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You shouldn't use mp3 for for speech encoding though..

    26. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am sure the Chinese goverment is very glad to let 100 million people move to the land of free as long as the totalitarians in the home of the brave allow them to do so.

    27. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      Any human is ready for democracy. Its really not that hard for a person to make decisions for their own personal lives. To suggest otherwise is to truly believe that others are of lesser intellignece than other humans on the planet. And if that is so why not just enslave them and get it over with?

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    28. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by bishop32x · · Score: 1

      Very few humans are ready for a democracy. I'm not, and I would doubt if you are. In order to be "ready" for democracy you need to have a sound picture of all of the issues haes your society, not just whats being legislated on right now, not just your personal life. Luckily, there are very few true democracies out there, mostly there are republics, which require a less complete understsnding of events, although they still require some. They also require a free press and freedom from prosecution of political views. Without that no one can make informed decisions. It takes time for these things to come about, whic in the case of china is slowly improving (while the us is degrading).

    29. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by Adolph_Hitler · · Score: 1

      "Are the people of China ready for a democratic, capitalistic system?" Well since we clearly arent a democracy, why do we expect China to be? We are a republic, period. Is China ready? No. DO they have to copy us? No. China is having its problems with human rights, the USA had its problems too. In the USA when slavery was legal about 100 or so years ago, no country came to our aid to tell us how we were abusing human rights. Why should we be Chinas savior? China is our competition, why not let them struggle through the next 50 years, why not keep our jobs and labor? Why not keep our technology and our internet? If they arent ready for it, leave them in the stone age. As far as China's political system, honestly China should do what works for China. So far their economy is kicking our ass right now and I don't think we should dare help China. In fact it pisses me off to see all of these Americans who are the same ones mad about outsourcing, now wanting to give all this help to China. I mean really. Sure its good to help China in the short term, yeah China will get educated, get democracy, have more freedom etc but what will happen 20 years from now when China is super power, has all the jobs, all the technology, all the freedom. Why would anyone want to live in America?

      --
      People don't exist to serve systems, systems exist to serve people.
    30. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > But I think an equally important question that no one seems to have asked yet
      > is, "Are the people of China ready for a democratic, capitalistic system?"

      And the simple answer is "Yes, fuckwit, or do you think the Chinese have some special gene which makes them stupid?".

      A better question is "Is America ready for democracy?" I mean, you have to make sure you punch a whole in the right place, which lets face it is pretty complicated if you're a stupid fat fucker with a poor education, never mind all those irritation questions about black disenfranchisement.

    31. Re:Any Slashdot readers helping out? by iMMersE · · Score: 1

      There is at least one drug that I can grow myself.

      Penicillin?

      I just have to face facts...I don't belong here.

      Go to K5 then and stop boring us.

      --
      codegolf.com - smaller *is* better.
  2. But what about the UK? by pagaman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Good. Now can we guarantee that we can dissent in the uk?

    1. Re:But what about the UK? by ackthpt · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Good. Now can we guarantee that we can dissent in the uk?

      Depends. Is your name Andrew Gilligan?

      Interesting read on the Chinese Revolution, The Soong Dynasty, but Sterling Seagrave. Paints a pretty hideous picture of Chiang kai-Shek. I'm half-way through it, but I'm getting an understanding of why China closed itself off from the world, screwed even by Stalin, and cautiously invites in the international community 50 years later. The PRC seems oppressive, but China has always been repressed. Doesn't make censorship right, but it's worth understanding how far back the memory goes to the great humiliations. A bit insightful the writings of Ching-ling Soong (Madam Sun yat-Sen) on revolution and how it's inevitable. Seems the current regime is trying to hold back another revolution, which is futile.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    2. Re:But what about the UK? by I+confirm+I'm+not+a · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Easy! No.

      HTH!

      Sadly, I'm not entirely joking. And before all the trolls start off on how China's much worse - no shit? But I expect the UK to be a beacon for democracy, whereas right now it's more a flickering birthday candle. Frankly, we'd have a better chance of convincing less free regimes to be more open if we were as democratic as possible.

      If you really hate my ideas, this may cheer you up: I can be arrested and detained indefinitely, without trial, in Britain right now. Because I'm not British. That's right, if you're, say, from the USA the British government can hold you forever at Her Majesty's Pleasure!

      You can all sleep safer, now, knowing that.

      --
      This is where the serious fun begins.
    3. Re:But what about the UK? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Democracy? Aren't you a subject of the crown?

    4. Re:But what about the UK? by sketerpot · · Score: 1, Insightful

      In the USA we're detaining numerous non-citizens indefinitely without the usual "due process of law", right now. Beat that, Brits!

    5. Re:But what about the UK? by I+confirm+I'm+not+a · · Score: 1

      (Oh God don't make me defend the British monarchy...)

      Surprisingly, democracy can still occur in monarchies (UK) as well as republics (USA). It just means it's less secure. AFAIK, the current Queen has never refused to sign a bill presented to her by Britain's democratically-elected Parliament. It doesn't mean it couldn't happen, and I'd be a lot happier if Britain had a written constitution guarenteeing that it won't.

      ...but to answer your question, no, I believe I'm not (any longer) a subject of the Crown. I'm a New Zealand expatriate exiled in Scotland ;)

      --
      This is where the serious fun begins.
    6. Re:But what about the UK? by Nexus+Seven · · Score: 1

      Nope, since The Crown can't arbitrarily subject me to it's will.

      I'm a citizen of the United Kingdom, a parliamentary democracy.

    7. Re:But what about the UK? by Tony+B+Liar · · Score: 1

      In the UK we jail drivers for speeding whilst burglars, muggers, drug dealers all walk the streets after getting a 50quid fine and 15 hours "community service.. umm wtf?" Homeowners are not allowed to defend themselves, police dont turn up to burglaries, muggings, car thefts, and the victims of crime are treated like s*** by the police and the judicial system. To get back on track, on top of this it is actually illegal to protest in Britain, (criminal justice bill) and the state is spying on everyones every move with lots of new legislative powers that the government doesnt discuss with the masses. Christ, they even want every car to have a tracking system... not incase it is stolen, but so they can automagically issue speeding tickets and know where you are at any point. With ID cards on the way as well, its all getting a bit paranoid, and we are soon going to have a "reds under the bed" situation here. The outcome will be the total oppression of civil rights for anyone who is NOT a criminal, whilst the under classes roam freely and do what they like, the courts having their usual lack of respect for the law abiding citizen. Quite simply, time for Tony to go. we hate him, and simply for the mess he has made of this country. Almost every policy his govt has screws the working man, and feeds and funds illegal immigrants over our own. Right now, Id love to live in America. Best wishes, Tony XX

    8. Re:But what about the UK? by I+confirm+I'm+not+a · · Score: 1

      Can't it?

      Maybe you're assuming either that (a) measures put in place by Parliament will will protect you, or that (b) the armed forces will defend you against a capricious monarch, or that (c) the people will rise up in defense of freedom when it is threatened.

      (a) Parliament sits at the pleasure of the Crown - Parliament can be dissolved by the monarch. Just because we might whinge if it happened doesn't mean it can't happen;
      (b) The armed forces take the Queen's Shilling: if there's any debate over loyalty to orders, the armed forces are legally obliged to follow the Queen above Parliament;
      (c) The people, by and large, don't give a shit.

      You may be a citizen of the UK, but you're still a subject of the Crown.

      --
      This is where the serious fun begins.
    9. Re:But what about the UK? by Handpaper · · Score: 1
      You may be a citizen of the UK, but you're still a subject of the Crown.
      s/you/i
      At the moment, I'm happier to be a subject of HM than of TB

    10. Re:But what about the UK? by I+confirm+I'm+not+a · · Score: 1

      True. I can't argue with that. And even as a republican I've got to admit that Prince Charles looks like he'd make an alright monarch, too. But the fact remains that (a) we can't vote out a bad monarch, and (b) Tony's sprogs won't be afflicted on us.

      --
      This is where the serious fun begins.
  3. Duh... by OtakuHawk · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Censorship is almost an impossibility now, especially in well-developed countries, thanks to the internet.

    1. Re:Duh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Although there is something I like to call "natural censorship" - for example: the media is so flooded with celeb news (Britney married who?) and uninteresting gibberish that it is difficult to find any real information.

      And regarding American "news" - for instance the coverage of the invasion of Iraq - not worth the freedom that spawned it.

      Shame...

  4. FIRST REPLY! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    well the best thing you could do is to not buy items made in china.

    of course thats just a good idea anyways

    1. Re:FIRST REPLY! by Mod+Me+God · · Score: 3, Insightful

      well the best thing you could do is to not buy items made in china... of course thats just a good idea anyways

      Yeah, don't buy their products, deny them benefits of global trade, nothing like condemning a nation to poverty and sustaining a disceptive self-sustaining government (rather than rewarding the transition China is in).

      --
      --

      FreeNET user? Comfortable with the adverse selection?
    2. Re:FIRST REPLY! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and what do you think pays for this censorship?

      you buy chinese, you are supporting oppression.

    3. Re:FIRST REPLY! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hacked by Chineese!

    4. Re:FIRST REPLY! by Mod+Me+God · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No, you are supporting a country in transition (remember censorship doesn't have to be 'paid' for). If you don't buy Chinese, will the country change (compare the present leadership to the Shanghai Brigage 10 years ago or that of the Great Leap Forward when China was under sanction, if you think they are the same you are believing a fallacy)?

      Likewise if you think a government will change into a lets-hug-each-other one from a totalitarian one over night (or even in 20 years) you are seriously deluded. Change takes time to feed through, or else there is volatile coup after volatile coup and everyone gets screwed (or nuked).

      Not that I say you should buy Chinese specially, but denying buying Chinese for some up-in-the-clouds-political-fairyland ideology is madness. Global trade is great for sharing wealth and generating more wealth (read wealth as standard of living) amongst nations, and in terms of the trickle-down effect China is doing damn well compared to any other country's development (eg Agricultural Land Rights, mobility of labour and class, etc).

      But if you would prefer to condemn the worker to starve as a serf on a farm rather than work in a factory getting a better standard of living for themselves and their family that is up to you.

      --
      --

      FreeNET user? Comfortable with the adverse selection?
    5. Re:FIRST REPLY! by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Oh, come on! Look at how well such policies have worked against dictators like Fidel Castro!

      No, wait...

      --
      And the brethren went away edified.
    6. Re:FIRST REPLY! by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      well the best thing you could do is to not buy items made in china.

      There ain't many alternatives anymore.

    7. Re:FIRST REPLY! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      or else there is volatile coup...But if you would prefer to condemn the worker to starve as a serf on a farm rather than work in a factory getting a better standard of living for themselves and their family that is up to you.

      So if we did take out their government, everyone would be better off, correct?

    8. Re:FIRST REPLY! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Had countries embargoed against the USA when slavery was legal, would America be economically stronger than China today? Would the embargoes have helped the US free slaves faster? No and no.

    9. Re:FIRST REPLY! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The embargo is working great.

      if (USPresident.popularity() == LOW) {
      US.invade(Cuba);
      }

    10. Re:FIRST REPLY! by DarkVader · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yes, it likely would have helped the US free slaves faster. In fact, a simple embargo of US farm products from the South would have very likely removed the economic incentive for slavery, and as it was primarily an economic institution, it would no longer have made sense for it to exist.

      As to the question of economic strength today, I don't know. But the economy would likely not have been one of slavery for nearly as long as it was.

    11. Re:FIRST REPLY! by bishop32x · · Score: 1

      Boycotts work when you know you can force a government into changeing their ways, not as a general norm. If you look at South Africa, the boycott there was effective, it sent a clear message and provided a clear incentive for change. I agree with you that the time is not right for a boycott now, but if the government backslides(the whole 'two steps forewrd, one step back' thing) Then a large-scale boycott would be just the thing. Yes it denies the citizens of said country the benefits of globalization, but it does more damage to the regime, people can recover, but governments often cant...

    12. Re:FIRST REPLY! by grub · · Score: 1


      well the best thing you could do is to not buy items made in china.
      of course thats just a good idea anyways


      Yup, you're supporting virtual slave labour when you buy Chinese.FYI: WalMart single-handedly accounts for nearly 10% of China's exports to the U.S. Read the labels..

      --
      Trolling is a art,
  5. power to the people by SHEENmaster · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I always find Communism funny. How can any government of the people be responsible for censoring the information they receive?

    Email me if you need any dangerous info; be sure to include your public key and encrypt to mine/a.

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
    1. Re:power to the people by Atzanteol · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, all governments place limits at some point on what is considered 'okay'. Some are just more strict than others. Child-porn is universally 'illegal' for instance.

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    2. Re:power to the people by radish · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Agreed. I mean, what kind of "government of the people" would make it illegal to distribute information on, for instance, how to watch a movie?

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    3. Re:power to the people by jrockway · · Score: 1

      You're allowed to talk about child porn, though. Imagine that, instead of getting modded down, you got arrested for mentioning child porn. That's China.

      --
      My other car is first.
    4. Re:power to the people by kfg · · Score: 4, Interesting

      In one sense you're right, but the definition of child porn varies wildly, even within a single legal structure.

      So wildly that "child porn" has no real meaning. Hell, just "child" is a major issue of debate. And to the extent that it is universally illegal is due mostly to an American promotion, with the usual strong arm tactics, to create a universal condemnation, not due to any cultural aversion in and of itself.

      Governments tend to do things for purely politica reasons, and right now, in the world scheme of things, it's politically advantageous to adopt certain tenets of American Puritanism.

      Note that Japan has a long history of prostitution as not only a cultural norm, but in some respects a respected profession. Now it is illegal.

      But not because the Japanese themselves really see anything innately wrong with it. It's politics.

      KFG

    5. Re:power to the people by Tassach · · Score: 1
      Yeah but the definition of "child porn" varies considerably from country to country. In many (industrialized) countries, 15 & 16 year olds are considered to be mature enough to decide whether or not they wish to be photographed while having sex. There's a world of difference between a pre-pubescent child and a biologically mature teenaged young adult.

      The US is pretty fucked up about sex and nudity. It's pretty stupid to tell someone who's old enough to get married, drive a car, and volunteer for military service that they aren't old enough to take off their clothes in front of a camera.

      Given the knee-jerk rush to judgement surrounding anything resembling child porn or child abuse, a teenager with an axe to grind could seriously screw up some people's lives by taking nude pictures of themselves with a webcam in the privacy of their own bedroom, and then emailing said pictures to people they don't like and reporting the recipients to the police. Pretty f'ing scary scenerio if you ask me.

      --
      Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
    6. Re:power to the people by the+gnat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Governments tend to do things for purely politica reasons, and right now, in the world scheme of things, it's politically advantageous to adopt certain tenets of American Puritanism.

      However, disapproval of child pornography is something that crosses party, cultural, and religious lines in America. There are many, many people here who would not fit your definition of "puritan" and yet are as disapproving of kiddie porn as any Texan evangelist.

      There are a number of areas where I don't have any problem with America forcing its values on the world: women's rights, secular democratic government, individual liberties, and so forth. I won't be losing any sleep if Bush pushes various Muslim nations (e.g. Nigeria) to outlaw sharia. That our government and society is often very hypocritical in regards to many of these issues does not lessen the value of the principles involved.

    7. Re:power to the people by brett_sinclair · · Score: 1

      Imagine that, instead of getting modded down, you got arrested for mentioning child porn. That's China.

      Well... Imagine that, instead of getting modded up, you would end up in court for describing how to decode a DVD. That's the U.S.

    8. Re:power to the people by the_mad_poster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      screw up some people's lives by taking nude pictures of themselves with a webcam in the privacy of their own bedroom, and then emailing said pictures to people they don't like and reporting the recipients to the police. Pretty f'ing scary scenerio if you ask me.

      You don't need to go that far. Baseless allegations, if properly worded, can cause a serious detriment to a person's life and leave the accusing party completely off the hook. All you have to do is send a nice letter to the FBI saying such and such person MAY have been viewing and/or sharing child pornography or they said something that LEADS YOU TO BELIEVE that they MAY be involved with it in some way.

      No evidence necessary, and 9 times out of 10 a search warrant will be issued due entirely to the nature of the allegations, no matter how baseless they are. Then, the cops'll come down on you even harder for your "suspicious" activity of demanding they show some justification for searching / siezing property.

      Got an axe to grind? I'm almost willing to guarantee that scenario would work well for you. If you're REALLY careful, a few covert "leaks" about the bogus investigation to friends, family, and co-workers could leave a totally innocent person premanently labeled without a shred of evidence.

      Welcome to the American Justice system, where hearsay and public opinion court more power than most people would ever dare dream. We hope you have a nice stay.

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    9. Re:power to the people by corbettw · · Score: 1

      Well... Imagine that, instead of getting modded up, you would end up in court for describing how to decode a DVD. That's the U.S.

      Funny, I thought DVD Jon's court cases were all in Norway. Silly me.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    10. Re:power to the people by brett_sinclair · · Score: 1
      I thought DVD Jon's court cases were all in Norway.

      Yes. However, the case against e.g. 2600 wasn't.

    11. Re:power to the people by kfg · · Score: 1

      But I might also point out that demand for child porn crosses all those same lines.

      It's also interesting to note that in traditional cultures with no particular strictures on eroticism there is no "kiddie" porn. There's a certain amount of bondage and torture, group sex, bestiality, etc., but no erotic depictions of adults having sex with toddlers.

      There are issues here that are culturally deep.

      Nor have I provided any personal definition of "Puritan," so any ideas you have along that line are largely assumptional based on a single, very short, post. If I were to do so it certainly wouldn't be restricted to the Texas evengelist. One may well overtly reject certain religious tenets and still hold closely to them if your society does. The American "work ethic," for instance, is essentially Calvinist; yet many good atheists adhere to it. Some other cultures have their own work ethics embedded in the culture, some look upon the work ethic as repulsive.

      I believe very deeply in many of our cultural values when it comes to ideas of personal freedom. I have no great love for Islamic law. Nor do I have any great love for Mosaic law, although even a cursory reading of American legal code reveals a descendency from such.

      I can't really see any difference, for instance, in a stricture requiring a women to veil her face and one requiring her to veil her breasts. It's really just a matter of the size of the veil and it's placement, the principle is the same.

      As one who believes in personal liberty I am not comfortable with the idea of compulsion. I would much rather see America exporting whatever is of value in its values by virtue of their virtues.

      And if people do not see the virtue its virtue is in question. I'm perfectly happy with the idea that a people may democratically chose to adopt law that I am not personally comfortable with, so long as that democracy is fashioned in such a manner that it protects minority opinions.

      As a lover of liberty I'm no great fan of democracy either.

      KFG

    12. Re:power to the people by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      Either way, my point is that all societies have *some* form of censorship. There is not such thing as completely 'free' speech.

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    13. Re:power to the people by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      The US is pretty fucked up about sex and nudity. It's pretty stupid to tell someone who's old enough to get married, drive a car, and volunteer for military service that they aren't old enough to take off their clothes in front of a camera.

      And you think a society that would promote 15yr old's staring in porn flicks is a good thing?

      Jesus Christ! I honestly don't know if there is any response to that! You're one sick bastard.

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    14. Re:power to the people by kfg · · Score: 1

      All modern governments have some form of censorship. Not all societies do. It would be truer to say that all societies have taboos, but many of those societies have/had no stricture on speech, per se. Many taboos are enforced by nothing more than fear of what your neighbors might think.

      Do you, for instance, really always dress the way you would like to?

      KFG

    15. Re:power to the people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      "Child-porn is universally 'illegal' for instance"

      No, it is not.

      On the other hand, ignorance is seemingly ubiquitous on slashdot.

    16. Re:power to the people by Happy+go+Lucky · · Score: 3, Informative
      (snip ignorance)

      No evidence necessary, and 9 times out of 10 a search warrant will be issued due entirely to the nature of the allegations, no matter how baseless they are.

      Do you even know how a search warrant is generated? Judging by the idiotic post, I doubt it. Let me explain:

      I gather information. I get specific facts from my witnesses, facts which show not just what the witness knows but exactly how he knows them. Statements like "I personally saw X get into the car." Hearsay is typically of no value. It can be used only in very rare circumstances at trial (such as where the original speaker is dead or where necessary to catch the original speaker in a lie) and not at all in a warrant affidavit.

      I then have my witness/complainant/informant put these facts in writing and sign it, after explaining to him the law and jail time associated with filing false police reports.

      I then complete an affidavit with these facts and submit it to a judge.

      If the judge agrees that the facts constitute probable cause to support the warrant, he issues one. If not, he tells me to get lost.

      And before you post your next moronic spew, confidential (names withheld, but known to police and possibly the judge) informants are worth very, very little, and anonymous informants(names not even known by police) are utterly worthless.

      The Pope may be infallible, but even he can't claim to have probable cause unless he can show personal knowledge.

    17. Re:power to the people by 24-bit+Voxel · · Score: 1

      child porn is legal in Japan

    18. Re:power to the people by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      Not 15 year olds, 16 year olds. You have to be 16 to drive and to marry.

      Seeing as how 16 is only 2 years away from 18 what would be wrong with 16 year olds starring in porn things?

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    19. Re:power to the people by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      Man if you have to ask...

      A limit must be placed somewhere. If you lower it to 15, then people like you say "But 13 is only two years away!" Children (18yrs old) don't know enough to make such decisions. Hell, most 18yr olds don't either, but at least they've got more world experience.

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    20. Re:power to the people by the_mad_poster · · Score: 1

      You'll have to excuse this post... it's a little close to home and "personal".

      If the judge agrees that the facts constitute probable cause to support the warrant, he issues one. If not, he tells me to get lost.

      You sir, are an imbecile, but I'd like to thank you for wasting your time explaining to me how all of this is SUPPOSED to work - something I already knew. The entire point of the post was that highly emotional topics such as kiddie porn can easily short circuit these things.

      filing false police reports.

      And you continue to be an imbecile. I had "false reports" lodged against me at one point that were nowhere near as emotional as the subject at hand. Despite the fact that NO evidence was available to support the ludicrous allegations, and the letter containing them appeared to be written by a former mental patient (oh.. wait.. it WAS written by a former mental patient.. in PENCIL), I still had my personal property taken and searched. After about a month, the detective determined that, in effect, he thought the guy who wrote the letter was a few crayons short of a box. I was given the option to press for an investigation in the other direction, but they told me up front they didn't think they could prove he knowingly filed a false report, and a lawyer concurred after seeing the complaint. ALL BECAUSE OF THE VAGUE WORDING IN THE COMPLAINT. I lost a month of otherwise useful time because completely bogus complaints were filed against me, including some that could have landed me in federal prison for fraud had they been true.

      So, before you come around here and shoot your fat mouth off about how things are SUPPOSED to work, bear in mind I just told you how it DID work. Funny how these systems don't always work like they're supposed to, isn't it? Or, can you just not comprehend the possibility that maybe, just maybe, things don't really work the way everyone feels comfortable thinking they do?

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
  6. Cue "internet routes around damage" line by Space+cowboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It is true, to a certain extent, but the use of strategic "choke points" on the network infrastructure can put a serious dent in the ideal...

    It's only really true when you have high connectivity across all nodes - even in the US/Europe this is rarely significantly true...

    Simon

    --
    Physicists get Hadrons!
  7. Don't worry by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

    I'm sure michael sims can suggest some good ways for the chicomms to censor everyone.

    --
    Do you even lift?

    These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    1. Re:Don't worry by Thud457 · · Score: 1

      I've they've gotten the story that goatse's been taken down by censorship-crazy Austrailailailans!

      --

      the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    2. Re:Don't worry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, did you know your last name rhymes with a part of the female anatomy?

  8. Paranoid government by RedHat_Linux_Man · · Score: 0

    It seems that the Chinese government should focus more time and effort on the looming threat of North Korea than the petty problem of civilian censorship.

  9. Have they thought of this? by moehoward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Just post the censored sites as links in Slashdot stories.

    Censorship via the slashdot effect.

    --
    "If you want to improve, be content to be thought foolish and stupid." - Epictetus
    1. Re:Have they thought of this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is this funny btw? I must be new here. Then again if I was, I might have actually found it funny instead of redundant. Some equation to solve..

  10. What is Communist about China? by kyknos.org · · Score: 1

    It is totality and very bad regime but it seems to me very commercial and capitalist. Communism is something little different I think.

    --

    SHE does throw dice.
    1. Re:What is Communist about China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Every time a communist regime get criticized on slashdot (or anywhere else) inevitably this gets trotted out. "But it's not REAL communism, communism is [bla bla]".

      It's like there is a group of people who have dedicated themselves to promoting walking on water. Every time someone tries to walk on water, they fall through, but the insubmersilists say "You weren't REALLY on top of the water to begin with, you were either above it or partially submerged!"

      It's retarded. Get over it, communism was a big flop.

    2. Re:What is Communist about China? by Mod+Me+God · · Score: 1

      Pure (Marxist) communism is. But the reality is defeated by self-interest. The most self interested will try to achieve the most power. Practical communism is totalitarian, just like practical capitalism is totalitarian except the totalitarianism in capitalism is reigned (to some extent) by the rule-of-law (and a career in law != a career in politics in 'traditional' 'Western' countries whereas in communist countries the politicians were the law; whether we are seeing transition in the US and Western Europe with politicians in the pockets of politicians and industrialists is interesting).

      --
      --

      FreeNET user? Comfortable with the adverse selection?
    3. Re:What is Communist about China? by holizz · · Score: 0

      IANASociologist... A class ruling over people = capitalism. Centralised, non-democratic control = totalitarianism. Why do people insist on calling it communism? It's totalitarian capitalism! (correct me if I'm wrong)

    4. Re:What is Communist about China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get over it, communism was a big flop.

      Yes it sure was. But that doesn't change the fact that China is about as capitalist a country as you're going to find.

    5. Re:What is Communist about China? by kfg · · Score: 3, Informative

      Nothing in particular is communist about China. It's Confucianism dressed up in Marxist clothing. China is always Chinese and always has been, even when conquered. The "conquerers" always end up "going native."

      However, Confucianism is based on a concept of society as being more important than the individual. An essentially commun-al idea. Kind of a fuedalism with an innate sense of ethics and true noblesse oblige.

      If you really want to understand China today and have a lot of fun doing it read some of the Judge Dee mystery novels of Robert van Gulik. Set in the Tang dynasty (the golden age of ancient Chinese culture) the society it depicts is still very much relevant.

      Then read the Little Red Book.

      Overlay Mao's peculiarly Chinese "Marxism" with the tradtitional Chinese culture and there you are. Modern China.

      It has more factories than the old China, but that's really the biggest difference.

      KFG

    6. Re:What is Communist about China? by kyknos.org · · Score: 1

      I probably know a lotr more about communism than you , as I was forced to live in it for decades. But China seems to me not being communist, it is certainly different. The economy is DIFFERENT. And communism is ECOMOMIC idea. You wouldnt be ale to base USA economy on RVHP countries of past, but it is actually based on the Chinese one.

      --

      SHE does throw dice.
    7. Re:What is Communist about China? by kfg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      communism was a big flop.

      Have you visited a monastary or a state sponsored public school lately?

      Communism is alive and well and living amongst us.

      You'll find very little Marxism though, as Marxism is an industrial theory, not a social one.

      KFG

    8. Re:What is Communist about China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who gives a fuck about defining it? Who cares about how something got bad; it's bad. China doesn't work and the Chinese government cannot be trusted. The only reason China is in any way significant is because so many people have had sex there, that there's 1.25 billion people! What more is there to say? China's government cannot be trusted. I feel sorry for residents of HK and Taiwan.

    9. Re:What is Communist about China? by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Four of my roommates and I in my last appartment couldn't even get communism to work. That's FIVE people not helping out with chores and always passing the buck on who-pays-what-bills. And your going to tell me that communism will work for country?

      PLEASE...SPARE ME!!!! *rolls eyes*

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    10. Re:What is Communist about China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a problem with you and your roommates, not the idea.

    11. Re:What is Communist about China? by kfg · · Score: 1

      That wasn't communism. That was capitalist anarchy. Join the army. That's a totalitarian oligarchy. Just like the USSR. You'll do your chores or sit in the stockade. They don't care much whether you like it or not.

      I also don't recall saying anything about a country.

      KFG

    12. Re:What is Communist about China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Human nature is incompatible with communism, therefore communism is false.

    13. Re:What is Communist about China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what government can be trusted? can america's?

  11. They got greedy... by EulerX07 · · Score: 5, Funny
    From the article :

    "Filters are used to screen out items containing certain pornographic or politically sensitive terms"

    See, if they had stopped at stifling free expression and political opinion exchange they would have been allright. They went after porn, and in technology, porn ALWAYS win. An army of horny men will find a way through their defenses like a knife through hot butter.
    1. Re:They got greedy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or better yet, a HOT knife through butter, I screwed up my last sentence...

    2. Re:They got greedy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      shouldn't that be hot knife through butter? hot butter is more like water..

    3. Re:They got greedy... by ForestGrump · · Score: 1

      nah, those are the jap girls...
      Ever since WW2 and the Rape of Nanking, those japs can do pratically anything!

      Bombarding them with radioactive isotopes doesn't help them much either...

      --
      Is it true that more people vote for the winner of American Idol, than vote for the president? -Ali G.
    4. Re:They got greedy... by I+Be+Hatin' · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      the only chinese porn I have ever seen is the two girls in a bathtub eating shit and making each other puke and then eating that.

      Ah yes, a true classic of East Asian cinema. Oh well, it's still more watchable than 99% of the crap that comes out of Hollywood, I suppose.

      --
      I know god exists. I read it on the internet, so it must be true.
    5. Re:They got greedy... by Roofus · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'm sorry to hear you believe that. Pornography is one of the evils plaguing our world. Exploiting young men and women for your carnal pleasures shows your lack of understanding of the wonders of God.

      I encourage you to visit my Christian Lifestyles page at http://fury.rupture.net/christian_lifestyles.html.

    6. Re:They got greedy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol, too funny, lol can't stop laughing

    7. Re:They got greedy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I followed that link and... what a relief!

    8. Re:They got greedy... by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      Damn, I thought that would be a link to religious porn. Why is it that so many mormon girls are so friggin hot? I guess that explains all the breeding.

    9. Re:They got greedy... by JoshWurzel · · Score: 1

      To quote Dilbert (loosely)

      Dilbert: I've written software that prevents kids from seeing smut on the internet.

      Dogbert: So you're pitting your engineering prowess against the collective sex drive of all the teenagers who own computers?

      Dilbert: What's your point?

      Dogbert: Did you know that if you put a little hat on a snowball it can last a long time in hell?

  12. CIPA (Childrens Internet Protection Act) by stephenisu · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Reminds me of back when most of my friends in highscool had two floppy disks with them at all times. One to disable netnanny, one to put it back. Oh the good ol' days.

    --
    Sigs? We don't need no stinking sigs!
    1. Re:CIPA (Childrens Internet Protection Act) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And look how far you've come!

      - Moomin

    2. Re:CIPA (Childrens Internet Protection Act) by interiot · · Score: 1

      And now we have CDs that fit in your wallet and can do much much more. Except the one in my wallet keeps breaking. :( Is it that I need to lose weight, or is there some other trick?

    3. Re:CIPA (Childrens Internet Protection Act) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could do what I do and carry your wallet in your front pocket. Makes it a lot more difficult to pick your pocket too.

    4. Re:CIPA (Childrens Internet Protection Act) by ThisIsFred · · Score: 1

      Here's the easier method:

      We had NN set up on some boxes with Netscape. I found out that after NN shutdown the browser for attempting to access a restricted site, I could just open up the browser again and have a filter-free Internet experience.

      By the way, CIPA is unenforceable. The technology to block pornographic or offensive images does not yet exist, because computers can't look at an image an recognize what it is. Even the best existing filters are less effective than a teacher. CIPA: A stupid, feel-good law that should be removed from the books.

      --
      Fred

      "A fool and his freedom are soon parted"
      -RMS
    5. Re:CIPA (Childrens Internet Protection Act) by ForestGrump · · Score: 1

      I think his wallet is suffereing from the "Fat wallet" effect.

      Here, make a donation to me.

      -Grump

      --
      Is it true that more people vote for the winner of American Idol, than vote for the president? -Ali G.
    6. Re:CIPA (Childrens Internet Protection Act) by Tablizer · · Score: 2, Funny

      Reminds me of back when most of my friends in highscool had two floppy disks with them at all times. One to disable netnanny, one to put it back. Oh the good ol' days.

      That is indeed the good ol' days. In my day it took 8 floppies because the programs got so damned big.

    7. Re:CIPA (Childrens Internet Protection Act) by the_mad_poster · · Score: 1

      A stupid, feel-good law that should be removed from the books.

      Apply that to 99.5% of the other federal and state laws in existence, and you've basically got the U.S. system down pat.

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    8. Re:CIPA (Childrens Internet Protection Act) by gl4ss · · Score: 2, Funny

      get more credit cards.

      or start wearig hiphop trousers with needless pockets in areas that don't get twisted.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    9. Re:CIPA (Childrens Internet Protection Act) by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1

      Too bad we don't have a constitutional requirement that all laws which aren't regularly refreshed will expire.

      I personally like the legal structure of some Scandinavian tribe I heard about - they follow only the laws that the elders of the tribes can remember (and, I assume, agree on). If they pass something dumb, but nobody can remember it (or why it was a law) by the next tribal meeting, then nobody has to worry about it anymore :)

      As another potential way of reducing the complexity of the legal system, there could be a constitutional requirement that everyone gets free legal counsel at taxpayer expense (lawyers become basically salaried employees of the government). Oh, and a constitutional requirement for a balanced budget too. With those two requirements together, every time Congress passes a new law, they have to do a cost-benefit analysis to figure out how much it will cost to hire lawyers to explain the new law to everyone. I figure (after the legal system collapses a few times) the resultant set of laws will be _really_ simple (and being a lawyer won't be a very high-paying job).

      Aw darn, reality just woke me up from a really good dream :(

    10. Re:CIPA (Childrens Internet Protection Act) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It used to be that the gov't had to OPENLY PUBLISH the laws they passed so that the citizenry would know, else it was forfeit (or something). Nowadays they sneak em by while you are celebrating the capture of a desperate pathetic ruined fat man, or as soon as they turn the fan on the cheerleaders for the instant erecto-nips.

      The laws are gibberish anyway, it's like learning discreet math without knowing anything after algebra. Friggin' greek to me.

    11. Re:CIPA (Childrens Internet Protection Act) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You had floppies? In my times we had only hard dicks.
      Yeah. The joke is getting old. Move along, nothing to see.

    12. Re:CIPA (Childrens Internet Protection Act) by the_mad_poster · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's a matter of them blatantly hiding the laws, it's that they slap tons and tons of tiny laws around big ones, then, as you said, word them as gibberish so nobody can understand them. Net effect? Tons and tons of gibberish laws that can be used to criminalize, on demand, any citizen who the government feels may deserve it (read: anyone who can conveniently be jailed to shut them up or make the government look productive).

      Can anybody say "three strike laws"?

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
  13. Spam by justinkim · · Score: 1

    I wish they's put as much effort at trying to keep the number of spamvertized websites hosted on Chinese ISPs under control. 90% of the spam I receive are advertising sites hosted on IPs that are allocated to Chinese companies.

    1. Re:Spam by Tackhead · · Score: 1
      > I wish they's put as much effort at trying to keep the number of spamvertized websites hosted on Chinese ISPs under control. 90% of the spam I receive are advertising sites hosted on IPs that are allocated to Chinese companies.

      Look at it this way. They're probably just as pissed off about all the "F0u4 JU|\|E +13|\|4|\|m3|\| M4554cr3!" spam their activists are sending them in order to get around the filters.

  14. The more the Internet is needed for by Gentoo+Fan · · Score: 2, Insightful

    outside-of-China business the more China will have to adopt to it. It's basic market principles. Sure, the average Chinese citizen will have a harder time accessing it but it will filter down, eventually.

  15. Just cross ur fingers and hope u dont get caught.. by goodbye_kitty · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yes indeed the censorship in china is quite ineffective, they dont run any filtering of content at all just various well known webaddress like cnn.com, bbc.co.uk, wenjiancity etc however this can be easily bypassed by using an oversease proxy or bouncing the web pages through akamai. I was shocked to find thay they dont even block taiwanese news sites! I guess all they can do is go after a few unlucky people and try to make examples of them.

  16. ChinaNet by Txiasaeia · · Score: 5, Interesting
    if the chinese government really wants to censor the internet, maybe they should consider scrapping ISPs and build their own Intranet, one which has no access with the outside world -- non-compatible e-mail systems, incompatible HTML/XML markup, integrated browsers, etc. etc. Even looking at the above, I still don't think it's possible to block the outside world.

    Maybe they should start working on propaganda - China rules and the rest of the world sucks. Non-Chinese news sources are fallacious and biased against China, that sort of thing. I've been kicking around the idea of fascism in our post-industrial world, but as yet I've not come up with an idea that would truly work. A closed media system is impossible to achieve, esp. in a country as large as China.

    This is all, of course, for fun; the intellectual exercise is more interesting to me than applying my ideas to reality.

    --
    Condemnant quod non intellegunt.
    1. Re:ChinaNet by MajorDick · · Score: 1

      Just like they do in Cuba, to quote a Cuban on the net "The internet is for foreginers the intranet is for Cubans"

    2. Re:ChinaNet by junkymailbox · · Score: 1

      Maybe they just dont want to pay microsoft. $ always win over ideals.

    3. Re:ChinaNet by MooCows · · Score: 1

      Oh my god!
      What if the Chinese government reads slashdot!

      --
      The path I walk alone is endlessly long.
      30 minutes by bike, 15 by bus.
    4. Re:ChinaNet by jafuser · · Score: 1

      This is correct. As long as there's any form of I/O, someone will write a tunnel to (ab)use it to get around any filters.

      It may not be fast, but if people want something bad enough, they'll do whatever it takes and take whatever they can get to get ahold of it.

      I once used HTTP tunnelling to run VNC.. It was not pretty but it got the job done =D

      --
      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
    5. Re:ChinaNet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      non-compatible e-mail systems, incompatible HTML/XML markup, integrated browsers, etc. etc

      Wouldn't even need those. Think. You are the government. Make it totally illegal to have any connections going out of country. Slice off every connection hooking you to the backbone. Insta-intranet.

    6. Re:ChinaNet by Troed · · Score: 1, Troll

      Non-Chinese news sources are fallacious and biased against China, that sort of thing.

      That's exactly what people here say as soon as you say something negative about the USA, regarding non-USA sources ...

    7. Re:ChinaNet by Txiasaeia · · Score: 1

      They've got these lovely things called satellites, dear. Satellite TV and Internet can come from them. Sure, cutting off the backbone can help, but what about air waves? How about a huge 802.11b tower sitting just outside of China?

      --
      Condemnant quod non intellegunt.
    8. Re:ChinaNet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because that's very important to China.

    9. Re:ChinaNet by Felinoid · · Score: 1

      non-compatible e-mail systems, incompatible HTML/XML markup, integrated browsers, etc. etc
      Ahh so that is what Microsoft is up to...
      Cutting the United States off from the rest of the world...

      --
      I don't actually exist.
    10. Re:ChinaNet by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1

      Are you kidding? There's no way censors would let the frequent anti-authoritarian messages spewed out on Slashdot anywhere near their impressionable population.

      Chinese internet users probably haven't been able to read Slashdot since they got their first net connection outside of China.

      Damn, now I'm not sure if I was trying to be funny or not :(

    11. Re:ChinaNet by carou · · Score: 1

      Whoever moderated that as Troll, I congratulate you for making his point.

  17. Conflicting Values by reclusivemonkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does anybody know how much involvement the Chinese Government has with Red Flag? It seems to me that the principles of open source software sit uneasily with censorship.

    1. Re:Conflicting Values by marhar · · Score: 1
      Does anybody know how much involvement the Chinese Government has with Red Flag?



      Not much. Red Flag was started by the Chinese Academy of Science (CAS). There are several chinese-language distributions available, and Red Flag does not seem to be particularly popular.

  18. Pssst, look here!!! by Eberlin · · Score: 3, Informative

    Lots of people in the US subscribe to these guys for Internet censorship: N2H2

    I know it's not quite the same as "Communist Country" censorship, but the US isn't without Government-influenced information suppression. Just google for CIPA. You filter, you get funding. You don't filter, you find funding elsewhere.

    "False-positives" anyone?

    1. Re:Pssst, look here!!! by delirium+of+disorder · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Ya...my school filters because the school board decided censorship was worth funding. check out http://igloo.bigfiber.net/~the1/report.jpg and http://igloo.bigfiber.net/~the1/incident.txt for my dealings with this policy.

      --
      ------ Take away the right to say fuck and you take away the right to say fuck the government.
    2. Re:Pssst, look here!!! by boobsea · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Hey.

      I operate a website that criticizes our local school system.

      We have similar censorship policies in Fort Bend ISD and I have set up CGI-Proxy accounts for people in the past so they could access totally appropriate websites that were wrongly blocked.

      Anyway, I'd like your permission to use your story as a front page article. You do a really excellent job demonstrating the ignorance and total disregard for students that these administrators have for us.

      Reply here or email me - news @ fortbendisdsucks. com. Thanks!

  19. Censorship ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting


    Lets talk about censorship shall we ?, can you handle the truth ?, from where i sit China's is looking good at the moment compared to some places

    1. Re:Censorship ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people have no sense of scale. Prohibiting reporters at military bases is rather different to banning all foreign news sources.

  20. Jailarity by Neuracnu+Coyote · · Score: 1

    Censorship is almost an impossibility now, especially in well-developed countries, thanks to the internet.

    Thanks to new tracking techniques, once your government of choice tracks you down all they need to do is toss you in jail and have said tossing broadcast on every channel from coast to coast.

    --
    --
    1. Re:Jailarity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you can live free, or you can live in fear. That's your choice.

  21. Hacktivismo by rjelks · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Hacktivismo group has been writing software to help the Chinese and others that are being censored. I was very interested when I heard about the "Six/Four" protocal that they were writing for anonymous browsing. Has anyone heard any news on the development of this or any other projects like it. (I'm aware of freenet) Anyway, here is their project page. They're an interesting group that seems to be pushing for free distribution of information.

  22. Tunneling, encryption, steganography. by Lord+of+Ironhand · · Score: 1

    Watertight internet censorship is impossible as long as you don't have full control over all the computers used for access as well.

  23. Bad stuff by The+Bungi · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you want to get an idea on just how bad it is over there in terms of filtering, check out this article about a 2002 study by the Hardvard Law. There are about 19,000 sites listed there. Pretty much anything that has to do with the US and other western governments, "smut", anything even remotely related to Taiwan and so on.

    1. Re:Bad stuff by updog · · Score: 1
      That's an interesting list, but my experience was very different.

      Last month I spent about 3 weeks traveling in China - Beijing, Chengdu, and Guangzho included. I went to several different Internet cafes in each of those cities, and accessed many of those sites included in this list without problems, including BBC, CNN, sfgate, and google. In fact, I successfully accessed every site I attempted to reach.

      My impression is that the reality of censorship is very different from the what most people in the US believe.

    2. Re:Bad stuff by syan2000 · · Score: 1

      That's not true. Communist will relax it in certain time. But if something sensitive happens, it will shut down all those sites.

  24. Re:I know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is very inreresting.

  25. Whew! by dustmote · · Score: 1

    Well personally, I think that's pretty relieving. The harder it is to censor the internet, the better, big picture wise. Although that means I'll be forced to accidentally run across "gems" like goatse mirrors occasionally, I suppose. c'est la vie

    --


    -1, "1337" speak
  26. This could be useful... by chill · · Score: 2, Funny

    If this Chinese gov't attempts to block access to IP addresses that run web proxies outside their control. I can report my own servers to China, so their Big Red Firewall can block all the spam I get from inside China!

    2) Profit!

    -Charles Hill

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    1. Re:This could be useful... by bircho · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I don't know about you, but i never received anything like:

      enrage your penisu todai. onry $199 dorrars.

  27. /. like censorship system? by dkode · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think it would be interesting to employ some form moderation system that is currently in use on /.
    The citizens could vote on which sites are offensive and the appropriate sites would be blocked.
    Although a conflict of opinion would surely surface as it seems to be already

    But this would essentially take control of the internet out of the hands of the government and put it in the hands of the citizens which is an oxymoron for communism.

    --

    Those who trade in their freedom for security, deserve neither.
  28. Serving a purpose? by BeemanH2O · · Score: 1

    "online dissent and distribution of censored information continues and even influences government policies."

    Isn't that what the internet is for? To be able to discuss censored topics/information? I don't see how this is too much different than here in the states. There is all kinds of material that is censored from television and radio that makes it to the net. Seems like everything is working out to me.

  29. Having lived there by Tristan7 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I lived in China for six months last year teaching English at a University. What I found particularly amazing, was that the culture has taught people not to question things. Even my PhD students largely accepted whatever was told to them. So even though there may have been forums online for them to learn about political dissent, most wouldn't particularly have been interested (a few seemed more aware than most, but only a very few).
    Add to this the location of these forums. Online. China does have internet cafes in the larger areas, but the bulk of the country is too poor to even go into them, let alone find their way to some hidden forum.

    I'm all for more individual freedoms in China, but I think most westerners really don't have a clue about how our cultural upbringing has affected us, and how their culture has affected them.

    1. Re:Having lived there by skedastik · · Score: 1

      I lived in China for six months last year teaching English at a University. What I found particularly amazing, was that the culture has taught people not to question things.

      wow.. sounds exactly like my county... the US

    2. Re:Having lived there by Quirk · · Score: 1
      Even my PhD students largely accepted whatever was told to them.

      The idea of controlling a population by propoganda is ancient and effective. Plato in his designs for a Utopia suggested it took only two generations to instill a political falsehood as a universal truth. Having the resources and the means to question the presuppositions underlying our beliefs are rare gifts.

      --
      "Academicians are more likely to share each other's toothbrush than each other's nomenclature."
      Cohen
    3. Re:Having lived there by Second_Derivative · · Score: 1

      Yeah tell me about it. Like, the US mass slaughters its own college students with tanks ALL THE TIME...

    4. Re:Having lived there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Like, how quickly the Americans forget about Kent State.

    5. Re:Having lived there by chenyu · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually its very likely that they were questioning things, it was just that they weren't telling you that they were questioning things.

      My experience in working with Chinese people, is that they do think for themselves. However, (for really obvious reasons), they generally are very reluctant to openly challenge authority. This can make really, really difficult to manage Chinese because they often know something is wrong, are talking about it among themselves, and scared out of their minds to tell the manager about it.

    6. Re:Having lived there by Anonymous+Coed · · Score: 1
      Hah. Kent State was a tragedy, but only 4 students lost there lives and there was no subsequent 'witch hunt' of any and all people who may have participated in the demonstrations. Although deadly force should not have been used at Kent State, the fact is that the 'peaceful protest' there was quickly degenerating into a stone-throwing rabble, threatening to burn down the ROTC building on campus.

      But what do I know, this happened 6 years before I was born.

      I can, however, clearly see that what happened in China in 1988 was a case where the one-party ruling clique used 'all means neccesary' to preserve their rule at a time when there seemed to be a very real chance of these students causing the downfall of the entire government.

    7. Re:Having lived there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am a Chinese. Thank you for teaching English at China. I think you misunderstood their response. In China, the student should always respect the teacher, no matter you are in elementary school or you are a PhD student. You also were a visiting teacher, which means you also were a guest. It is very rude and inappropriate, if not forbidden, for a student to say s/he does not believe what the teach says in public.

      The Chinese colledge kids have no reason to care about the democracy or those dissents. They care about how to hook up with a girl, how to make some money in the summer, and how to find a job or start their own company after graduation.

      Ideology is cheap, show me the money!

      Disclaimer:

      1. I am an atheist, but I do not believe in Communisim, nor Democracy.

      2. My parents at China belong to another political party beside the Communist Party. Yes, there are other political parties in China.

      3. Although I did not care, I did vote in some elections for a lawmaker's position when I was in college. Yes, there are elections at China. But people only care about in very small elections, such as the election of the leader of their village, the director of their division in the goverment. As for who will be the president, who cares.

    8. Re:Having lived there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe they read to much Dilbert.

  30. After blocking, can they try drowning ? by leoaugust · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If it becomes increasingly hard to block "objectionable" messages, (which by the way the Cubans have effectively done - Cuban Government Toughens Internet Restrictions) would it come to a stage the Authoritarian Governments try to drown the messages.

    The Govt could itself start sending out so much propoganda messages that they will drown the "rebel" messages, and most people will be unable to develop personalized filters to get to the "rebel" information. (A conspi-racist may think that the real purpose of the CAN-SPAM legilation was to pre-emptively acquire these capabilities.)

    After all, if this is supposed to be the attention economy, all the govt has to do to prevent mischief is to keep your attention - almost like in Clockwork Orange. Does it really matter if the attention is directed to something worthwhile, or towards just delusion and deception - I mean from the Governments point-of-view.

    --
    To see a world in a grain of sand, and then to step back and see the beach where the sand lies ...
  31. It surprises me... by b0r0din · · Score: 1

    That you sat through watching all of that. This requires watching the shit-eating, THEN watching the puking, THEN watching the puke/shit eating...

    I'd take tentacle porn over that any day.

  32. How about /. in China? by CAlworth1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Does anyone know if Slashdot is blocked or at all censored in China? A huge variety of news goes through here, as well as new technology (some of which could even prove helpful in evading the various filters...)

    1. Re:How about /. in China? by delirium+of+disorder · · Score: 1

      I donno about china, but my school's filter did. Check out http://igloo.bigfiber.net/~the1/incident.txt and http://igloo.bigfiber.net/~the1/report.jpg to hear about what happened when I tryed to fight censorship.

      --
      ------ Take away the right to say fuck and you take away the right to say fuck the government.
    2. Re:How about /. in China? by Mike+the+Mac+Geek · · Score: 1

      I would imagine that if /. was not blocked before this article was posted, it sure is now.

      --
      -------------------------------------------------- ---- The man, the myth, the something or other.
    3. Re:How about /. in China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not blocked, or was not about a year ago. I spent 2 weeks there, and dealt with multiple ISPs, and as far as I could tell, nothing was blocked.

      CNN, etc all worked fine. Now, I did not go into any cafes, but had access to the straight pipes.

      Applications such as videophone, and ip telephony work fine, even now.

    4. Re:How about /. in China? by centralizati0n · · Score: 2, Informative

      As of the most recent harvard Chinese censorship study, slashdot is not censored. (from their Emperical Analysis of Internet Filtering in China found here)

    5. Re:How about /. in China? by chenyu · · Score: 1

      It's not. I've been there and it works fine.

  33. OT,but someone has to make the [NO CARRIER] joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Herro, me Chang from China and I run a rebsite about human rights vio=20 ]} } } }&..}=3Dr}'}"}[NO CARRIER]

  34. Yay for CameraShy! by Ozone+Depletion · · Score: 1

    Thanks to projects like CameraShy these people can still send censored information around :)

  35. Obligatory RIAA parallels by aelfric35 · · Score: 1

    While I'm NOT saying the RIAA is a pinko organization, this article reminded me of their tactics. They squash Napster, and Audiogalaxy flourishes. They get Audiogalaxy, and Kazaa gets big. The internet users are always one step ahead. Unless you're Lu Xiaobo or that 12-year-old girl; the Chinese censors and the RIAA both leave a wake of human detritus, whom one can regard as heroes or infidels. Once again, it all comes down to free speech or free beer.

    --

    "Den som vover mister Fodfaeste et Oieblik; den som ikke vover mister Livet." -Soren Kierkegaard
  36. Should China Join the WTO? by Iplaw-dc · · Score: 1

    If China did join the WTO, the government could not censor information because it would be in violation of the agreement. Here is a resourceful link on this subject: http://www.globalissues.org/TradeRelated/FreeTrade /WTO.asp There are several papers here that argue that China should not be allowed to enter WTO and that support China's entry...you decide....

    --
    Jax
    1. Re:Should China Join the WTO? by wan-fu · · Score: 1

      China is in the WTO. If you had read the entirety of the link you posted, you might have also realized this fact.

  37. American Technology is helping repress the Chinese by GomezAdams · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When I worked at GTE the company got the contract to lay the fiber optic cable around the border of China and put in the network centers that setup a ring around China. Total control of all the traffic in and out of the country, or so they hoped. A career limiting move came when I wrote Chuck Lee, CEO of GTE, and said we were helping the same Communist government that gave us Tianamen Square and would continue to repress the Chinese people using this technology. But Bean Counters only care about profit and damn the people that get get screwed over in the process.

    As a side note, I knew a lad working near me from China who had been at Tianamen Square the day before and then the day after the massacre happened. When he saw what the army had done to their own people he went home, packed and left for Hong Kong and then to the US.

    Censorship is only one way the Communists will use to stay in power and shooting another bunch of college kids can happen again.

    --
    Too lazy to create a sig...
  38. The Saudi Lead? by Necrotica · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I seem to remember stumbling across a web site a few months ago that had a list of "black market" ISPs that would allow a Saudi citizen to access the Internet in a non-monitored/non-censored way. Apparently accessing the Internet using "normal" ISPs means excessive content blocking, etc.

    There may already be such ISPs in China for all I know. But it's interesting to see groups of people band together to circumvent the restrictions put on them by their governments.

  39. That makes no sense! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cracking down on pornography in a nation one billion strong? Sounds like they need it to me.

    1. Re:That makes no sense! by gid13 · · Score: 1

      Uh... maybe people are LESS likely to have sex if they watch porn? That would seem to be the logical conclusion to me.

      Also, and perhaps sadly, I think the original poster may have a point about people not rising up against the government if they get their porn. I mean, you don't see many Americans rising up against George W.

    2. Re:That makes no sense! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they need gay porn. Lots and lots of gay porn. Because not only do they have 1.2 billion people, but they have a 1.06 male/female sex ratio. Too bad traditional Chinese norms say homosexuality is bad.

    3. Re:That makes no sense! by goatasaur · · Score: 1

      How do you explain Japan, then? They have so much porno over there that it boggles my mind. And a population density of over 300 people per sq km. I don't get the "people have less sex when they watch porn" reasoning. I think an older applicable adage would be "out of sight, out of mind".

      --
      ~D:
    4. Re:That makes no sense! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I mean, you don't see many Americans rising up against George W."

      Don't forget that in America, we have a different way of "rising up". We can have protests, which we do, we can setup websites that say "fuck bush", which we do, and we can generally vent our discontent. I know Bush supporters generally act like little nazis when it comes to dissent or criticism against Bush, but in fact, it's what makes America great. We can express ourselves, vent our anger, and get it out of our systems without resorting to armed uprisings, which would bring misery to our country.

      And there is always the vote, which while it may seem like a jacked up system, can change things given enough critical mass.

    5. Re:That makes no sense! by I+Be+Hatin' · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      I don't get the "people have less sex when they watch porn" reasoning.

      Presumably, more pr0n == more whacking off == less sex with an actual female. Or at least, I suppose that's the theory.

      --
      I know god exists. I read it on the internet, so it must be true.
    6. Re:That makes no sense! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Japan's population has been declining for some time now.

    7. Re:That makes no sense! by goatasaur · · Score: 1

      I would call that a "loaded gun" fallacy. :)

      --
      ~D:
    8. Re:That makes no sense! by Deraj+DeZine · · Score: 1

      Or a "loaded gun" phallacy

      --
      True story.
    9. Re:That makes no sense! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yeah but Japan is tiny, Density would be the population per square mile (kilo, whatever.) Simply saying the density reveals absolutely nothing about the population, except is relation to the amount of space available.

      While there are a lot of them in a small space, if you spread them out in America they'd be much more spread out. Are you claiming that this spread would in effect lower the birth rate? It's not like you hear about many japanese girls having babies out of wedlock. Please explain your fucked up reasoning.

  40. Reap what you Sow by MajorDick · · Score: 0, Troll

    So what ?!?!
    The Chineese Govt CENSORS stuff

    THEY ARE THE PEOPLE THAT PUT THE GOVERMENT IN POWER !!!

    THEY HAVE THE OPTION TO CHANGE THINGS !!!!

    Why dont they ? Because they value security MORE than Freedom. Why the hell should I feel bad about some Marxist regimes censorship ? If THEY cared so much en-masse THEY would do something about it. THEY obviously dont care , why should I ?

    1. Re:Reap what you Sow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know this is a troll, but its funny. Someone moderate please.

    2. Re:Reap what you Sow by ignoramous · · Score: 1

      Two words: "Tianamen Square" Would you really be seen in a demonstration against a government that will come and waltz a few tanks over you (and the thousands of others) without thinking twice about it. The whole point of the story is that just about anybody with any connections or education at all, is finding ways to fight. I think that means quite a bit considering what kind of stakes they're ignoring.

      Millions of Americans were actively opposed to Gulf War II, but they didn't come out on the street - compared to Rome which brought up to five million to bear from all over Italy, New York, with a larger population got barely 500,000 -, because somebody made sure that every protest which exceeded X amount of people got teargassed. Colorado Springs is one example, where the cops didn't even bother making up a valid excuse until three days later.

      MP3 sharing is down 80 percent because a couple of people got charged with copyright violation. The stakes: little more than a ruined credit rating.

      All I'm saying is that a lot of incredibly brave people are protesting over there, despite the fact that dissenters routinely get shot. That means that the vast majority of them positively hate their regime. I bet you wouldn't be amongst the protestors either, because compared to that level of dedication, 99.99 percent of americans are utter pussies.

      --


      I had a dream that I was dreaming about recursion.
    3. Re:Reap what you Sow by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Why dont they ? Because they value security MORE than Freedom. Why the hell should I feel bad about some Marxist regimes censorship ? If THEY cared so much en-masse THEY would do something about it.

      Because they don't know what to compare it to. You can't make an informed decision with slanted information. They are in essence in the dark. Besides, Tianamen Square taught them an object lesson.

    4. Re:Reap what you Sow by ignoramous · · Score: 1

      One more thing. How do you know that people in China were aware of what was happening there when the govenment assumed its current form? 1 billion people spread out over the largest country in the world, with shitty communication.

      And even if they had had it, would it have made a difference? Some might argue that the same thing that happened to China is happening to us - in the US - right now, slowly but surely. Hell, Patriot Act II is coming soon, to a listening post near you.

      --


      I had a dream that I was dreaming about recursion.
    5. Re:Reap what you Sow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course the first step is to call it a riot.

    6. Re:Reap what you Sow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other news, 70% American thought there was a link between Sadam and Al Qaeda.

  41. China is _not_ communist by rsilvergun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They're a Fascist Dictatorship with Communist Rhetoric. Communism makes for great posters and propaganda when you're nearly starving and working 16 hrs/day. But given that people at large in China seem to have very little say in how "their" resources are spent (if they did, would they allow sweat shops to exist?), I don't see how you can call them Communist.

    That said, I don't think Communism is a viable system. You can never get past that whole "Dictatorship of the Proletariat" thing. China didn't, Russia didn't and neither did Cuba. I'm a Socialist myself. Violent or at least forceful revolutions like Communism is usually associated with almost always end with a brutal, Fascist government. I better solution is for the poor and disenfranchised to control their population so that the value of their labor increases (kinda like what happened with the Black Plague but minus the Plague). As funny as it sounds, I think birth control is the best hope for mankind. Now if we can only get those pesky religious and cultural factors to go away so the poor will use it...

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:China is _not_ communist by notcreative · · Score: 1
      the Black Plague but minus the Plague

      Is that some kind of racist remark?

    2. Re:China is _not_ communist by I+confirm+I'm+not+a · · Score: 1

      Oh for pity's sake! No! It's a reference to the Bubonic Plague that killed off a large part of the labour force, pushing up wages. I find it really difficult to see even the maddest of racists arguing that "Black" ("Black Plague" minus "Plague"), meaning, presumably, more immigration, could mean higher wages.

      ...but then, IHBT, right?

      --
      This is where the serious fun begins.
    3. Re:China is _not_ communist by notcreative · · Score: 1

      joke.

    4. Re:China is _not_ communist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're confusing "fascist" with "authoratarian". Stalin was a communist, but by your definition he would be a fascist. This isn't the caae - what he had in common with Hitler was that he was an authoratarian.

    5. Re:China is _not_ communist by Tablizer · · Score: 2, Interesting


      That said, I don't think Communism is a viable system.

      The definition has gotten bumped around a bit. They are not "communists" as originally defined, but a single-party dictatorship.

      Also, economic system and freedom of speech can be orthogonal things. Communism used to mean mostly an economic system, not a speech control system.

      I think birth control is the best hope for mankind.

      But Darwinian natural selection will eventually prevent it. Even now there seems to be more people who like having children for the sake of having children because those who don't like children tend not to pass on the gene. There are some women who have an opiate-like substance released when they are pregrant. Thus, they get high having babies. Natural selection will likely create more of those. The voluntary approach will eventually no longer work.

    6. Re:China is _not_ communist by I+confirm+I'm+not+a · · Score: 1

      Phew! Sorry about the rant - late, needing sleep...

      --
      This is where the serious fun begins.
    7. Re:China is _not_ communist by corbettw · · Score: 1

      Now if we can only get those pesky religious and cultural factors to go away so the poor will use it...

      You could always force people to accept it. After all, it's for their own good.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    8. Re:China is _not_ communist by leereyno · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The problem is that in a country like the US most of the poor and disenfranchised have no one to blame but themselves. Every child is afforded a free and public education. Every child has educational and economic opportunities that people in the third world would do almost anything to take advantage of. Why do you think the US is a beacon of hope an prosperity to the rest of the world? Even those nations that hate and resent us do so because we represent everything that they are not. Resentment is the sincerest form of flattery.

      The US is a meritocracy. Not a perfect one of course but what flaws we have are not fatal ones. Prosperity can be had by anyone who is willing and able to work for it. Most adults who live in poverty are losers plain and simple. Worrying about their welfare and quality of life when they won't take responsibility for these things themselves is an exercise in stupidity. There is a reason why some people are well off and others are not, and that boils down to a fundamental difference in the quality of their character and the level of their abilities. Losers lose, winners win. Do anything you want to the system within which these two groups exist and it won't make a damned bit of difference. You can't help those who won't help themselves. Trying to monkey with the social machinery to favor those who can't or won't produce just makes things worse for everyone.

      I agree with you that birth control is the best hope for mankind. If losers and idiots can be discouraged from creating more of themselves the long term benefits for humanity are nearly limitless. I can't agree with you about religion however. Nature abhors a vacuum and religion is a powerful civilizing and socializing force. It is not perfect, but at least it does not deny human nature. Most leftest ideology is based upon the idea that evil is the result of social conditions/injustice, and simple misunderstandings. Man's nature is seen as both inherently good and infinitely malleable. It is believed that man can be made into something better through education and other social endeavors. The truth is that human nature is not inherently good and neither is terribly changable. Any system that denies the truth about human nature will be the victim of it. Communism is only one of the more horrific examples of this fundamental truth.

      I understand why you're a socialist. You want to make the world a better place. What you need to understand is that not everyone can be helped and those who can are best served by providing them with the opportunity to help themselves.

      Lee

      --
      Muslim community leaders warn of backlash from tomorrow morning's terrorist attack.
    9. Re:China is _not_ communist by ratamacue · · Score: 1
      I better solution is for the poor and disenfranchised to control their population so that the value of their labor increases

      Can you explain how the poor and disenfranchised could possibly obtain control (the "right" to initiate force as a means to an end) over the rest of the populace without becoming the powerful elite?

      Government cannot possibly achieve equality, because the first prerequisite of government is inequality.

    10. Re:China is _not_ communist by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

      I don't think what women want will matter soon. There's work being done on a male birth control pill that is cheap, safe and 100% effective. The demand for such a pill will force it onto market sooner or later. I also think that given the choice most men wouldn't have children (or at least not more than one or two). I have nothing to back up that assertion beyond my own experiences. And by 'most men' I really mean 'most poor men'. I'm sure we've all at some point or another seen the effects of having a child before you're financially stable (just go to your neighborhood McDonald's, those 25 year olds aren't there for fun ya know). Speaking from America, I've never met a man who makes under $30,000/yr and has had kids on purpose.

      --
      Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    11. Re:China is _not_ communist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He meant "control their population" as in "limit the number of" rather than as in "assert authority over". Although it's a little ironic that the Chinese government realized this a while ago, as it pertains to them as a nation, and used their control over their population to control their population with the one-kid rule.

    12. Re:China is _not_ communist by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

      I wish. It just doesn't work out that way. If people were smart enough to allow you to force them to control population, you wouldn't need to force them. You'd need vast wealth and power to force such an unpopular idea on people; and the people who have that kind of power benefit from having lots and lots of poor, desperate people.

      --
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    13. Re:China is _not_ communist by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      "They're a Fascist Dictatorship with Communist Rhetoric. "

      And those Chinese Fascist Communists will be first against the wall when the Revolution... oh... er... wait...

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    14. Re:China is _not_ communist by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

      Evidently you've never been in the Tucson, Arizona public school system if you can make an assertion like that. Moreover, the US is in a rather nasty position. On the one hand we've got millions of people who don't want children having time. These people didn't want to be parents and have no real intention of trying. On the other hand, our society'll be damned if it's gonna let the schools take over the job of parenting. This leaves a huge class of children with parents but no parenting. Shoving kids full of facts isn't even half the job of parenting.

      Oh, and the U.S. is a beacon of hope because we command an inordinate amount of the world's resources (it's an economic fact I'm too lazy to google to support, for added fun look up some of the studies that are predicting the disaster-waiting-to-happen that is China's industrialization). The rest of the world hates us because we're exploiting them for cheap labor. When our labor force got tired of working in slums and sweatshops we exported them overseas so profits wouldn't suffer. My favorite is the economists who believe (or say they believe) the rest of the world needs the US to buy their goods. Why the hell can't China keep it's own manufactured products, huh? Or develop India as a market? Point is there are other markets than the America. The Capitalists in America are starting to realize this, and are rapidly abandoning the US for them. Outsourcing is just the tip of a very large, ugly iceberg.

      As for religion, consumerism is just as good a religion as any (read Brave New World if you haven't already). I don't think people are smart enough to need reasons to behave. They just need food, shelter and something to do with themselves that isn't too intellectually demanding (I know I fall into that category, I'm a right lazy bastard).

      Oh, and I couldn't care less about the world being a better place, I just don't want to live in the truly awful place it's rapidly becoming. The future is a nasty one. Globalism will allow Capitalists to move from country to country, preventing organizations of workers from every improving their lot. It's already happening. India is losing jobs to Vietnam which in turn lowers the value of labor in India and raises it in Vietnam. Once it's high enough in Vietnam you'll see jobs vacate there. Eventually a kind of sickening equilibrium will be established with a very small group of grotesquely wealthy individuals. These people will oppress the poor not to maintain their standard of living, but to maintain the vast social power that controlling scarce resources affords them. After all the progress, life's are on it's way to becoming Nasty, Brutish and Short again. That bugs me.

      --
      Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    15. Re:China is _not_ communist by fermion · · Score: 1
      God, what have you been smokin'? Or perhaps you grew up in a private school in the suburbs?

      Just to be clear, I somewhat agree with you, except for the religious babble. If a person can keep his or her nose, clean, study hard, and ignore all the negative forces then there is a good chance he or she can succeed.

      However there are two issue. First, education is harder for some people to get than others. If you are lucky enough to have been born into money, or have a parent that is willing to advocate for you, then a good public education can be had. Unfortunately for many kids, their potential is destroyed by being in bad classes. I see it all the time. One or two good smart kids in a classroom filled with twenty other not so good and not so smart kids. The other kids are yelling, playing, doing anything to avoid getting an education. The few smart kids are penalized for not having the right parents. It is extremely difficult to learn in such a situation. The best of the best succeed. But they face obstacles later on.

      The main one being that the leaders all go to prep schools and certain colleges. Again, the best of the best can raise themselves to the prep school and the college. I have seen it. It happens. The kids who succeed are brilliant beyond imagination. They have managed to avoid the gangsters who want to steal books and money on the way to school, the police who will incarcerate a kid and destroy his or her life for a tiny amount of drugs, and the stigma of doing badly on a test that no one prepared you for.

      Of course, if you are rich all these problems disappear. Private schools in which the teachers must make sure the kids pass or lose their jobs(read that as you wish). Private neighborhood police who will take a drunk adolescent home instead of to the police station. SAT prep courses. Drug rehab programs that never get listed on the kids record. Money to pay for college, or build a wing for a building, or whatever.

      And of course religion is very civilizing. I spent many years in the toughest public schools. The only time I ever got beat up was in a private baptist school. When i reported the beating, a series of events transpired which resulted in the principle of the school beating me for a transgression committed by the boys who beat me up. All because it was clear I was not the proper religion. And let's not forget those religious people on TV that spout bigotry and hate in exchange for money. I mean really, would Jesus wear a Rolex?

      We all can be made better through education. Unfortunately, in the US a good education is getting harder to come by, and those that need it the most brag that all they ever read is a fishing magazine.

      Finally, poverty happens. Some people can spend their childhood on drugs, sleeping with every pussy around, dodge the draft, and extort money from the public coffers, and still end up the most powerful person in the world. Others have the unfortunate luck to born to a mother who is clueless, and whose husband gets put in jail for posing a small amount of dope. Perhaps it is true that god just like some of us more than others. Which is fine with me. I am going to be with feynman and einstien and ghandi and all the other cool people. You can heaven with hitler and the other happy, healthy and compansionate christians.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    16. Re:China is _not_ communist by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Yes, but natural selection applies to men also.

    17. Re:China is _not_ communist by weston · · Score: 1

      The problem is that in a country like the US most of the poor and disenfranchised have no one to blame but themselves. Every child is afforded a free and public education.

      The basic point is a good start and those facts are one of the things that make America a good country and make our upward mobility what they are.

      There's more than a few problems with assuming that means those who are poor have no one to blame but themselves, though.

      The IT industry bust is a pretty classic example. At the beginning of the 90's, almost no one would have warned you -- certainly no one warned me -- that software or I/T jobs might ever reach a point where not only was there an oversaturated market in the US but that many of the jobs would be shipped overseas. Lots of people made educational decisions -- ones that almost anyone would have said were sound -- based on projections that software I/T was a complete growth field, one that would need more labor than we could supply for decades to come.

      Clearly not the case.

      I'm speaking as a person who's been lucky to ride out the worst, lucky enough to have personal connections to acquaintances with a growing business that had open roles I could adapt to (even though it's meant working a lot of 12-16 hour days), lucky (in some ways) that I didn't have to worry about supporting a family while my bank account drained and I had to rely on the help of others.

      But lots of people in society make exactly these kinds of decisions about their futures based on information of similar quality. Many of them don't adapt so readily. Many of them don't get the breaks I got.

      Our society is great about providing first chances. Second chances -- which just about everyone needs unless they're dealt a first hand that's all but proof from following disasters -- we're not so good at, and generally leave to luck. It's not an easy problem to solve, but the first step has to be recognizing that while laziness and spurned opportunity can lead a person to a bad economic position, they're not the only path there . Many of the poor are guilty of nothing worse than imperfect foresight.

    18. Re:China is _not_ communist by punxking · · Score: 0

      Ha ha ha...
      I'll assume you're just bitter and that you actually believe that, and that you're not just trolling...

      A few small issues to consider: It's hard to make use of the (often questionable) free and public education system when you are overcome by hunger. I don't mean "I missed lunch" hunger, I mean not knowing where the next meal is coming from or if it's coming at all today or tomorrow (and I use the word "meal" liberally here.)

      Not having safe and adequate shelter can also make that free and public education system a good deal less effective. Just for fun lets throw in child abuse and domestic violence as examples of a few minor bumps in that fair and equitable road to the get-an-education-and-pull-yourself-up-by-the-boots traps promised land you refer to. Familial substance abuse can be a real downer on a childs potential education, as can mental illness, famial criminal activity and incarceration, absentee parents and so on. I'll leave out specific arguments about social factors like racism, sexism, etc.

      It's pretty easy as a white male (yeah, that's me) to go the egocentric and ethnocentric route and think, "I had to work for it, and if they worked for it they could make it too." But you've probably already had more privilege than most of those people will ever get. Children aren't "losers" if they never had a chance, and none that I've ever seen got to select their parents or childhood environments.

      God forbid you should ever have had to walk a mile in their shoes...

      --
      You can have my cynical agnosticism when you pry it from my cold, dead logic.
    19. Re:China is _not_ communist by Tonytheloony · · Score: 1

      Whatever.
      You also forgot to add you believe America was chosen by god. At least complete your argument.

      --
      The quickest way to become an atheist is to study the Bible thoroughly.
    20. Re:China is _not_ communist by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      Not everyone can be helped? Has anyone really ever tried to prove that we can truely help everyone of us? I mean a good solid effort. Has anyone tried yet? Kind of silly to put down something no ones tried. And perhaps the ideal world is impossible... so what. Most applications have bugs right? But they do work. I think if we really wanted... we could raise the standard of living for everyone to atleast have a respectfull and happy life. I think thats a little better than calling the poor "losers" as you call them. Not everyone is given the same chances in life. Free education does not mean you have a chance to be donald trump. People are ill. People have cancer, and have to take shitty jobs to pay insanely priced medical bills. People have responsibilities. So while they're still POOR... THEY'RE NOT LOSERS. Calling them losers is the most insulting and dehumanizing thing you could do. Shame on you. Look at the statistics for all of the major illnesses. Look how they effect peoples lives. They had free education... but.. they spend their days and nights suffering from a life long medical issue, or a fatal illness. I agree that having 10 kids and not being able to afford them is pretty stupid.. but not everyone who cant make it... are losers. It aint so simple my friend. Life is complex and contradicting at every turn

    21. Re:China is _not_ communist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They have the freedom not to work at the sweat shop. No one forced them. Of course they are not communists, because they are capitalists.

    22. Re:China is _not_ communist by replicant108 · · Score: 1

      "The US is a meritocracy."

      Of course it is. Just ask the Bushes.

      Or the Kennedys.

      Or the Rockefellers.

      Or... well, you get the idea.

    23. Re:China is _not_ communist by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      No he's pretty much right. The overwhelming majority of poor people in the US are losers and deserving of their station in life. For those who this is not true they will eventually rise above the others.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    24. Re:China is _not_ communist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm trying really hard to figure out if you're a troll or just an idiot.

    25. Re:China is _not_ communist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I am a Chinese. It is not about Communism in China after 1980. It is all about power and interests. Most officials are corrupted in China. Officials at province level take tens of millions bribe for projects like high way construction. Highest officials do not take bribes. Their sons and daughters start companies in state monopolized industry and make billions with their parents power. A China Vice Premier's daughter spent 14 million dollars to buy an apartment in Manhattan. I have seen that apartment in person. That Vice Premier is in charge of China Telecommunication and IT industry in 90's(Telecommunication is monopolized by state in China). The closer to power, the richer. The officials will absolutely obey the orders from higher-ups if they want to continue make big money on their position. Law enforcement and court serve the power not the people. Communists will never give up their power until revolution comes. On the other side, people far away from power are poor and miserable. Almost one billion peasant's income did not experience notable growth since 1990. The average annual income of a adult peasant is about 200 us dollars and still subject to many taxes. So they can endure 3 dollars per day salary and work over twelve hours in foreign invested factory. That's how the cheap stuff in Walmart comes. High GDPs of China are just supported by heavy foreign investment and sacrifices of peasants. There will be nothing left except nice buildings in Beijing and Shanghai when foreign investment withdraws. The economic structure would become more and more rigid until one day it collapses.

    26. Re:China is _not_ communist by skrutsch · · Score: 1

      Going by the few "poor people" I know, I can't categorize them all as losers. I don't agree that "person who contributes to society" means "person who isn't on welfare", but hey, maybe I'm just not consuming enough:*(

    27. Re:China is _not_ communist by N1XIM · · Score: 1

      Oh well, that's what we get for being happy once we have our bread and circus. Our world is going the very same way as that of the Romans (for one example) for the very same reasons. People don't learn their history and thusly they repeat it. With any luck we'll all be dead of old age the next time this happens--just so that we won't have to watch it all happen all over again......

    28. Re:China is _not_ communist by N1XIM · · Score: 1

      I mean really, would Jesus wear a Rolex?
      Yes, he would--he was the son of a very wealthy man (and his brother--read that as you wish--James "The Just" became the leader of the temple not all that long before it was reduced to the current remains of the "old city")--artisans such as carpenters (in a place where people usually lived in mud-brick houses--and anything large made of wood was a luxury item of some sort) were quite well off. That is what was really damn odd about Jesus of Nazareth, and is indeed part of the reason that we remember him today--he was the only prophet of the time in his part of the world that wasn't some poor "crazy" person (instead, some would argue, he was a rich "crazy" person). So yes, he would wear a Rolex--but only when it would benefit him in some really important way (otherwise he would risk ticking off the poor folk too much).

  42. U.S. Companies are helping by rjelks · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here is an article about how the Chinese have been blocking content from their citizens. What's interesting is how some American companies, like Yahoo, are cooperating to do business with them.

    1. Re:U.S. Companies are helping by SteveAstro · · Score: 1

      Agreed.

      The original article also mentions the "Great Red FireWall" - this should of course read "Great Red FireWall (tm) Cisco Routers"

      Steve

    2. Re:U.S. Companies are helping by base3 · · Score: 1

      The executives from Cisco and Yahoo who cooperated with the Chinese government should be tried in the Hague and hanged for crimes against humanity.

      --
      One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
    3. Re:U.S. Companies are helping by Richard_at_work · · Score: 0, Troll

      Tony Blair, John Prescott, George W Bush and Colin Powell first please.

    4. Re:U.S. Companies are helping by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Colin Powell? How about Henry Kissinger?

    5. Re:U.S. Companies are helping by chenyu · · Score: 1

      Yes, and then we should organize and condemn any
      Western efforts to help the Chinese build their
      internet infrastructure.

      That way instead of having an internet infrastructure which the government tries and fails to censor, the Chinese will have no internet at all!!! It is after all much better to demonstrate our moral indignation than to actually do something useful to advance human rights and freedom in China.....

    6. Re:U.S. Companies are helping by vegetablespork · · Score: 1
      Yes, and then we should organize and condemn any Western efforts to help the Chinese build their internet infrastructure.

      False dichotomy. The Chinese could have been helped "to build their Internet infrastructure" without having been sold custom-designed censorship technology.

      --

      Call (206) 338-5780 COLLECT for information about a genuine BA, BS, MA, MS, MBA, or Ph.D.

    7. Re:U.S. Companies are helping by chenyu · · Score: 1

      1) There's very little custom designed censorship technology involved here.

      2) How do you propose to force the Chinese government to not allow censorship?

    8. Re:U.S. Companies are helping by vegetablespork · · Score: 1
      1) That's Cisco's spin. I doubt their contention that they simply sold the PRC generic routers and didn't provide technical assistance or custom programming to facilitate censorship.

      2) Start with trade sanctions, revoking MFN. Work up from there.

      --

      Call (206) 338-5780 COLLECT for information about a genuine BA, BS, MA, MS, MBA, or Ph.D.

    9. Re:U.S. Companies are helping by chenyu · · Score: 1

      1) I believe them because of the way that the firewall is structured. The Great Firewall of China works by IP blocks, which makes it trivial to get around. If it were the case that Western companies were helping the Chinese government develop data-mining techniques or anti-cryptography techniques, then you might have a point, and this would be objectionable (partly because those technologies would probably eventually be used by Western governments). But the evidence that this is not going on. You can reroute via a proxy server, and ssh/https connections aren't being blocked.

      Getting back to the original point. Laying fiber is good because it makes it much *harder* to do content based filter. It's easy for North Korea to monitor all internet connections out. It's difficult to impossible for China to do so because there too much traffic which contains https, VoIP, video.

      If you are the only one sending e-mail, it's easy to keep track of you. If everyone is connected to the internet, it makes it much easier in hide in the weeds.

      2) Which defeats your purpose. The Chinese government will just slam the door in your face and keep everyone poor like the North Koreans. If you want to loosen the Chinese governments grip on power, you want to make people in China rich and well connected to information. Putting in internet connections *even with censorship* makes communications more open.

    10. Re:U.S. Companies are helping by vegetablespork · · Score: 1

      I like your ideas, but as the RIAA has demonstrated here in the states, it doesn't take perfect enforcement of a monitoring regime to have a chilling effect. And in China, the stakes are a bit higher than a settlement of a few thousand dollars. It's morally better for U.S. corporations (had they any morals) to avoid doing business with China until their human rights abuses cease. Trade is a big carrot, but should be being used as big hammer. Regrettable, the monied interests of the corporate bourgeoise (what irony) in the U.S. are allowing the Chinese government to present an image palatable to westerners, while still stifling rights and murdering its citizens.

      --

      Call (206) 338-5780 COLLECT for information about a genuine BA, BS, MA, MS, MBA, or Ph.D.

  43. Europe by blackula · · Score: 0

    As long as Europe continues its trend towards more and more extreme Socialism (i.e., Communism), one can only predict that this kind of censorship is in EUians' futures. You may think I am trolling, but I assure you that I'm serious. Look at Europe's Draconian laws regarding "hate speech." The "worker's revolution" has begun, Europe. I hope you're ready for the consequences.

  44. medicine always tastes worse when its yours by vicparedes · · Score: 1

    chinese government censors its citizens. citizens censor chinese their government back. censorship rears its ugly head when you least expect it. isn't life interesting?

  45. Open Networks, Closed Regimes by pangian · · Score: 1
    1. Re:Open Networks, Closed Regimes by pangian · · Score: 1

      D'oh Sorry. I really was trying to hit "Preview." I swear. Here is what I meant to post:

      There's an interesting book called Open Networks Closed Regimes that looks at Internet censorship in China. Basically, the book is in response to the technodeterminists of the early 90s who believed that you could simply add the Internet to an authoritarian country, stir, and get a thriving democracy. The book makes a few flaws and omissions (most notably ignoring the impact of email), but the overall point is pretty sound. It's gross oversimplification to say so... but I will: the Internet is a tool, a tool that crafty people can use for control as much as it can be used to promote openness.

      I only mention this because frequently these articles still take a subtly (or not so) technodeterminist slant-- "Hey, look what Internet is doing in China." --When really the credit belongs to determined individuals who are using whatever tools they get their hands on to challenge an oppressive regime. If you really want to promote democracy in China you need to find more ways to help these folks out, not just build bigger pipes.

  46. Re:Hacktivismo-- Great Terms by ifreakshow · · Score: 1

    4. You must be a Certified Patriot! In our view, it is exceptionally patriotic to be a member of Hacktivismo and to advocate civil liberties all over the world. And we don't view people who agree with George Bush, John Poindexter, John Ashcroft, Dick Cheney, or Don Rumsfeld as very patriotic at all. It is patriotic to disagree with Mr. Bush and other friends of Big Oil. But neither we nor George Bush can decide unilaterally whether you are a Certified Patriot merely based on your politics or point of view. A "Certified Patriot" has come to mean anybody (even communists, militia members, muslim extremists, animal-rights activists, tree-huggers, vocal critics of John Ashcroft, and card-carrying members of the ACLU) not listed as a "Specially Designated National" or "Blocked Person" by the U.S. Treasury Department Office of Foreign Assets Control ("OFAC"). The OFAC list of Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons [PDF] is located here [PDF] or here [text file]. The most recent changes [PDF] to the SDN and Blocked Persons List are published here [PDF]. IF YOU ARE NOT ON THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT LIST, THEN YOU, TOO, ARE A CERTIFIED PATRIOT! Congratulations! ;-)

    They then make you agree to this. It's pretty funny

  47. Thanks for living up to your name. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Moron.

    1. Re:Thanks for living up to your name. by r00tdenied · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I might be risking my karma here, but how can you say that the people in China have the ability to choose the government they want?

      I might be mistaken, but isn't their government COMMUNIST. The people of China have no say in how their government is run, they can only cower and hope that they don't say something that displeases a government official enough to throw them in a prison. You need a clue pal.

      Also shame on the dope who moded his comments up as insightful.

      --
      Platinum Networks Hosting www.platinum-networks.com
    2. Re:Thanks for living up to your name. by MajorDick · · Score: 0, Troll

      When I say "Change things" I mean with a club and a gun.

      The point I was trying to make Is WHY THE FUCK SHOULD I CARE ?

      The Chinese people PUT their Goverment in Power PERIOD, whatever happens as a result of that is their fault.

      Communism in China is GOOD for americans, we pay less for all the cheap shit from China we buy. So WHY , give me 1 REASON , WHY Should I care in the least about censorship in China ?

    3. Re:Thanks for living up to your name. by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 1

      "WHY Should I care in the least about censorship in China ?"

      Ask someone from Tiananmen Square that. Oh, wait... They're mostly either dead or in prison for the remaining term of their lives.

    4. Re:Thanks for living up to your name. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must be an American.

  48. Re:I know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is a very racist remark. I do not like racists you are the scum of the earth.

  49. good luck by oohp · · Score: 1

    Censorship? In the 21st century with all the communications and the Internet? I guess not. The Chinese gov't can swim upstream if they want to but it's pretty silly anyways.

  50. Wireless will be a bitch in the coming years then by CrackedButter · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Try controlling radio frequencies never mind speficially laying pipe for conventional net access.

  51. Let the call go out..... by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 2, Insightful

    to all oppressors of the human spirit, your end is at hand.

    The forces of freedom and technology now walk hand in hand.
    There now exists the most powerful weapon in the war against ignorance since the printing press.
    A weapon that has evaded, and will continue to evade, every attempt to control it that has ever been made, including by the country that spawned it.

    Those who desire freedom will not stop until they attain it.

    You can not stop them.
    You can not slow them down.
    Kill them, and more will rise in thier place.
    Try to silence them, and they will whisper in secret and be heard the world over.
    Stand in their way, they will go around you,
    over you,
    under you,
    and eventually, through you.

    Try to make criminals of those who wish only to think and say as they wish, and you will be exposed to millions as the criminal that you are.

    Try to keep secret your evil actions, and you will fail miserably.

    As someone said long ago " This is our world now... the world of the electron and the switch, the beauty of the baud. ... We explore... and you call us criminals. We seek after knowledge... and you call us criminals. We exist without skin color, without nationality, without religious bias... and you call us criminals. You build atomic bombs, you wage wars, you murder, cheat, and lie to us and try to make us believe it's for our own good, yet we're the criminals."

    No government whose survival depends on the oppression and ignorance of its people deserves to exist.

    How long to you think you can keep your iron grip on your citizens when they begin to learn how much better thier lives can be and they rise against you?

    This is the Information Age. The truth can be spread to all corners of the earth in the blink of an eye. How long can a nation survive which relies on disinformation and lies?

    1. Re:Let the call go out..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bwahahahahahahahahahahah!

      now pass the crack pipe man.....

  52. Endless supply of peasant soldiers by ewg · · Score: 1

    It doesn't matter what people on the internet in Chinese cities think. The Party has access to an endless supply of young men from the hinterland it can arm and deploy to counter any kind of threatening popular movement.

    --
    org.slashdot.post.SignatureNotFoundException: ewg
  53. Shunning One Monopoly to Make Their Own? by Cranky+Mac+User · · Score: 1

    Could this be why they want to support their own PC hardware and OS? To enforce censorship via DRM on the circuit board level?

    --
    Can NE1 help me find out if there's any porn in this 2GB torrent? http://www.edkeyes.org/choco/Choco_J-Pop_Videos.t
  54. Re:I know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Azn pryde?... damn those racist chinese.

  55. "boobsea" = Penisbird by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In light of this, am I being overly paranoid to believe you didn't actually have anything to do with that site?

    1. Re:"boobsea" = Penisbird by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I fail to see what that post has to do with the topic of censorship in schools, but if you would like to enlighten me, please go ahead.

      Otherwise you're just as bad as you folks make out the anti-slash people to be because you are lowering the signal-to-noise ratio just to point out their posts. Thats called hypocrisy.

      -boobsea as AC

    2. Re:"boobsea" = Penisbird by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Otherwise you're just as bad as you folks make out the anti-slash people to be because you are lowering the signal-to-noise ratio just to point out their posts. Thats called hypocrisy.
      I have no problem with lowering the signal-to-noise ratio. It's just that Anti-Slash people and more specifically GNAA members are worthless trolls and, indeed, buttfuckingly gay. So there you are.
    3. Re:"boobsea" = Penisbird by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's just that Anti-Slash people and more specifically GNAA members are worthless trolls and, indeed, buttfuckingly gay. So there you are

      Worthless trolls? Look who is talking.

      Anti-slash and GNAA have contributed more to trolling than any other group past.

    4. Re:"boobsea" = Penisbird by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Anti-slash and GNAA have contributed more to trolling than any other group past.
      Since trolling groups are completely worthless (also gay), this is not an anchievement.
  56. Freenet-China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I am a Chinese national currently visiting the US. Gaining access to censored material is difficult but not impossible, the hard part is discoving its existence in the first place.

    A few months ago a friend gave me a CD which contained a version of Linux that you could put in your CD drive, and reboot your computer, and when it came up your computer became a Freenet node, and you could surf Freenet. The main site was called "China News On Freenet" which is mirrored on the web here. Most stuff on Freenet is either pornography, or in English, but there is an increasing amount of Chinese information, some of which is of quite good quality. Freenet-China is a modified version of Freenet, but translated to Chinese. They also use an earlier version of Freenet since Freenet itself is still quite experimental and recent versions have been unreliable.

    It is possible to use proxies to access information from outside China, but most people are fearful of these since you never really know whether you are being monitored. With Freenet-China at least you konw that the worst they can find is that you have a Freenet-China CD, which even in China isn't really enough to get you in trouble.

    Software like Freenet-China is important because it gives a sense of comfort. Being able to access censored information is useful, but being able to access it without worrying about going to jail is important if is really going to have an impact.

  57. I had a colleague from the PRC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    His conditioning against expressing opinions was so ingrained that he was afraid to fill out a customer survey from the company that ran the lunchroom.

    That's scary.

    1. Re:I had a colleague from the PRC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      huh yes. i don't complain about my food to people who might spit into it

  58. scary by ignoramous · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Let's see...what's wrong with this sentence (for those of you who didn't read the actual article):
    But despite the help of several major international corporations and the use of the most sophisticated equipment, the Chinese government is finding the worldwide web much harder to censor than traditional media.
    This seems to me like the most interesting point. If major American corporations weren't helping out, the large scale prosecution that appears to be happening wouldn't even be going on.

    As to another comment regarding boycotting international corporations: sure, but that may mean living without television, soft drinks, cars, computers, and clothes. Let's face it, every single product which consists of more than five components has something, or some ingredient that was made in China. And most of the clothes - to pick a random example - which get imported to the US from Europe, and which are made by European manufacturers, are either too expensive or too weird to be worn constantly. The regular clothes (sweater and jeans type stuff) they make over there are pretty bad. That's why they don't send them over here. I know, I lived there for thirteen years.

    Also, are you really prepared to start paying three times as much for clothes as you currently are? Every american consumer is at least partially responsible for this situation. The "evil corporate giants" are partially trying to increase their profit margin no matter what the cost but, currently, those profit margins are pretty tight as is.

    --


    I had a dream that I was dreaming about recursion.
    1. Re:scary by wheelgun · · Score: 1

      Isn't Cisco Systems one of the companies that is helping the Chinese governments censorship effort? I think they have sold a lot of routers to the PRC. I remember reading about it on theregister or something like that. The routers are designed to make government snooping and tracking easier.

  59. Wrong... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    China is obliged to crack down on copyright violators.

    1. Re:Wrong... by js7a · · Score: 1

      ...to about the same extent that U.S. trafic enforcement is obliged to crack down on people failing to use their turn signals. I.e., hundreds of thousands of violations for every one warning, let alone citation.

  60. Hey, redneck! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Go drive your shitty Camaro back to the trailer park and take those ugly, mullet-headed, larval welfare recipients that you call your kids with you.

    Azn pryde, motherfucker. Azn pryde.

  61. Re:In other News by monkeyman_67156 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Wow, I'm glad the moderator understands humor.

  62. Lao Tzu comes to mind... by PsychoKick · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If rulers take too much grain,
    people rapidly starve.
    If rulers take too much freedom,
    people easily rebel.
    If rulers take too much happiness,
    people gladly die.
    By not interfering the sage improves the people's lives.


    - Lao Tzu, Tao Te Ching

  63. China is _not_ a Dictatorship by NSash · · Score: 1
    China is a republic. Regions elect local People's Congresses, which elect from their number delegates in the National People's Congress. The National People's Congress elects one of its members as president.

    Sure, you hear about how the evil Chinese government is surpressing the poor Falun Gong practitioners -- but do you ever hear about how hundreds of Falun Gong adherents have sliced open their stomachs to try to find the "cosmic wheel" that their founder supposedly implants in them with his psychic powers? That's why the PRC has declared Falun Gong an "evil cult." China has more reason to ban Falun Gong then the US ever did to lay seige to some harmless nutballs in Waco, Texas.

    But of course, China is a dictatorship, and they throw unwanted baby girls in rivers. :sigh:

    (Oh, by the way, your references to "the proletariat" are completely off base. Maoism differed from Marxism in its emphasis on the peasantry rather than China's [at the time] non-existant factory workers.)

    1. Re:China is _not_ a Dictatorship by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but do you ever hear about how hundreds of Falun Gong adherents have sliced open their stomachs to try to find the "cosmic wheel" that their founder supposedly implants in them with his psychic powers?

      I was sitting on a bus last year, and as the bus was parked at a traffic light, a Chinese guy came up and handed me a pamphlet about Falun Gong through the open window. It talked about the repression and suffering that has occured in some parts of China. Surprisingly, he did not appear to have any stomach wounds; I didn't get a chance to ask him about his spinning wheel, but it didn't look like he was troubled by it.

      This man was a real representative of Falun Gong, a person on the street trying to make others give a fuck. You should listen to his type, not label them all as whackos in China who you don't even know about.

      But of course, China is a dictatorship, and they throw unwanted baby girls in rivers. :sigh:

      Don't sigh; China is a dictatorship, and that is to the obvious and known detriment of the people at large. One of the ways the Chinese dictatorship works is to take away the rights of the individual; why do you think so many have been protesting in Taiwan or in HK recently. Because they have reason to believe that their lives will be hindered by Chinese rule.

      It has nothing to do with babies in rivers or Falun Gong. It has to do with much more insiduous things like state-run media, repression of free speech and dissent, censorship, about people not having the choices that you or I take for granted. Why do you defend this?

    2. Re:China is _not_ a Dictatorship by Anonymous+Coed · · Score: 1
      China is a republic. Regions elect local People's Congresses, which elect from their number delegates in the National People's Congress. The National People's Congress elects one of its members as president.

      Ummm ... yeah. You do realize that Stalin's Russia was also a republic with a written constitution and an elected legislature (soviets)? Calling Soviet Russia or modern PRC a 'republic' (as opposed to a dictatorship) is meaningless if there is a single legal party and a repressive state security apparatus ready to enforce the 'correct' way of thinking at all times.

    3. Re:China is _not_ a Dictatorship by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that there are other political parties in China. Edit you article if necessary.

    4. Re:China is _not_ a Dictatorship by Anonymous+Coed · · Score: 1

      Ummm, no. There may technically be other political parties in China, but in reality the CCP has an effective monopoly on power. If any of these so-called independent parties came out with position at variance with the official CCP line there would be a hasty 'retraction' and quick restoration of 'correct thinking.'

  64. 1.2 billion people, the largest army in the world. by rbird76 · · Score: 1

    ...more nukes than you can shake a stick at. For starters.

    Repression is a gov't's knowledge that they are not wanted, that the only way that they can maintain power is to force it. Tienamien (sic) Square happened not just because of a few radical students, but because many others within China sympathized with them (see the Tienamien(sic) Papers - 2001). TS came from the knowledge that people didn't choose their gov't and wanted it to change against its will. While the gov't has tried to move China's economic system towards a more capitalistic system (no more "iron rice bowl") it still has a lot of control at local and higher levels (over jobs, housing, etc.). Capitalism asks its people to think for themselves and their own best interests - it is likely to be hard not to question your gov't when you are expected to question everything else. This would seem to make (although IANA China expert) an unstable equilibrium, even with cultural differences. The presence of a large army and lots of nukes means that a match could set off a very big spark.

    Add to this that China has antipathies for Russia, India, and Japan in their vicinity, and cooperates with N. Korea (who isn't a paragon of stability themselves). They have needs for resources and territorial spats with various SE Asian countries over oil. A gov't requiring that kind of force to keep the lid and lots of volatility in and around is a matter of concern for a lot of people.

    Oh, and their nuclear warheads can probably reach the US. A bonus.

  65. Very Astute Observation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I saw the same thing in the Soviet Union (Russia) in the 1980's, although perhaps not to as great an extent. People were more willing to question and criticize in smaller, personal gatherings. But in official or bureaucratic settings (Government, University, School, Work, etc.) it was the "party line" all the way. Very depressing and disturbing.

    What is really frightening, at least here in the US, is the extent to which corporations (and other employers like Universities) are bringing in recent immigrants or foreign workers who do not question anything including absurd work demands and unsafe and even illegal work conditions. I am not just talking about vegetable pickers and sweatshop laborers. I am talking about white collar "professionals" who willingly climb high up onto unstable furniture or windowsills to fix electronic equipment, "repair" electrical wiring, heating, plumbing and other building services without training or legal authorization (Slashdot story about that recently), accept cramped, polluted, unhealthy, non-ergonomic and damaging work environments, move heavy and awkward equipment and furniture without proper care for safe practices, work 80+ hours while barely being paid for 35 and often with minimal, if any, benefits, and endure endless harassment, verbal and other abuse.

    Almost as disturbing is how they will never admit to anyone that they do not know something, or can't do something without proper training and support. I am seeing more and more projects collapse because of people (often, but not always from a non-US culture) who refuse to give honest feedback to management, for whatever reasons. This screws everyone as management does not get an honest picture, workers willing to tell the truth are seen as troublemakers, and those who lie or cover up problems eventually collapse under the weight of their own deception. Unfortunately by then everyone is painted with the brush of failure not just those who brought the problem on everyone in the first place.

    Professionals - stand up for your rights, and the responsibilities of management for a safe and reasonable work environment!

    1. Re:Very Astute Observation by chenyu · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think you are "blaming the workers" when then fault is really in management.

      Getting people to tell the truth is really hard. It's even harder if you are dealing with people who have been culturally conditioned to believe that very bad things will happen to them if they tell authority something that authority doesn't want to hear.

      In managing groups of Chinese people, its very important to establish that nothing bad is going to happen to them if they point out a problem. It's also important to have channels by which people can privately and anonymously bring up issues without fear of retribution. Finally, its also important to have a sixth sense and realize that something is going wrong without having people tell you.

      Getting back to the internet, one thing that is good about the internet in a Chinese context is that it makes it possible to post things more or less anonymously. (Yes you can trace the IP, but if it goes back to some internet bar which hundreds of people are using, then you are out of luck.)

  66. Censorship != democracy by Pidder · · Score: 1

    My thoughts goes out to the chinese people. Keep on fightning the censorship. One day you will be free, until then, stay strong.

    1. Re:Censorship != democracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many $s will they be paid for that?

  67. Bigger than you? by braoult · · Score: 1

    As main comments here coming from USA, where freedom is clearly a fact (humm ;-), it is difficult to understand how a small 200 million people country can give lessons to a 6 times bigger one (while at the same moment they don't accept any smaller/weaker country objection).

    Where is freedom today? Just an example: Is it more easy today to travel to China or to USA?
    Try to guess what is the most important for you and for your family. I simply hope it is not computers...

  68. Re:In other News by ignoramous · · Score: 1

    Hate to break it to you, but it looks otherwise to me, since the article's gone.

    --


    I had a dream that I was dreaming about recursion.
  69. All talk, no action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These guys seem much better at talking about all these great things they will do - but I have never actually seen them produce anything useful.

  70. Freenet by vlad_petric · · Score: 1
    Why are the chinese people not using freenet regularly ? This is exactly the scenario that it was designed for - fighting censorship.

    Well, I guess they could outlaw freenet as a protocol ...

    --

    The Raven

    1. Re:Freenet by chenyu · · Score: 1

      Why don't people use freenet for swapping Mp3? Because there are easier alternatives available.

      Generally nothing bad will happen to you if you
      read subversive content, and the firewall is ridiculously easy to get around. If you are really paranoid you can log in at a random internet bar.

      Bad things will happen to you if you post subversive content (and by this I don't mean post a bulletin board message I mean hosting an anti-party web site). Here freenet doesn't help you much because by just using a non-standard protocol, you limit your audience, and if you host an anti-party website in China, then they will track you down just like the RIAA will track down websites with bootleg songs. What you want is "no hard targets" that the government can track, and just trying to get freenet installed and running is a hard target.

      There are ways around the second type of censorship. It's actually not that difficult to express or post views that are critical of the Communist Party or government even on government sponsored bulletin boards like the People's Daily board (which is much more interesting to read than you might expect). You just have to use code words and think about how to phrase things. (The closest analogy is trying writing a corporate memo that says that the CEO is an idiot. If you directly write that the CEO is an idiot, you are the idiot, but its usually possible to get that meaning out without saying it directly.)

  71. They are... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    ...see here.

  72. I'm helping... by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    Every time I receive unsolicited commercial email that advertises a website in China,I make sure to forward along information on Falun Gong or Free Tibet propaganda along with my LART.

  73. Good. Now I understand. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By my estimation, judging by similar occurences, there is a 95% chance that you have at some point consumed at child pornography, or presently would like to consume child pornography, but feel that the Man is constraining your freedom to watch 7 and 8 year-old boys and girls suck on the penises of hairy, middle-aged men, and bleed as they penetrate them.

    Great. You just keep on fighting for your rights, buddy. When you're in the federal pen, I'll be sure to have Bubba send you my regards.

    1. Re:Good. Now I understand. by kfg · · Score: 1

      By my estimation, judging by similar occurences, there is a 99.999. . .% chance you are a sociopathic idiot. Your personal acquaintence with Bubba only serves to strengthen that likelyhood. But, at least while you are here, you are free to be so.

      KFG

  74. Can't access BBC from China by fluppy88 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'd love to read about how censorship is failing in China but I can't access BBC from Beijing.

    1. Re:Can't access BBC from China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Chinese activists evade web controls
      Tim Luard
      BBC News Online

      Chinese dissidents say that despite the government's best efforts to stop them, they are successfully using the internet to spread their messages ever more widely through the world's most populous country.

      The communist authorities have tightened controls on access to the web and imprisoned growing numbers of people for setting up websites or exchanging emails on sensitive topics, Amnesty International reported this week.

      The net is proving increasingly difficult to police
      But despite the help of several major international corporations and the use of the most sophisticated equipment, the Chinese government is finding the worldwide web much harder to censor than traditional media.

      "The more they do to block it, the more people want to get online," said Liu Xiaobo, who spent years in detention after leading a hunger strike in 1989 in support of the student democracy protesters on Tiananmen Square.

      The young and educated are no longer taking to the streets, but many are these days sitting in internet cafes, braving police monitors to take part in a new, virtual civil society that links them both to the outside world and to each other.

      "More and more, they're taking the chance to talk about politics and democracy", Liu told BBC News Online from his home in Beijing.

      The government needs the internet as an integral part of China's economic opening up, but consistently tries to block anything it dislikes, stepping up its efforts during major events such as the National Party Congress, he said.

      "They send messages to servers, telling them to be extra careful ... and shut down chatrooms, bulletin boards and personal websites on which people have pasted up material from foreign media.

      "One site has been shut down thirty times," said Liu.

      "But after a month or two they open up again. You can't shut them down completely."

      Getting through

      Filters are used to screen out items containing certain pornographic or politically sensitive terms, such as 4 June (the date of the Tiananmen Square crackdown), human rights, independent Taiwan or Tibet, and Falun Gong.

      There is no way the government can be successful in really controlling the internet

      Liu Qing, Human Rights in China

      Members of the banned spiritual movement, which runs dozens of websites from outside China, said new ways are constantly being found to thwart the various tactics employed by tens of thousands of official internet monitors.

      "People in mainland China who get onto a sensitive site like ours find they can be reached within minutes by police and their computer automatically disabled," said Sophie Xiao, a spokesperson for Falun Gong in Hong Kong.

      "But we try to get our message through this blockade by all sorts of means, such as emails, chatrooms and proxy servers".

      Chinese surfers have become skilled at finding proxy or intermediary websites that let them evade the so-called Great Red Firewall to reach a certain blocked site. But the authorities soon learn of these secondary sites and block them too.

      Human rights groups have accused major foreign companies of helping the Chinese government crack down on freedom of expression and information.

      Reporters Without Borders said it wrote early last month to the heads of 14 suppliers of computer and internet equipment, asking them to take a stand against the Chinese government's "repression of the internet," but had yet to receive a single reply.

      The Paris-based media watchdog accused two companies in particular - one of supplying special online spying systems to China, and the other of agreeing to change its portal and search-engine to facilitate censorship in exchange for access to the Chinese market.

      Self censorship

      The Chinese authorities sometimes succeed in creating a climate of self-censorship because people are uncertain about what is or is not permit

  75. existing software by js7a · · Score: 1
    It seems that the best obscured and encrypted application-layer HTTP tunnel is HTTPort, which is very popular in Saudi Arabia.

    However, it's clear that China doesn't block HTTPS/SSL or even SSH, so any of the ordinary transport-layer proxies would do, as would simple ssh-based port forwarding.

  76. So glad to be past all that by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 1

    Good luck - you are one GED from being able to give them the finger with impunity.

    Or maybe you ought to ask them for their scores on the high school exit exams. Some districts require teachers and administrators to take them.

  77. The city and the stars.. by Mr2cents · · Score: 1

    I just finished reading this fine book of Arthur C. Clarke (yes, he wrote 2001), what you describe has a striking resemblence of Diaspar, a city cut of from the universe where people were conditioned to fear the outside.. Just asking the question if there was anything outside the city would make the inhabitants flee in terror..

    I really can recommend this book.

    --
    "It's too bad that stupidity isn't painful." - Anton LaVey
  78. Mod parent up [search warrants] by crucini · · Score: 1

    I like it when someone introduces a note of reality into slashdot.

  79. In Soviet Russia... by rffmna · · Score: 1

    err :\

    --
    -------
    FM Clan
  80. wow! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh well, it's still more watchable than 99% of the crap that comes out of Hollywood, I suppose.
    Eew. So Hollywood was one of the girls' names. What's the other?

  81. Story link itself is blocked by ThesQuid · · Score: 1

    It's kind of ironic that here in China I can't access the main story referenced, being that BBC is blocked. Anyone care to put up a mirror?

  82. Nuke the world. by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

    If China really want to censor the world, it will have to nuke it first. Of course, that would never happen. But, they can try... Muahahhah.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
  83. What's freedom? by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

    The Chinese are born and raised without ever understanding the concept of freedom. Thus, they do not miss it nor would the fully embrace it if suddenly it was available to them. Freedom does not just come from the goverment, but from a countries caulture as well.

    Basically, trying to explain free to the oppressed is like trying to explain the concept of color to a blind person.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
  84. Wake up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If major American corporations weren't helping out, the large scale prosecution that appears to be happening wouldn't even be going on.

    Actually China is one of the few dictatorships in history that has not been setup by, or didn't receive much help of the United States. This means that these companies hadn't had their share there, I believe they're more than happy to get some bucks now.

    ...to start paying three times as much for clothes as you currently are?

    Prices didn't change much since companies started to make things in China. You don't see the difference but I can tell you $COMPANY does. $COMPANY screws you more now.

    And they live next door, you can shoot them from here.

  85. blah blah blah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're right: chinese refugees are just doing tourism abroad.

    Also many people in China do not fully understand the concept of bullet in the head before they experiment it as a bonus.

    Non-occidentals these days...

  86. I'm reading this from the PRC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So for the slower among you, the answer is no, it's not.

    Incidentally, your notions about internet censorship in China are way, way, way off the mark. That harvard list of blocked sites people keep passing around? I was able to access the vast majority of those. There a few sites I'm consistantly unable to get at from work, like groklaw, and for example the bbc, but I'm never sure if that's due to wackiness in the way the network works here or actual willful censorship. It's never terribly consistant.

    Lots of sites (like geocities) that allow people to make their own websites for free are blocked. Same with free blog services, that sort of thing. The Chinese government seems to want to restrict anonymity.

    No one cares about Slashdot though. Not enough people read it in China. Just look how long it took someone to post a reply to your question that actually knew what the fuck he was talking about.

  87. Who can do the job? by weston · · Score: 1

    non-compatible e-mail systems, incompatible HTML/XML markup, integrated browsers

    And I know just the company to do it.

  88. Re:American Technology is helping repress the Chin by chenyu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not to be too harsh since your heart seems to be in the right place but.....

    I think here GTE has helped free speech in China more than you have. A fiber system in and out of China which the government tries to censor is *far* better than no system at all. One reason that China is finding much harder to censor the internet than Cuba or North Korea is that there is so much traffic going back and forth that its impossible to monitor it all. Putting in fiber helps increase internet usage and makes it much harder for the government to censor it.

    Something to keep in mind is that on the same weekend that Tiananmen happened, the Burmese government also shot a whole bunch of students. No one remembers or even knows about it, because there weren't a million television cameras in Burma that weekend.

  89. Thank you... by z01d · · Score: 1


    Thank you...Slashdot, and all the comments that concern about all these sad facts, which are happening in a country far away from US/EU, at the same time, those hypocritical politicians and mercenary economic-alliance are happy to see a crony & bureaucrat capitalism growing...even the President of US and France are forgetting about Human Rights issue.

    Thank you...Freenet, Six/Four, and other projects I don't aware. Thanks for the work and effort you guys made, which empowered a lot people you barely know, at the same time, at least 30,000 shameless tech guys are hired by Chinese Government to censor/filter/delete/report their neighborhood brothers and sisters.

    Yes, Freedom, what a word...

    -- A Chinese /. reader.

  90. The censorship is to leverage FOREIGNER Media!!! by taweili · · Score: 1

    Pirating CD carrying banned foreigner contents are sold on streets. Major international magazines and books are available in many book stores. Many people I know don't really care about foreigner contents. They are happy with the Chinese contents from several portals and news sites. Why should a typical Chinese really care about English content from BBC, CNN or any other news?

    However, the blocking gives Chinese government a lot of power of foreigner media companies in China. Give Chinese bargain power over the media companies' entry and access to the vast Chinese market. Give Chinese power in the negotiation table. Time Warner who wants to access to this vast market, not for CNN or Times but for the studio contents, have to negotiate hard with Chinese government.

  91. You just proved his point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's a middle ground between "promoting" an activity and forbidding an activity.
    It's called "letting a person make up his or her own mind."
    If a person is responsible enough to drive, get married, etc., then that person is responsible enough to decide whether he/she wants to be photographed nude or while having sex.
    Your Puritan knee-jerk reaction demonstrates the stupidity he was writing about.
    BTW, here in the U.S., a 15-year-old is usually not considered old enough to drive a car (at least not by himself/herself) or get married, and is never considered old enough to serve in the military.

    Also stupid is the idea that if you fuck a girl one day after her 18th birthday, you're a stud or a lucky bastard, but if you do it two days earlier, you are some sort of child-molesting perverted monster who should be castrated and locked up for the rest of his life.

  92. internet=printing press by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The Internet is the most important invention/discovery/whatever in the last 100+ years. It is more important than landing on the moon (overrated to begin with), invention of transistor, electricity, etc. Prior to the Internet, the most important discovery was the printing press.

    Both of these are similar and will end up accomplishing similar things. The Internet will result in massive increase in the spread of knowledge. Most importantly, the Internet will shift power from the authoraties (usually the government) to the individual. It is already happening and this is just the start.

    I have this theory that the internet will allow future generations to overthrow the government. I'm not talking about just China--I'm talking about ALL countries. It is THAT powerful! It is more powerful than any military; it is more powerful than having a billion dollars; it is more powerful than the Pope; and so on.

    Needless to say, there are several threats emerging on the horizon. Hopefully the threats will be dealt with but it remains to be seen. The threats I have in mind are money/capitalism, and the government. Governments of all stripes have been trying to hard to control the Internet. The naive would say that it is impossible for the governments to control it but one should not be so confident. Already some governments have total control over the Internet. China probably doesn't because of its size. But smaller poorer countries have total control. This is mostly because there are only a few ISPs and the government monitors them. Even in larger countries, the governments are getting ever more smarter. Some countries already have tax laws passed. These laws are not enforced but the govt can do so at any time. There is already censorship against freedom of speech. Countries like China come to mind but there are many more which are worse. Some countries, like USA, already spend billions attempting to sniff through e-mail and websites. Let's also not forget that encryption technology is heavily controlled by governments. Sending encrypted e-mail is sure to land some in jail. It hasn't happened in countries like USA or Canada yet but it won't be very long before USA start jailing people because Al-Qaida or some other dark shadow is using encryption.

    The other threat on the horizon is capitalism and its excesses. In particular, the greed and the power that comes with any new technology. The original Internet was largely controlled by the government. Even then, it was a scientific environment. Therefore, it was mostly free (in more than one sense). There is no doubt that capitalist entities, like corporations, helped the Internet, but there are some downsides too. The push towards profits can already be seen. One just needs to mention Verisign, which is attempting to control the most lucrative elements. Other companies are pushing proprietary technologies which will result in monopolies. Companies are also more likely to shut down websites for "offensive content". I suppose one can also count the actions of RIAA and others as a threat. It is within the right of RIAA to crack down on pirates, but some of their methods are highly questionable (eg. forcing ISPs to disclose people). Good thing similar organizations in other countries haven't cracking down. It would be worse in other countries because privacy laws are much weaker in other countries (compared to USA). Who knows what else will emerge from the brains of the corporations?

    Having said all that, I am hopeful that the Internet will surivive with my vision. I think it will. The reason is simple. Just like the printing press, the Internet is too simple to be manipulated. Regardless of what the monarchs and the priests did with the printing press, they couldn't control it. I think the same thing will happen with the Internet. It is just too simple and too many people are involved for it to be controlled.

    Sivaram Velauthapillai

    --
    Sivaram Velauthapillai
    Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
  93. Chinese believe internet is for politics by rikomatic · · Score: 1

    A survey of internet user in China done by the Chinese Academy of Social Science found that Chinese people are quite interested in using the internet to engage in political discussions and interact with their government. Among the findings:

    * 71% of Internet users and 69% of non-users agreed that the Internet gives people more opportunities to express their political views.

    * 79% of Internet users and 77% of non-users agreed that the Internet gives people a better knowledge of politics.

    * 79% of Internet users and 73% of non-users agreed that the Internet will give government a better understanding of the views of its citizens.

    * 60.8% of Internet users and 61% of non-users agreed that the Internet gives people more opportunities to criticize government's policies.

    Maybe the Chinese government does have something to worry about.

  94. Re:American Technology is helping repress the Chin by HeghmoH · · Score: 1

    Another reason is that people see Burma (justified or not, I have no idea) as a hopeless shithole, whereas people actually see great potential for China. It's exactly the same reason why people get so upset when the US executes a 17-year-old whereas mass killings in Wherever, Africa don't even make the evening news. People get upset about things like that in the US because the US is, in general, a shining beacon of reasonableness, and we're also really big and powerful, so people are tremendously annoyed when we do something stupid. (Yeah, I'm sure people will laugh at that statement, bring it on!) It's not a double standard, more like an expression of disappointment.

    --
    Mod down posts with a "Free Mac Mini/iPod" sig, they're spam!
  95. Still, never mind by carou · · Score: 1

    I'm sure it will work for Microsoft

  96. YHBT YHL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    HAND

    1. Re:YHBT YHL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The perennial cop-out used by bad trolls when they've been decisively destroyed. How's my cock feel in your ass?

  97. Some information by 4lex · · Score: 2, Informative

    It is always good to remember, and to be informed about the present situation.

    Here you have some recent news.

    --
    My journal. Mainly about freedom.
  98. Simply not true. Democracy is not for everyone. by BulletProofMonk · · Score: 2, Interesting

    One of the things I've learned from traveling to 20 different foreign countries and living in about 10 of them over the last 25 years, is that democracy DOES NOT work in every country.

    For whatever reason, some people prefer the strong hand of a dictator. Some people prefer a democratic solution, and some people prefer socialism.

    To have the arrogrance to dictate that everyone wants or is better off as a democracy is committing the very thing you despise.

    There are geographic, sociological, as well as biological reasons for the various political systems around the world.

    It is high time we in the West get off our high horse, and let the rest of the world deal with their own countries as they see fit.

    North Korea, China, Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq et al are not the way they are because ONLY one person acting ALONE got them into their current political system. A lot of people were/are involved, including the complicity of the general population.

  99. I'm confused, what about the David Koresh search . by BulletProofMonk · · Score: 1

    OK, now I'm really confused. Your exemplary checklist is the way it should be, however, how did it work in the Branch Davidian / David Koresh case, which in fact may be more of the norm.

    Waco Search Warrant

    "...Criticism of federal law enforcement actions at Waco has not been in short supply...Missing from the discussion of how the federal government handled the Waco disaster is how the government got into the problem in the first place. In particular, how and why did the government procure the search and arrest warrants which the BATF was attempting to "serve" with its unsuccessful raid? A careful study of the Waco search warrant reveals numerous flaws, not just with the warrant application but with search and seizure law as it has developed in the 1990s."

    Is a Search Warrant Your Death Warrant

    "...The Fourth Amendment of the Constitution protects us from unreasonable searches and seizures....However, the government can abuse the Fourth and Eighth Amendments to undercut the Second...

    ...A review of the evidence the BATF put forward to justify its first search warrant indicates that the case it had against Koresh was based more on his views than his actions... ...David Koresh had what most of us would consider strange religious views. However, there is no federal death penalty for believing oneself to be Jesus Christ. Koresh and his people owned firearms--more than one, in fact. There is nothing illegal about that. David Koresh didn't think much of the BATF. That appears to have been a crime. ...

    ...That this is the last charge made in the affidavit prior to the raid should be an alarm to every law-abiding gun owner. According to the BATF, it is suspicious for a citizen to believe in the right to bear arms, be knowledgeable about firearms laws and own video tapes critical of the BATF. If this is grounds for a search warrant to be served by an army, the rest of us had better step lightly...."

  100. POV from a HKer by QnA · · Score: 1

    I am a native "Hong kong"er and one sentence from this article catch my attention.
    "The more they do to block it, the more people want to get online,"
    The fact is that, those chinese DO NOT REALLY WANT TO KNOW THE FACT. They feel so comfortable while living in such a less information place.

    From the experience of SARS and the Fluid these days, we can find that those citizen living in China do not what is happening both inside china and outside. And the reporter ask them
    "Do you feel safe at that moment?"
    "Of course, government should be able to handle all the stuffs"

    But in fact, the situation has NEVER been under China's govenment control.

  101. Democracy, Capitalism - differerent things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Democracy is way much older than capitalism, why do you think there must be a conection between the two?

    For example Italy was a dictatorship under Mussolini yet it was a capitalist country. Switzerland was a democracy in the Middle Ages but its economy was not capitalist. When Atheniens in ancient Greece invented democracy 2500 years ago their economy was based om slavery, not capitalism. Capitalism started in the late Middle Ages but as a main mode of production is only 300 years old.

    Is seems stupid that Greeks were ready for democracy in 500BC and yet the Chinese are not ready for it two and a half millenia later. What was so great about the Greeks 2500 years ago what is so bad about the Chinese now?

  102. Its not our job by Adolph_Hitler · · Score: 1

    Its not our job to help out other countries. They have the internet, we gave it to them. Its time for us to sit back and watch. Its our helping out that allowed al-qaeda to gain strength, its our helping out that caused 911. We are better off letting these countries solve their own problems. NONE OF THESE COUNTRIES HELPED AMERICA!

    --
    People don't exist to serve systems, systems exist to serve people.
  103. The war is over. We already won. by Adolph_Hitler · · Score: 1

    China is not the soviet union. What war? I think we need to end all of these endless pointless wars. The whole "give freedom to country X" does not work unless country X wants freedom. IF country x wants freedom let them take it themselves. Its because we want to liberate countries against their will that we keep making more enemies, which causes more war in an endless cycle. Most of europe hates us now, even though we stopped the soviet union. It seems that the world is less stable without 2 superpowers than it was when we had 2. Now every country hates us, theres no more playing sides, whats our best move? Get out of the spotlight. Why should we waste all our moneys helping countries who don't want our way of life? Let China be China, give China the technology and do business with them, and let them solve their own political problems. As much as we think we can somehow influence China through the internet, its playing a game by rules which we don't want or need to play. All of this focus on China is allowing China to consume all our jobs, all our technology, all our best features of America, and once that happens why stay in America?

    --
    People don't exist to serve systems, systems exist to serve people.
  104. Use logic. by Adolph_Hitler · · Score: 1

    What company or government wants an uncensored internet? Our US government wants a censored controlled internet, no napster, no terrorist sites, no kiddie porn. Our US companies want a censored internet, think the RIAA, don't dare talk bad about SCO, don't dare talk bad about microsoft. The China government wants a censored internet. "Think of the Trojan horse. If you don't sell the Chinese these sorts of technologies, they are going to be less likely to develop internet infrastructure. If you sell the Chinese these sorts of technologies, yes the Chinese government will try to censor the content, but they'll fail miserably at it." The trojan horse will backfire just like it did with Japan. Soon China will lead the world in internet technology. Soon most websites will be Chinese websites. Soon China will be influencing us through the internet and our government will be trying to censor us from terrorist Chinese websites. This goes both ways you know.

    --
    People don't exist to serve systems, systems exist to serve people.
  105. Exactly my point. by Adolph_Hitler · · Score: 1

    All of these pro freedom for China people do not realize that eventually when most websites are Chinese and those websites host warez, kiddie porn, and anti bush anti american literature, what happens then?

    --
    People don't exist to serve systems, systems exist to serve people.
  106. you are assuming absolutes. by Adolph_Hitler · · Score: 1


    That is not a sign of intelligence. You assume that all humans want freedom and democracy, or that all humans need it at this very moment. Sure most humans do want it, and most need it, but some just arent ready for it.

    The middle east, Africa, China, these places just arent ready. They don't want it for religious reasons or cultural reasons, and they get pissed off when you try to tell them what they want.

    Freedom comes with a price. We in the USA ourselves cant always handle the price of freedom. Freedom on the net means freedom to do evil as well as good, freedom to download mp3s, freedom to create hate sites, freedom to create terrorist sites.

    Freedom is not something that every country is capable of handling at this time. You give absolute freedom to the middle east and they will use it to create terrorist hate sites. You give absolute freedom to Americans and the concept of intellectual property will be destroyed. You give absolute freedom to the Chinese and all our jobs will go to China.

    This who pro-China stuff is lead and controlled by big corporations who want to hire foreign labor. They want to help China so they can get rich off China. They don't mind giving China all the jobs even if we all lose our jobs here. Someday China will surpass and what will we do then?

    You cannot control China once you bring China into the market, and swell up their economy to the size of ours. Right now the only reason we are super power is because China lacks the money to go to war with us. Why on earth do we want to empower China is beyond me.

    --
    People don't exist to serve systems, systems exist to serve people.
  107. YHBRT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    bad trolls? who won? who got the karma? how was I destroyed?
    FOAD

  108. Re:American Technology is helping repress the Chin by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

    Why come here? Wasn't the Kent State Massacre pretty much the same thing?

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  109. Re:American Technology is helping repress the Chin by from_downunder · · Score: 1

    Is there any chance that, without the work laying cable for the Chinese Govt, you might not have been working at all? I applaud the message to your CEO. I applaud the lad who went home. But is it possible, that it wasn't just the bean counters helping the Chinese Govt?