Posted by
timothy
on from the favored-nation dept.
Lemmingue writes "China government is, again, restraining the access to internet. Ars Technica says they are now blocking the Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. How much time will it take for to Slashdot be blocked?"
Speaking of blocking...
by
the_other_one
·
· Score: 4, Funny
How much time will it take for to Slashdot be blocked?"
Slashdot is already blocked in China and India. Geeks are still productive overseas. This is the main reason for the offshore outsourcing frenzy.
How soon can Slashdot be blocked in North America.
-- 134340: I am not a number. I am a free planet!
Re:Speaking of blocking...
by
timstarling
·
· Score: 3, Informative
Apparently they can. I was talking with a computer-literate Mainlander on this subject in the Wikipedia IRC channel. He said that ordinary HTTP proxies are blocked, and that to access Wikipedia now, you need a secure tunnel.
Slashdot not going to be blocked
by
0x0d0a
·
· Score: 4, Insightful
How much time will it take for to Slashdot be blocked?
Slashdot *does* criticize Chinese policy, including information control and the like.
However, it's also extremely critical of the current US administration, which China's current administration is not a tremendous fan of.
Also, Slashdot (at least the English slashdot.org) is not in Chinese, limiting the number of people that can read it. Wikipedia is translated to Chinese.
I do agree that this sucks. Technically, China is still communist, and Wikipedia is about as fine an example of the triumph of successful communist principles (community-owned, from according to assets, to according to need) as you could ask for. Seems like a stupid idea on the part of China.
Re:Slashdot not going to be blocked
by
LWATCDR
·
· Score: 2, Insightful
"I do agree that this sucks. Technically, China is still communist, and Wikipedia is about as fine an example of the triumph of successful communist principles (community-owned, from according to assets, to according to need) as you could ask for. Seems like a stupid idea on the part of China." Guess what China has never been a communist country. In fact there has never been a communist country per Marx. China is a not free and seeks to control every aspect of the life of the people that live there.
-- See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
Re:Slashdot not going to be blocked
by
Distinguished+Hero
·
· Score: 2, Insightful
In fact there has never been a communist country per Marx. China is a not free and seeks to control every aspect of the life of the people that live there.
China would not necessarily have been any freer if it had been "a communist country per Marx." I think it's time that people finally accepted that the Austrian / Chicago school of economic thought is far closer to freedom than any of the garbage Marx, Engels, and Lenin were spewing. Free societies require (at least mostly) free markets; history has shown this.
-- Uttering logically derived and empirically supported truths to the disciples of the orthodox establishment.
Re:Slashdot not going to be blocked
by
tobar+mersa
·
· Score: 3, Insightful
Austrian / Chicago school of economic thought is far closer to freedom than any of the garbage Marx, Engels, and Lenin were spewing
Free Markets like Singapore? or Pinochet's Chile? Or how about Revolutionary France, with guarantees to property?
I know none of these are perfect examples, but simply because a place has free markets, does not make them inherently free.
I believe many people should remember that all countries which have declared themselves to be based off of Marx and Engels have also been one-party dictatorships. Thus, even though all means of production were in the hands of the Government, since the Government was in the hands of a small cadre of party leaders, the Government, and thus the nation, could be considered to be in private ownership by this small clique, and the means of production again created what their owners told them to create, only this time without any effective means of staying out of bankruptcy due to bad management.
Of course, this completely ignores the fact that the People's Republic of China does not qualify as Communist nowadays, as they permit private ownership of the means of production (about fifty percent, iirc), and encourage Capitalism, that thing which Marx and Engels were trying to replace.
-- This sig space intentionally left blank.
Re:Slashdot not going to be blocked
by
Distinguished+Hero
·
· Score: 3, Insightful
I never stated that a free market guarantees complete and utter freedom; I merely stated that a free market is closer to freedom than a centrally planned economy, a claim which you did not refute. Given two hypothetical countries, both with brutally despotic rulers and the same amount of rights, with the exception of one being centrally planned, and the other possessing a free market, which country is freer?
My point was "Free societies require (at least mostly) free markets." Rebutting this statement by listing states which possessed a free market and yet were not completely and utterly free does not disprove my point; implying that I stated that societies with free markets are always free and then disproving that point it a straw man fallacy.
Furthermore, there is evidence to support the fact that free market economies eventually lead to the downfall of oppressive regimes (see East Asian Tigers excluding Singapore, etc.). Certainly you will agree that a free market economy is far less hospitable for tyrannical rulers and oppressive regimes than a centrally planned economy.
Perhaps there is a reason why all the countries which "declared themselves to be based off of Marx and Engels have also been one-party dictatorships." Sure, correlation does not imply causality, but given enough examples, perhaps one should begin doubting the divinity of communism. There are certainly enough beliefs within the dogma of communism (must be attained through a revolution, forcefully taking controll from some and giving it to others, etc.) which would be conducive to the sort of "one-party dictatorships" that have historically emerged.
-- Uttering logically derived and empirically supported truths to the disciples of the orthodox establishment.
Re:Slashdot not going to be blocked
by
tobar+mersa
·
· Score: 4, Informative
Given two hypothetical countries, both with brutally despotic rulers and the same amount of rights, with the exception of one being centrally planned, and the other possessing a free market, which country is freer?
They are equally unfree. Simply because a person is free to own a factory in one land does not make it more free than a land where a person is forbidden from owning a factory. The fact that a person is free to accumulate great wealth in this scenario has nothing to do about the freedom to speak out against the crimes of the Government.
My point was "Free societies require (at least mostly) free markets." Rebutting this statement by listing states which possessed a free market and yet were not completely and utterly free does not disprove my point
I probably misread your comment. You also wrote: I think it's time that people finally accepted that the Austrian / Chicago school of economic thought [emphasis added] is far closer to freedom than any of the garbage Marx, Engels, and Lenin were spewing. Thus, I assumed you considered economic and societal freedom, if not causal, at least correlational. I was simply trying to point out that Free Markets do not require Free Societies; thus, a Free Society could easily slide into a non-Free one, whilst the market still went about its work.
Certainly you will agree that a free market economy is far less hospitable for tyrannical rulers and oppressive regimes than a centrally planned economy.
I agree it is far less hospitable than other forms of economic systems. Just it is also not wholy inhospitable. After all, a dictator could easily permit a free market for anyone who does not oppose the regime.
given enough examples, perhaps one should begin doubting the divinity of communism. There are certainly enough beliefs within the dogma of communism (must be attained through a revolution, forcefully taking controll from some and giving it to others, etc.) which would be conducive to the sort of "one-party dictatorships" that have historically emerged.
I think this is more a result of having nearly all Communist countries that lasted any appreciable length of time outside the U.S.S.R. modeled their development after the U.S.S.R. This means that the Coup d'Etat launched by Lenin often termed the October Revolution provided the effective base for single-party governance, as the Coup was mainly Bolshevik in character, and the following Civil War effectively quashed the other parties. Then Uncle Joe Stalin (or, as I prefer to call him, Tsar Josif) took over after Lenin's death, and squashed any rights which interfered with his outlook on how the country should be run (N.B.: this included economic rights. Lenin established the New Economic Policy, which broke up Government owned industries into different sections, which were then ordered to compete along pseudo-Free Market Lines; also, the ownership of small factories and of small stores of under, iirc, ten people was also legalized. Stalin made an alliance with the Old Bolsheviks promising to keep the NEP if he is installed into power instead of Trotsky, who vowed to rid the U.S.S.R. of the NEP. Then, after gaining power, Stalin did away with the NEP and the Old Bolsheviks both.) Then, when other forms of authoritarian Communists were trying to gain power, they followed the way that had worked in the U.S.S.R.
-- This sig space intentionally left blank.
Re:Slashdot not going to be blocked
by
possible
·
· Score: 2, Interesting
There are no free market countries that I know of. U.S. industries are so heavily protected and subsidized by taxpayers it's ridiculous to think we have anything approaching a free market. Our aerospace industry is subsidized to a stunning degree by taxpayers, as is the communications sector, agriculture, and the energy sector. The U.S. steel, auto, and tech sectors are receiving, or about to receive, huge anti-competitive protections that go against all free trade theories. People in the U.S. don't want free markets in the U.S. -- they want free markets elsewhere.
Three words.
by
the_other_one
·
· Score: 2, Insightful
Humor, artistic license
-- 134340: I am not a number. I am a free planet!
Just another reason why...
by
Read+Icculus
·
· Score: 4, Insightful
We need to develop tools to share and distribute information securely, anonymously, and efficiently. Government control in these matters is not in our best interests, and in the best interests of the rest of the world. Sure this sounds like your normal "information wants to be free" rant, but when the government here in the United States tries to send someone to jail on trumped up Terrorism Charges for running a website... well it's quite clear that freedom of speech and the rights I hold dear mean nothing to those in power. "Even" in the "freeset nation on earth".
Sure there's freenet and what have you, but when it comes to oppressive governments I'd rather not have anyone know I'm functioning as a freenet node and a relay for certain information.
-- Anti-social? My code is just platform-specific.
Re:Just another reason why...
by
reverius
·
· Score: 4, Interesting
check out i2p... maybe it's exactly what you're looking for. if you're really impressed, and you can, please contribute! we need this network functional and -used- as soon as possible, given the state of politics worldwide and the necessity for free speech.
http://www.i2p.net/
They are so fragile
by
ericandrade
·
· Score: 4, Interesting
If the chinese government thinks that wikipedia is a menace to their power, I wish them good luck in the years to come.
Is slashdot.org blocked in China?
by
jsse
·
· Score: 3, Interesting
Re:Is slashdot.org blocked in China?
by
jsse
·
· Score: 3, Interesting
Thanks bloody slashdotters! You knocked the test engine down!:)
Anyway, slashdot.org is not officially blocked or restricted in China - YET. If your China friends found it difficult to access/. from China it might due to some self-disciplinary measures by individual ISP.
zh.wikipedia on Tianenmen
by
beeplet
·
· Score: 4, Interesting
I thought it was interesting - but not terribly surprising - that the access was cut off just prior to the anniversary of the Tianenmen Square massacre. It's odd to be able to access a Chinese site from the US that is blocked there... (Or has the block been lifted?) In any case, I was poking around and found their page on Tianenmen. Some of the pictures are familiar - I wonder how many people in China would find them as familiar as I do? Too bad they can't see them.
Still, I think this is a stopgap measure at best. The wikipedia is an easy target because it's a clearing house for links to information, but as long as there is any internet, there will be a way for this information to be passed around. A better model for disseminating information underground would be a highly decentralized system - harder to navigate, but more robust.
I also thought it was odd that there were only 100 regular contributors, out of a country of 1 billion+ people. Is it lack of computer access? Or fear of reprisals? I have to have admiration for the people who put the zh.wikipedia together in the first place.
Re:zh.wikipedia on Tianenmen
by
Jon+Chatow
·
· Score: 5, Informative
At first, zh was blocked in and around Berlin a couple of days before the anniversary; this block has since expanded to cover most of our IPs, and our whole set of DNS domains, and being blocked throughout China, from what word we have had passed on.
All Wikimedia servers are hosted in Florida, so life is unaffected for the rest of the world. Sadly, this is not the case for our Chinese brethren.
Wikipedia [[User:Jdforrester]].
-- James F.
Totalitarian societies
by
Red+Warrior
·
· Score: 4, Insightful
can't abide free flow of information.
All governments rely on the consent (or at least aquiesence) of the governed. As soon as the majority really BELIEVE that there is something better possible, it's all over.
-- "If, therefore, any be unhappy, let him remember that he is unhappy by reason of himself alone."
~Epictetus
Re:Totalitarian societies
by
Anonymous Coward
·
· Score: 3, Insightful
> All governments rely on the consent (or at least aquiesence) of the governed. As soon as the majority really BELIEVE that there is something better possible, it's all over.
Depends who's holding the guns. I'm sure a great percentage of folks living in Stalinist USSR believed there had to be something better - getting that without getting killed or shipped off to Siberia, that's a different problem.
Why block Slashdot?
by
duffbeer703
·
· Score: 4, Funny
Any subversives looking for information to undermine the Communist regime would instead find themselves posting inane posts about dead operating systems, hot grits and beowulf clusters.
Hmm... maybe/. is actually a mind control device.
-- Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
Re:Only Chinese version of Wikipedia?
by
nroose
·
· Score: 2, Informative
Wikipedia is reporting that All of wikimedia, including wikipedia is blocked as of June 12.
Wikipedian discussions
by
teslatug
·
· Score: 3, Interesting
For some discussions have a read at the wikipedia-l mailing list.
It had to be said
by
moosesocks
·
· Score: 2, Funny
IN COMMUNIST CHINA, Wikipedia blocks YOU!
-- --
If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
Pro-China posting
by
GuyMannDude
·
· Score: 4, Funny
How much time will it take for to Slashdot be blocked?
We just have to liberally sprinkle lots of pro-China comments in our messages to ensure that our geeky breathern in the Far East can continue to enjoy the scintillating, intellectual banter found everyday on this great site.
Lucas should have cast Jet Li as Jango Fett!
I'll bet the upper levels of Starfleet Command are all Chinese. That's why you never see them on the Enterprise. They're too important to be in harm's way.
How China Edits /.
by
jazman_777
·
· Score: 4, Funny
How much time will it take for to Slashdot be blocked?"
All Chinese accounts read at mod level 6:Confucian.
-- Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
me chinese, me play joke...
by
NanoGator
·
· Score: 2, Funny
I'm in China right now, and I just wanted to let you all know that Slashdot is still avai-0x$942k29482... [NO CARRIER]
-- "Derp de derp."
Posting on the /. won't help them either
by
romanm
·
· Score: 2, Insightful
This issue has been raised on wikipedia-l mailing list and there were some opinions that they should try to resolve things quietly before making headlines. Posting on the Slashdot at this point of time sure won't help anyone (OK, so people have the right to know).
Big freaking clue
by
LWATCDR
·
· Score: 4, Insightful
Roosevelt in a speech in January 1941 talked about the four freedoms. They have very little to do with economics. It is much more simple and human than Marx.
"In the future days which we seek to make secure, we look forward to a world founded upon four essential human freedoms.
The first is freedom of speech and expression --everywhere in the world.
The second is freedom of every person to worship God in his own way
-- everywhere in the world.
The third is freedom from want
--everywhere in the world.
The fourth is freedom from fear,
--everywhere in the world."
What a world it could be. But China is not it. It is not even close. The US is not living up to this totaly but at least a lot of people in the US know where it should be going. I get sick to my stomach when I see all the idiots on Slashdot hold up the right to download kiddie porn and swap mp3s as freedoms. There are places where you can not teach your children about God if you do beleive in God with out worrying that your door will get kicked down and no one ever see you again! I do not care if a country is capitalist or not if they do not at least try for those four freedoms they are HELL. I know that some people belive trading with China will help it become free someday. I pray that they are right. Start with those four freedoms and then we can work on which system of ownership works the best!
-- See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
How much time will it take for to Slashdot be blocked?"
Slashdot is already blocked in China and India. Geeks are still productive overseas. This is the main reason for the offshore outsourcing frenzy.
How soon can Slashdot be blocked in North America.
134340: I am not a number. I am a free planet!
How much time will it take for to Slashdot be blocked?
Slashdot *does* criticize Chinese policy, including information control and the like.
However, it's also extremely critical of the current US administration, which China's current administration is not a tremendous fan of.
Also, Slashdot (at least the English slashdot.org) is not in Chinese, limiting the number of people that can read it. Wikipedia is translated to Chinese.
I do agree that this sucks. Technically, China is still communist, and Wikipedia is about as fine an example of the triumph of successful communist principles (community-owned, from according to assets, to according to need) as you could ask for. Seems like a stupid idea on the part of China.
May we never see th
Humor, artistic license
134340: I am not a number. I am a free planet!
We need to develop tools to share and distribute information securely, anonymously, and efficiently. Government control in these matters is not in our best interests, and in the best interests of the rest of the world. Sure this sounds like your normal "information wants to be free" rant, but when the government here in the United States tries to send someone to jail on trumped up Terrorism Charges for running a website... well it's quite clear that freedom of speech and the rights I hold dear mean nothing to those in power. "Even" in the "freeset nation on earth".
Sure there's freenet and what have you, but when it comes to oppressive governments I'd rather not have anyone know I'm functioning as a freenet node and a relay for certain information.
Anti-social? My code is just platform-specific.
If the chinese government thinks that wikipedia is a menace to their power, I wish them good luck in the years to come.
See it yourself.
I thought it was interesting - but not terribly surprising - that the access was cut off just prior to the anniversary of the Tianenmen Square massacre. It's odd to be able to access a Chinese site from the US that is blocked there... (Or has the block been lifted?) In any case, I was poking around and found their page on Tianenmen. Some of the pictures are familiar - I wonder how many people in China would find them as familiar as I do? Too bad they can't see them.
Still, I think this is a stopgap measure at best. The wikipedia is an easy target because it's a clearing house for links to information, but as long as there is any internet, there will be a way for this information to be passed around. A better model for disseminating information underground would be a highly decentralized system - harder to navigate, but more robust.
I also thought it was odd that there were only 100 regular contributors, out of a country of 1 billion+ people. Is it lack of computer access? Or fear of reprisals? I have to have admiration for the people who put the zh.wikipedia together in the first place.
All governments rely on the consent (or at least aquiesence) of the governed. As soon as the majority really BELIEVE that there is something better possible, it's all over.
"If, therefore, any be unhappy, let him remember that he is unhappy by reason of himself alone."
~Epictetus
Any subversives looking for information to undermine the Communist regime would instead find themselves posting inane posts about dead operating systems, hot grits and beowulf clusters.
/. is actually a mind control device.
Hmm... maybe
Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
Wikipedia is reporting that All of wikimedia, including wikipedia is blocked as of June 12.
Internet_censorship_in_China
For some discussions have a read at the wikipedia-l mailing list.
IN COMMUNIST CHINA, Wikipedia blocks YOU!
-- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
How much time will it take for to Slashdot be blocked?
We just have to liberally sprinkle lots of pro-China comments in our messages to ensure that our geeky breathern in the Far East can continue to enjoy the scintillating, intellectual banter found everyday on this great site.
There, I've done my part.
GMD
watch this
All Chinese accounts read at mod level 6:Confucian.
Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
I'm in China right now, and I just wanted to let you all know that Slashdot is still avai-0x$942k29482... [NO CARRIER]
"Derp de derp."
This issue has been raised on wikipedia-l mailing list and there were some opinions that they should try to resolve things quietly before making headlines. Posting on the Slashdot at this point of time sure won't help anyone (OK, so people have the right to know).
Roosevelt in a speech in January 1941 talked about the four freedoms. They have very little to do with economics. It is much more simple and human than Marx.
"In the future days which we seek to make secure, we look forward to a world founded upon four essential human freedoms.
The first is freedom of speech and expression --everywhere in the world.
The second is freedom of every person to worship God in his own way
-- everywhere in the world.
The third is freedom from want
--everywhere in the world.
The fourth is freedom from fear,
--everywhere in the world."
What a world it could be. But China is not it. It is not even close. The US is not living up to this totaly but at least a lot of people in the US know where it should be going. I get sick to my stomach when I see all the idiots on Slashdot hold up the right to download kiddie porn and swap mp3s as freedoms. There are places where you can not teach your children about God if you do beleive in God with out worrying that your door will get kicked down and no one ever see you again!
I do not care if a country is capitalist or not if they do not at least try for those four freedoms they are HELL. I know that some people belive trading with China will help it become free someday. I pray that they are right. Start with those four freedoms and then we can work on which system of ownership works the best!
See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.