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Chinese Ban on Wikipedia Prevents Research

An anonymous reader writes "China has banned access to Wikipedia for the third time, outraging students and intellectuals." From the article: "The latest blocking of the website, the third shutdown of the site in China in the past two years, has now continued for more than 10 weeks without any explanation and without any indication whether the ban is temporary or permanent ... Others said the blocking of Wikipedia has been a major blow to their research projects and even to their prospects of passing civil-service exams. 'How can I do my thesis now?' a university student asked on another Chinese website."

439 comments

  1. Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I guess we wait for another Tiananmen Square to happen again. It kind of makes one wonder what exactly was accomplished in 1989 when 100,000 protesters marched in Beijing. Appearantly not much.

    While the U.S. is concerned with this, maybe we should instead be concerned with that?

    Either way, if you're interested in what the U.S. is concerned about, maybe you should read documents made available by the Freedom of Information Act.

    What are people supposed to do if they cannot free themselves from a suppressive government? It's not worth violence to be able to read wikipedia but it's clear that non-violent protests in the past did very little.

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by biocute · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I believe China has had its fair share of violent protests (which usually led to revolution and overturn of a government) throughout its history.

      What I'm trying to say is, What shall be can be the is of what was - Lao Fu Tzu

    2. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by edunbar93 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It kind of makes one wonder what exactly was accomplished in 1989 when 100,000 protesters marched in Beijing. Appearantly not much.

      Oh no, there was *lots* accomplished by this protest, and the massacre that ensued.

      The Chinese government proved to its citizenry that There Are Certain Things You Will Not Talk About.

      The Chinese government proved to the rest of the world that it doesn't give a rat's ass what anyone else thinks about how They Run Their Country.

      The American (and Canadian, and probably others too) government proved that they will walk on eggshells around the issue of free speech and human rights with China in order to get lucrative trade deals.

      The Chinese government basically proved that not only can they crush dissent in *their* country, but in others too.

      --
      "No problem. I have the capacity to do infinite work so long as you don't mind that my quality approaches zero."-Dilbert
    3. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by guaigean · · Score: 1

      Yes, 100,000 marched. But how does that pale to the other ~999,900,000. Some people are willing to stand up, but until many, MANY more are willing, the situation will stay the same. Marches rarely contain the majority of people, and often only the most radical. In a population with 1 billion people, 100,000 protesters is only ~0.01% of the people. Until more of them stand up for themselves (if that's even what they want), there's very little that can be done to change China.

      --
      Microsoft Sucks, F/OSS Rocks. I get mod points now right?
    4. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It kind of makes one wonder what exactly was accomplished in 1989 when 100,000 protesters marched in Beijing. Appearantly not much.

      Yes. That's kind of the point of the fact that they lost and the government won. :(

    5. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by BewireNomali · · Score: 2, Informative

      Agreed. Even more, in New York, marchers need permits from the city. How's that for non-violent protest. The bureaucracy has to pre-approve your protest before you can gather en masse. lol.

      Marches might have worked for somebody way back when, but not today.

      --
      un burrito me trampeó.
    6. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by sdedeo · · Score: 1

      Debtaes on China's superpower status aside -- what does superpower status have to do with civil rights? -- marching has been quite effective in the past. When other communications are suppressed by law, custom, or technological barriers, marches are one of the most effective ways to communicate with your fellow citizens. Why do you think China suppresses them?

      --
      Protect your liberties. Donate to the ACLU
    7. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Stargoat · · Score: 5, Insightful
      "The Chinese seem to be okay without civil rights..." Tell that to my family, you sunvabitch. And there have been people like you before, "They don't need civil rights, they're black." Or "They shouldn't rush things like this, getting civil liberties is a process that takes time."

      There can be no happiness without freedom. You have no idea what it is like to know that if the police come knocking, you need to hand over a thousand yuan or a loved one disappears. You don't know what it means to have classmates beaten so badly they leave police stations brain damaged and half dead, with no recourse. You don't know what it's like when the state owned company you worked for for 30 years decide that it is not going to pay the heat in the winter and the heating company turns it off and will not turn the heat back on for any amount of money. You have no idea what it is like to be required by law to work 80 hour weeks because the company you are at has decided that it's employees can produce more. You don't know what it's like to listen to your daughter call, worried about the riots in your city, only to be told by state run media that there are not any.

      You seem to forget just how oppressive a Communist regime and a dictator can be. There is economic growth in China, and it is not trickling down. A few have become rich; most Chinese were better off sixty years ago under the KMT. All property and all rights in China are illusory.

      There is no freedom in China. There is no happiness in China.

      --
      Hoist Number One and Number Six.
    8. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by The-Bus · · Score: 2, Funny
      I guess we wait for another Tiananmen Square to happen again.


      I would like to know what this "Tiananmen Square" is, but alas, your links lead to Wikipedia.

      Signed,

      An Inquisitive Chinese 'Net User
      --

      Small potatoes make the steak look bigger.

    9. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by voice_of_all_reason · · Score: 1

      what does superpower status have to do with civil rights?

      People as a whole are generally more willing to tolerate civil rights abuses as long as 1) it's not visibly affecting them and 2) they're doing well economically. What's the famous saying to running a country? "Just feed 'em and keep 'em happy?"

      When other communications are suppressed by law, custom, or technological barriers, marches are one of the most effective ways to communicate with your fellow citizens.

      Communicate what, though? Everyone knows that getting thrown into prison on a whim or being executed for your religion are Bad Things, so what can a march teach them? Maybe a march accompanies with rock/mototov parties. At least that'll communicate the crucial message that "some shit is about to go down shortly, and you should either pick a side or get out of the way."

      Why do you think China suppresses them?

      They're not being rational, as evidenced by the ban on pornography. Letting your citizens watch other people do the whoopie can in no way lead to undermining the government. However, the people on top have decided that they do not like it and that is that. There's that old quote about the only things you need to successfully rule a country are to feed the population and keep them happy. Marches don't provide significant changes in the short term. Sure, they worked (a bit) for civil rights and vietnam in the US, but I can't think of anywhere else in the world where TPTB relented.

    10. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Threni · · Score: 1

      On a related note, the interesting intelligence (and somewhat tech-related) site:

      http://www.cryptome.org/

      now has a sister site dealing specifically with Chinese suppression, at:

      http://www.cryptome.cn/

    11. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by susano_otter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      China has the power to plunge the world into violent chaos, if it does not get its way, and if its needs are not met.

      What would you have the U.S. government do? Forsake peace and prosperity and an incremental approach to reforming China, in favor of cutting them off, putting their backs against a wall, and taking us all straight to World War IV?

      I mean, it's an option, of course. Is it your option?

      The fact is, China has been reforming incrementally even since before Tiananmen Square. They know what's going on. A lot of their policy is guided by a desire to meet their citizens' growing demands for freedom without plunging the country into the state of mafia-ruled anarchy that plagues the former Soviet Union today. They've learned a lot from Russia's rush to reform. The main lesson being: take it slow.

      I think a lot of their current crackdown on the Internet has to do with limiting their people's access to outside information that will whet their appetite for reforms: An appetite that cannot be swiftly fed, and that, once awakened will lead to violent uprisings if not immediately sated.

      I dunno. Maybe violent uprisings are the answer. And it's certain the people in power in China have their own best interests at heart, with the incremental approach.

      But I ask you, what would you do? Would you rather put China in a position where they have nothing to lose? That leads to war--nuclear war, most likely. Or would you rather use international commerce as a tool for applying both carrots and sticks to China, to encourage them to join the free world at their own pace, but join it nonetheless?

      If China was still relatively powerless (like, say, Saddam Hussein's Iraq), then I'd be all about a forcible regime change, and the sooner the better.

      But they're not.

      The fact is, you have no idea what kind of pressure is really being brought to bear on the Chinese government. You have no idea what kinds of things get discussed in those trade negotiations. You have no idea what kinds of factors come into play, that might influence Chinese government policy on a broad spectrum, as a result of engaging with them economically instead of isolating them.

      And you obviously have no idea what the potential ramifications of an isolationist policy with regard to China would be.

      Or do you? Maybe I have you all wrong, and you're some kind of expert Far East Asia SocioPolitial Analyst, who has it all figured out. If so, please point us to your scholarly papers, detailed analysis, and/or personal blog full of insightful commentary on the subject. Enlighten us, please: how do we go about isolating China to force a faster rate of reform, without forcing them into war, instead? In what material way would it differ in appearance from what the western powers are doing right now? Don't forget to account for all the other constraints, influences, boundaries, and assorted limitations that western politicians must work within, in order to bring this peaceful reform of China about (including, of course, the sad fact of human weakness both in elected officials and in the masses that elect them).

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    12. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      Put that in perspective:

      The USA's government does not give a rat's ass what anyone else thinks about how We Run Our Country (nor should we, it's OUR country)

      The American People have not collectively surged forth in government to force restrictions on trade with China

      The latter is really the only knob we have to twist on how China conducts its affairs. If we don't feel strongly enough to stop using their cheap labor, we are supporting their government.

    13. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by HungWeiLo · · Score: 1

      most Chinese were better off sixty years ago under the KMT

      You're obviously repeating what your parents told you (or some other person who lived in that era) - and I'm not saying they're completely exaggerating or lying, but things are certainly much, much better than when the KMT were in power (and if you think the KMT gives people more freedom and is not corrupt like the Communists, you're out of your mind or you don't know a thing about history). Go visit and take a look for yourself. In my mind, a bigger concern is the environmental armageddon (I suppose you can call it one already) from the laissez-faire factory production sprint race that is going on in China nowadays. Their state health care will surely collapse when half of the 30-year-olds in the country come down with lung cancer.

      --
      There are a huge number of yeast infections in this county. Probably because we're downriver from the bread factory.
    14. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      What are people supposed to do if they cannot free themselves from a suppressive government? It's not worth violence to be able to read wikipedia but it's clear that non-violent protests in the past did very little.

      That's very debateable. All revolutions have involved a degree of violence. Even the Indian Revolution was not without violence, despite Ghandi's best efforts.

      The quintessential revolution is the French Revolution. And I think any revolution in China is more likely to take this form than any other. Tight government control of the media and the sheer scale of the country would suggest that only "big" news will travel fast enough to stir people up, i.e. armed revolt. Peaceful protest simply will not get enough press coverage in so vast a territory. Nor will civil disobeidience.

      The biggest tradgedy is that a revolution in China is not even guaranteed to bring in democracy. No revolution really is. Violent revolution even less so. A lot of people could end up suffering and dying for nothing but a military putsch.

      The other option is that the reformers in the chinese communist party win out over the autocrats. But as the tension grows higher and the stakes become greater, this may become less, and not more likely.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    15. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by badmammajamma · · Score: 1

      "If we don't feel strongly enough to stop using their cheap labor, we are supporting their government."

      Which we won't do because then stuff will have to get made in other coutries where it's more expensive. Personally I'm against the use of what is tantamount to slave labor. However, in this country everything is run by the very rich. I don't have any control in it. Oh wait, that's how it works in every country...

      --
      Any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood. -- H. L. Mencken
    16. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why is it that whenever people bring up China, they bring up Tiananmen Square, but they never bring up Kent State? Granted, it's not on quite the same scale, but it's still an example of the US government killing its own citizens.

    17. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have no idea what it is like to know that if the police come knocking, you need to hand over a thousand yuan or a loved one disappears. You don't know what it means to have classmates beaten so badly they leave police stations brain damaged and half dead, with no recourse. You don't know what it's like when the state owned company you worked for for 30 years decide that it is not going to pay the heat in the winter and the heating company turns it off and will not turn the heat back on for any amount of money. You have no idea what it is like to be required by law to work 80 hour weeks because the company you are at has decided that it's employees can produce more. You don't know what it's like to listen to your daughter call, worried about the riots in your city, only to be told by state run media that there are not any.

      You seem to forget just how oppressive a Communist regime and a dictator can be.


      We've got to deal with George Bush as our president. You have no idea what that's like.

    18. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1
      Though I find the Communist regime repellant, I do have to agree with you. And let's not forget our history, the Peoples Republic is largely a Western creation. If the Western Powers hadn't so thoroughly abused China during the 18th century, with their one-sided "treaties", stuffing opium down their throat, and ultimately picking a murderous bastard like Chiang Kai-shek (this blame really goes to the US) rather than even bothering to comprehend the mood of the Chinese people themselves, the PRC might never have arisen, or at least it might have been a little more moderated. The Americans had their chance to talk with Mao, and if they had had any brains, rather than just simple idiotic "better dead than Red" sloganeering, the PRC might not have sat during its key early years so firmly on the Russian side.

      The fact of the matter, and this recognized even during the 18th and 19th centuries, that China is one of the world power houses. It has been a major exporter since ancient times. It has the population on its side, and deep traditions (Confucianism was a school of thought while most Europeans were still living in huts) of the place of the state and and the individual which all the protests in the world are not going to change in any substantial way. The inevitably of China's rise, and even the way that China is generally governed today, have been writ in centuries of history.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    19. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      The government still has a great deal of control over what comes in and out of this country, and who US companies are allowed to do business with. There is not significant enough displeasure with China amonst the average guy to make that happen for them. I'm not even sure if people are really aware how much business we do with them in context with how their government operates.

    20. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 1

      Only in the steady and constant application of force lies the very first prerequisite for success. This persistence, however, can always and only arise from a definite spiritual conviction. Any violence which does not spring from a firm, spiritual base, will be wavering and uncertain.

      Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf

      --
      "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
    21. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Gulthek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I've seen happiness in China. I've seen happiness in Tibet. I've seen happiness in Xinjiang. I've seen happiness in Yunnan.

      I've talked to people on the street, I've talked to people in hutongs, I've talked to people in high-rise apartments.

      Maybe you should talk to them too.

      Things aren't perfect, they aren't even great in many places, but it certainly isn't a cultural revolution type situation over there anymore.

      The 20th century was brutal for China, but change doesn't happen overnight. In fact, a great deal of the problems came from change happening overnight.

      Would you really want China to go back to the chaos that she saw in the 1910s after the collapse of the Qing dynasty?

    22. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by TummyX · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Ths is slashdot. Bush == Hitler. Communist China == Socialist Heaven.

    23. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by sdedeo · · Score: 1

      Well, I was confused by your use of the word "superpower". There are plenty of countries doing well economically that aren't superpowers. Meanwhile, my vauge guess is that parts of China are well-off enough economically that they are starting to care about trivial things like not being able to speak their minds, have access to a fair court system or generally enjoy the fruits of their labor. AFAICT, the Chinese are a lot like Americans, as in, they generally want two things: personal freedom of the bill-of-rights kind, and to make scads of cash.

      Communicate what, though? Everyone knows that getting thrown into prison on a whim or being executed for your religion are Bad Things, so what can a march teach them? Maybe a march accompanies with rock/mototov parties. At least that'll communicate the crucial message that "some shit is about to go down shortly, and you should either pick a side or get out of the way."

      China is not going to have a civil war. In part because nobody wants the massive violence that would be associated with one. Meanwhile, a march communicates to people that "you are not alone" -- that the thoughts you're having that you might be too afraid to express are shared by others.

      You seem to think that the Chinese government is just being silly in suppressing wikipedia and outside (and internal) sources of information. My feeling is that while totalitarian governments often make strange decisions (and some make very strange decisions, N. Korea and Burma, e.g.), they know exactly what they're doing here.

      The Chinese government, unlike the North Korean one, depends for its national security on its citizens making lots of money, and in order to make a lot of money you need to have certain elements of freedom. They can't shoot everyone who disagrees lest they destroy their economy. They prefer to shoot a few of the "worst" ones, with the hope that it will discourage others. It's a bit of a prisoner's dilemma, in a way, and marches are a way of solving it: people stand up and say, not only do I think the way you do, but I'm willing to take risks to express it.

      PS: the Velvet Revolution?

      --
      Protect your liberties. Donate to the ACLU
    24. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by badmammajamma · · Score: 1

      We do a TON of business with them but so does everyone else nowadays. We don't have the leverage we used to have and I think this is why we "overlook" their human rights issues.

      --
      Any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood. -- H. L. Mencken
    25. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 2, Informative

      Agreed. Even more, in New York, marchers need permits from the city. How's that for non-violent protest.

      That's so they can set up a fenced-in area and call it a "First Amendment Zone". All protest is required to take place inside this fenced-in area. You still have your First Amendment rights, but only inside the fence. They are usually set up a considerable distance away from whatever event is being protested, and reporters are forbidden to speak to or take pictures of anyone inside.

      It's what the Framers intended.

    26. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You say that if China was as powerful as Iraq was you'd be all for forced regime change. Have you been keeping track of any news regarding the state of Iraq since the war was "won"? Still think forced regime change is a good idea?

    27. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      It's a square engineered by great Chinese scientist Dr. Tiananmen to be 33% squarer than imperialist pig squares.

      -China

    28. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by denelson83 · · Score: 1

      > There is no freedom in China. There is no happiness in China.

      Because of this very reason, I have adopted the argument that "China is not a sovereign country," i.e., I no longer recognize the PRC's existence.

    29. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by gwait · · Score: 1

      "There is no freedom in China. There is no happiness in China."

      Bullshit.

      "There is economic growth in China, and it is not trickling down"

      Bullshit.

      I've only been to China twice, and I met lots of happy people.

      Yes, the world should strongly pressure China to shape up on civil rights, and many things are seriously bad over there BUT there is no reason to outright lie about conditions over there. You end up hurting your cause when people find out you were lying to make your claim sound better.

      Funny how many people forget the US fired on it's own students in the 1960's.

      --
      Bavarian Purity Law of Rice Krispie Squares: Rice Krispies, Marshmallows, Butter, Vanilla.
    30. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      You have no idea what it is like to know that if the police come knocking, you need to hand over a thousand yuan or a loved one disappears.

      Nor do you I imagine.

      China is hardly a bastion of chaos and unrest. Its citizens, for the most part, are NOT unhappy. They believe in their government, and they believe that if information is censored, it's in their best interest. Does that make it true? Well, not necessarily, but its up to a country's own citizens to decide for themselves (unlike Bush would have us believe). You could make a strong argument that they're being duped (that's fooled, not copied) on a massive scale, but here in Asia, the overwhelming majority of Chinese that I've met are fully supportive of their government's policies, and it's not just an act that they drop in private.

      Are there instances of abuse of power in China? Absolutely. And they're different abuses than we're used to seeing in the US, but for the most part they're just trading one set of problems for another.

    31. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by lgw · · Score: 1

      Keeping the press out is where it crosses the line, and one hopes the Supreme Court will take a look at that practice soon.

      Keep in mind, you have the right to assemble, and the right to speak, but not the right to disrupt an activity simply because it displeases you. Creating a "free speech zone" makes sense given the tendency for protests to become disruptive - often that's the intent. You have every right to speak your peice, especially on political issues, but that's not the right to annoy others when they don't care to listen. Whenever someone sdays "protest" that's what I think of: we're going to go bother someone so they'll pay more attention to us, which is not a protected right.

      Of course, keeping the press out is just BS. How could that be *anything* but abridgment of freedom of speech. Any protester should have the right to talk to anyone who cares to listen, in a public place, especiallyabout political issues. As long as the protest doesn't cross the line to trying to force those who *don't* care to listen.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    32. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 1

      What shall be can be the is of what was
      - Lao Fu Tzu


      Is that suppossed to be "Laof ut zu" - Laugh at you? Because that's what I think you are doing at all the people trying to parse out that saying.

    33. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Firehed · · Score: 1
      Wow... that quote needs to be read about twelve times before it makes any sense. That or my caffeine high is backfiring. I'm guessing the former. Or I suppose the Chinese->English typewriter monkeys could have got it wrong.

      I definately see any attempt of China to block access to the internet as futile. For one... way too many people. Communism can work on about 200 people before it becomes unmanagable to the point of useless beyond saying "I own you all." For another... it's the internet. Ten years out and we could have one giant WiFi antenna (in Texas, of course, where everything is big) broadcasting the internet for the entire world (let's not get into the science of this; if you must, assume the signal can bounce off the atmosphere to reach the entire surface area of the planet from a single source). They'd have to rebuild the Great Wall out of lead.

      It's almost like putting jokes about amish people online/on TV. It doesn't matter what you say, because they "can't" access it. Except in this case, it's useful information and it's simply a matter of nuking the world's über-est firewall.

      --
      How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
    34. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by metternich · · Score: 3, Informative

      China has had several thousand protests a year for the last few years and they're getting more numerous. They're only getting scant attantion in the Western media though, since it's mostly poor people protesting poor wages, unsafe working conditions, corrupt officials, government abuses, etc., rather than media savy students fighting for democracy.

      --
      Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.
    35. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by ACMENEWSLLC · · Score: 1

      If you really care about human rights in China, look at everything you consume for MADE IN CHINA. If it has those words, then no longer buy it.

      The fact is most of us don't really care. We continue to purchase goods MADE IN CHINA.

      Why does China have such good prices? They pirate Windows and other software - so that is billions of US dollars they don't have to spend, and billions that the US doesn't get.

      They copy technology either through reverse engineering, or theift. They don't care about their workers. They don't care about the environment.

      It gives them an unfair advantage. In the long term the net effect will be for ever $1 your the US economy saves by buying China, it will also loose $1. The difference is time.

      What I don't get is why I hear so much anti American sentiment when we are angels compared to China. (No, we are not angels compared to maybe Iceland.)

    36. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by lebski · · Score: 1

      Well having never been there I cannot really comment on how happy or unhappy people are but given that China is not a democracy it really isn't up to the people to decide. That decision has been made for them. I find it hard to believe that a regime would repress free speech and media for the good of the people.

    37. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have to wonder, if things are so bad in China why aren't people leaving it en-mass?

    38. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    39. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by kabocox · · Score: 1

      There is no freedom in China. There is no happiness in China.

      Unless you happen to be in that top 1-5%. How is that much different from the US in the 1920s? I think that the Chinese will grow out of it or have another peasant rebellion. Of course if they have a peasant rebellion then most of the rest of the world would help them put it down so we could have cheap Chinese labor.

    40. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by clambake · · Score: 1

      All revolutions have involved a degree of violence. Even the Indian Revolution was not without violence, despite Ghandi's best efforts.

      Uh oh, Nintendo is in trouble.

    41. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have to wonder, if things are so bad in China why aren't people leaving it en-mass?

      Too hard to get a visa!

    42. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by irablum · · Score: 1

      unfortunately, every Chinese citizen knows where Tienanmen Square is, even if they've never heard of a protest occuring there. Tienanmen square is where the Government of China resides. Its analogous to the White House lawn in the United States or Parliament Square in London. Tienanmen Square is across the street from the Forbidden City, where the Emperors lived. I didn't know this until I had a business trip to China and toured Tienanmen square and the Forbidden City.

      This wasn't a little protest, this was the US army driving tanks over people during the million man march, live on CNN.

    43. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by deanoaz · · Score: 1

      >>> Unless you happen to be in that top 1-5%. How is that much different from the US in the 1920s?

      In America in the 1920's anyone could own land, and start a business, and write or say whatever they pleased. You couldn't legally sell whiskey or beer during much of that period, but in most other ways you had even more freedom than Americans do today.

      I wouldn't trade my life today for one in the 1920's though, because of the advances that have been made since then which give us an easier and longer life.

      I'm not an expert on China, but I would expect that the large numbers of people they have working in skilled trades will develop into a powerful middle class over time and transform Chinese society. This pattern has happened before in countries all over the world. That is why the Chinese labor market became so attractive in the first place. Earlier countries that had been that same kind of market were transformed into more developed nations as the workers became skilled labor and management. This led to a middle class, a growing domestic economy and rising wages.

      --
      If 'the people' in Amendment 2 are 'the state' then Amendments 1, 2, 4, 9, and 10 benefit the state, not you.
    44. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      given that China is not a democracy it really isn't up to the people to decide. That decision has been made for them. I find it hard to believe that a regime would repress free speech and media for the good of the people.

      That's false as well, not to mention contradictory. If China was a democracy then the people could vote for an authoritarian government? Think about it.

      What makes a government a government? I could declare myself Emporer of the United States tomorrow, but that wouldn't make it happen, and it has nothing to do with laws. It's because nobody would respect my claim. Government cannot exist without the consent of the governed. If a government is doing a bad enough job, eventually people will stop consenting. The fact that China's government exists is evidence that it is performing sufficiently. Beyond that, it's all shades of grey.

      Let's not forget that democracy is not without its shortcomings. We generally get to choose between egg shell and off-white. Six of one, or a half dozen of the other. The difference between candidates often comes down to petty issues, and there are generally only two choices. And no matter who you vote for, odds are you don't agree with all of that candidate's policies; you just had to choose the lesser of two evils.

      There are advantages of authoritarian governments. Less arguing about the correct course of action means more time spent actually pursuing that course, and often the difference is life or death. That's why militaries aren't democracies, as anyone who's served can certainly tell you.

      And the greatest irony of all? We mope and complain about China's lack of civil liberty, meanwhile we voluntarily surrender our own because we think it's more important to stay alive than to be free (as if those are the choices). In reality, Chinese citizens are making the exact same choice; they've decided that it's better to be alive and secure than to take steps toward a democracy. Who are we to question their decision?

    45. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by 6*7 · · Score: 1

      But that is not important right now.

    46. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except, the difference between the US and China that in the US, if for some reason the city denies your request, you can sue.

    47. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      World War IV?!

      Did I somehow sleep through WWIII recently?

    48. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by geohump · · Score: 1

      Wow - what an amzingly ignorant ....

      1920 America was not perfect, clearly, but The American citizens had two things nobody in China has to this day:

      The Constitution and the Bill of Rights. And they have made all the difference.
      (No, they haven't been perfectly or equally applied, still working on that and will be forever )

      Yes, The Chinese police/military can and do still brutalize people half to death and the victims (and their families) have no rights and no way to redress the situation. Look at some other (non-US) press sources for info on this. In the US when the Police do this, they can be caught and punished and the municipality who employed them can be sued for compensation. (Sadly, not all bad cops get caught, but life has no guarantees).

      Many of us,including me, are skeptical about the US being a "just and righteous" country, but overall, most of the time, the US system protects people from being abused by their government.[As long as Alito doesn't get on the Supreme court, that is, and leaving aside the most recent excursion by the current so called "administration" ]

      In China, the only redress an person victimized by the government has is to get their plight in front of the global press, and that almost never happens.

      Quick Quiz - Where is the worlds largest water power project being done? (No Peeking at Wikipedia or Google..)

    49. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by lebski · · Score: 1

      The people of China were never given a chance to vote in there own Authoritarian government. Can you try to imagine organising the uprising you allude to in a country of > 1 billion people without a free press? How would you do it exactly? When Mao took over China there were rebellions but the sheer size of the country and lack of free communication meant that only one small area could rise up at any one time. As a result they were crushed at hidden. You try to set up a web page to contest the lack of free speech and you get shut down (if Yahoo haven't already got there first). Set up a TV station yeah, nice one. An underground organisation big enough to sway a billion is not going to be very secret. Yes I agree that our current democracies are lacking, of course they are, but this is due (as you say) to our complete lack of defending them. However the fundamental ideal behind a democracy is sound. Authoritarianism is great in the military but China isn't the army! Try it in our country and people like us (who value debate and free speech - why else you would be here) are not going to find life far less comfortable and for what reason? What reason could China really have for suppressing free speech? What reason is there?

    50. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

      Did the U.S. care about the more than 20 million people who marched world wide against the war in Iraq?

      Nope... too bad you lose the "Get out of oppression free" card.

    51. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by orkysoft · · Score: 1

      Don't worry, WWIV will be fought with sticks and stones.

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    52. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by superyanthrax · · Score: 1

      It's hard to comment on an account that is so completely biased, slanted, and completely misrepresents the situation in China. Why it has been moderated insightful is totally beyond me. But as someone else who has lived for long periods in China, I'll try.

      You generalize from your family, and the people immediately surrounding your family, to the 1.3 billion people in China. This is a logical fallacy, and is alone enough to discredit your argument. What proof do you have that the majority of the 1.3 billion people suffer through the same troubles that you do? You don't, because your claim is false, and you're justifying it through the use of logical fallacies.

      I'd comment more but to comment on the rest of your post would cause the discussion to become a hissy fit between a communist sympathizer and an anti-communist.

    53. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by houghi · · Score: 1

      The Chinese government proved to the rest of the world that it doesn't give a rat's ass what anyone else thinks about how They Run Their Country.

      At least the Chines only run their own country as they see fit.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    54. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That or my caffeine high is backfiring.

      It's probably just your T cell count being too low.

    55. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stupid Commie. You Pinkos collectively have been responsible for more pain and suffering than any other group in the history of man.

    56. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Ummu · · Score: 1

      I'm chinese... It's not that bad, really. Even though I live in Canada, I've been back several times, and I know people who live in China. They don't mind that much, as it doesn't really affect them that much. If you said you would kill Bush in America in a loud, provoking manner, without trace of humor, you would probably get a 'friendly' visit too.

    57. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Ummu · · Score: 1

      Another note... You can't just say the Chinese aren't happy. You don't know. Shut up.
      Just because you have no happiness, doesn't mean that others don't. I guess all the others are all stupid and gullible, then?

    58. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Rone · · Score: 1

      Some people refer to the Cold War as WWIII.

    59. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by sydneyfong · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. The history of China is featured with massive nation-wide uprising every few centuries, somewhat on the order of a dozen times in recorded history.

      The first nation wide uprising by *peasants* happened more than TWO THOUSAND YEARS ago. ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qin_Dynasty - Search for "revolt") Anybody who has even a slight understanding of Chinese history know that if there is widespread dissatisfaction with the government, the government WILL fall, no matter what opressive practices the government tries to do. Many emperors in recent dynasties tried to prevent uprising from the people by various dubious means, but they all failed -- and they are remembered in history for that.

      In Chinese history these uprisings comprises hundreds of thousands of people, AT LEAST. Sometimes the army can be up to a million. It makes the so called "revolutions" in the west look like a weeny, disorganized party doesn't it?

      By the way, if you put yourself into the Chinese authorities' shoes, you'll understand that there is no so called "unfree" press in China -- they are only suppressing things that are already not too popular. Imagine trying to suppress the will of billions of people, and enraging them... we're talking about the largest mob on the planet.

      So read a bit of Chinese history. The western influence on the Chinese way of doing things, as I predict, will be neglegible on the grand scale of things.

      --
      Don't quote me on this.
    60. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by EiZei · · Score: 1

      In America in the 1920's anyone could own land, and start a business, and write or say whatever they pleased. You couldn't legally sell whiskey or beer during much of that period, but in most other ways you had even more freedom than Americans do today. *

      * Note: The offer may not apply if you happen to be non-white, non-male or just plain poor.

    61. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Archades54 · · Score: 1

      I guess we wait for another Tiananmen Square to happen again. It kind of makes one wonder what exactly was accomplished in 1989 when 100,000 protesters marched in Beijing. Appearantly not much. someones tanktracks got dirty?

      --
      If your neighbours roof is flying past your window, you know it's cyclone season.
    62. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Stargoat · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it is that bad. My family relies on me for news in China. There have been riots in their city that they did not know about. Threatening murder is one thing, but I've been able to spend letters expressing my displeasure to officials in the US before, work on campaigns, demonstrate against the sitting government, demonstrate against corporate abuses, join a real union, own a firearm, listen to any radio or satellite station of my choice, own any book I want, watch any movie I want, get DOI documents, and successfully challenge the government in a court of law. I've also never had to issue a bribe to any government official in the US. I am also protected by labor law.

      A person can get used to a bad thing, like when the company turns the heat off, or when a policeman talks to you and you move your hand to your wallet, but it does not mean that it is not wrong. And as someone Chinese, would you rather have your friends in Mainland China, or a place they could vote and had rights, like Canada, or Taiwan?

      --
      Hoist Number One and Number Six.
    63. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Anonymous+Bullard · · Score: 1
      I've seen happiness in China. I've seen happiness in Tibet. I've seen happiness in Xinjiang. I've seen happiness in Yunnan.

      And had you been there to visit Stalin's gulags and Hitler's concentration camps, you'd had found happiness there as well. The occupants probably had good reasons to smile at every outside visitor.

      What comes to the Chinese-occupied Tibet and "Xinjiang" (Peking dialect for "western frontier"), the Chinese are certainly happy to be there exploiting their neighbors' natural resources and settling hordes of Chinese migrants into those occupied lands.

      --

      Should invading one's peaceful neighbours be opposed, or rewarded with trade deals?

    64. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Young+Master+Ploppy · · Score: 1

      My partner is Chinese. She has a lot of family over there, and most of them would probably say that, on average, they get their fair share of happiness, no more or less than enyone else in any other country. Having talked to many of them myself, the impression I get is that most of them don't really concern themselves with civil rights or democracy campaigns or Falun Gong or Tibet or Taiwan. This is not through callousness or "blinkers", it's certainly not through fear of reprisal. They just don't see it as their business, and if you ask them about it, they'll look at you as if you just asked them for a stoat. They have far more relevant things to think about, like which restaurant to go to when Auntie X arrives, what digital camera to go for, what to give the kids for Christmas.... etc etc. They mostly concern themselves with what's in front of them, and are quite happy to leave politics to the politicians. If you break the law, you'll get punished, and that's that, whatever the rights and wrongs of the laws may be. They are no different from the average American or Brit, in other words. If you think that's harsh, I suggest you take a moment to compare and contrast this with the gradual but undeniable erosion of civil rights and freedoms in the West in favour of corporate interests and "the War On Terror". Of course, I can only speak for the ones I've talked to. Other generalisations are left as an exercise for the reader ;)

      --
      http://instantbadger.blogspot.com
    65. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by kabocox · · Score: 1

      Do some research we weren't nearly as "free" then as you seem to think. Of course this was mainly abit later.
      http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAhooverE.ht m
      http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAhuac.htm

      The Un-American Activities Committee didn't kill people, but that is about the best thing that can be said for the organization and the org that became the FBI of that time. Hoover was the US Hilter. He didn't go in for death camps. IF Hoover didn't like you, or your group or politics, he'd blacklist you so that you couldn't get a job, have FBI agents tail you everywhere, and try to get you deported to Russia at the drop of the hat. IF Hoover was alive and running the FBI today, all Greens, Libertains, any political group "left" of center and politics groups in the "far right", and most of Hollywood would be under FBI watch with files ready for a witch hunt and for them to deported out of the US.

      Hoover was the most Un-American US citizen to ever be in the Federal government. Almost anything that Bush & Ashcroft have done now a days is almost small potatoes to what Hoover did then. I'm only grateful that we live a somewhat more free life now. With the internet, I can throw up a website and build a global community/political party; The internet doesn't mean that any one else would follow my B.S. unless they believed in it themselves. Hoover was against freedom of political thought. He railroaded the Socialist and Communists political parties out of the US, which if is really un_American. (I don't really care for either of the 2 platforms, but having a US government agency push any political party out should be very against our laws on so many levels.) If I want follow or spread the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Spaghetti_Mons terism as a religion or political party, the FBI or other US governments shouldn't have the right to pick up anyone else that follows the FSM asks for all of our members and tries to get us fired from our jobs and removed from the country. Look at the US history; we weren't that much better than the Germans. We had camps of Japanese-Americans. Ours just weren't "death" camps. They could have easily turned that way though.

    66. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Gulthek · · Score: 1

      By your cursory summation of Tibet and Xinjiang, I can tell you have never been there. You should go sometime.

      I highly doubt I would have found smiles if I had been allowed to explore every room in the gulags or concentration camps. Of course, I have been allowed to explore anywhere I wanted to go in Tibet or Xinjiang. Generally, the further from Beijing and urban areas you get, the less oppressive things are. The proverb for the modern day is "Bejing is far away and the mountains are very high."

    67. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by deanoaz · · Score: 1

      >>> * Note: The offer may not apply if you happen to be non-white, non-male or just plain poor.

      Actually it did apply. Millions of people of all kinds flocked to the U.S. with nothing and built good lives for themselves because of the freedoms it offered. Does that mean that every last one of them prospered? No.

      Sometimes you had to find the right place to settle in order to get what you wanted, but freedom and opportunity were there for everyone. The original contention that it bore close resemblence to repressive regimes like Communist China is false.

      By the way, being born a non-white female in the U.S. in the 1920's did not get you killed on the spot. Does it still do that for you in China today?

      --
      If 'the people' in Amendment 2 are 'the state' then Amendments 1, 2, 4, 9, and 10 benefit the state, not you.
    68. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by Pampaluz · · Score: 1



      Sydneyfong typed: "Anybody who has even a slight understanding of Chinese history know that if there is widespread dissatisfaction with the government, the government WILL fall, no matter what opressive practices the government tries to do. Many emperors in recent dynasties tried to prevent uprising from the people by various dubious means, but they all failed -- and they are remembered in history for that."

      Yes, of course--all up until the the invention of gunpowder.

      Do you remember hearing about "the Boxer Rebellion?" Do you think there would have been a "Cultural Revolution" if not for guns and gunpowder, plus any other embellishments and "tools" and techniques which were brought to China courtesy of the British? Add the fact that you didn't have to train a soldier for a minimum of ten years, they way you had to for those amazing kung-fu warriors that previously the Emperors were always requesting of the Shao Lin (and other) Temples to take in and train?

      To just say "gunpowder" like this is a gross simplification of course--yet it is the case that modern warfare technology has changed everything.

      There was more that I wanted to write and post about; but everyone has good points and the discussion has been and is going very well; most of what I would say will most certainly be covered by someone else along the way... and anyway, I'd rather take this moment to post a couple of quotes I read today, which seem to say what I'd wanted to say, only better. These came to me in today's ICH newsletter to which I am subscribed. They seem to address something that bothered me when I was reading various posts in this thread; in the way that people think that something good will come of trying to compare the Government of the PRC with "other" Governments (one's own, perhaps? ;-) as if doing that will actually yield something useful. Anyway, here you go:

      "Patriotism in its simplest, clearest and most indubitable signification is nothing else but a means of obtaining for the rulers their ambitions and covetous desires, and for the ruled the abdication of human dignity, reason, conscience, and a slavish enthrallment to those in power": Leo Toystoy - Demanding the Impossible: a History of Anarchism by Peter Marshall (fontana press 1992) p374

      "The vested interests - if we explain the situation by their influence - can only get the public to act as they wish by manipulating public opinion, by playing either upon the public's indifference, confusions, prejudices, pugnacities or fears. And the only way in which the power of the interests can be undermined and their maneuvers defeated is by bringing home to the public the danger of its indifference, the absurdity of its prejudices, or the hollowness of its fears; by showing that it is indifferent to danger where real danger exists; frightened by dangers which are nonexistent." Sir Norman Angell 1872 - 1967
      -----

      --mVIIs

    69. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by edunbar93 · · Score: 1

      A lot of their policy is guided by a desire to meet their citizens' growing demands for freedom without plunging the country into the state of mafia-ruled anarchy that plagues the former Soviet Union today.

      Today's issue isn't about free-market freedom. It's about free-speech freedom. What kind of a despotic government bans publications because they criticize the government? What kind of actual harm would it do to the *people* if suddenly they were allowed to consider the concept of freedom?

      No, the government banned Wikipedia because somewhere in Wikipedia there is some idea that's dangerous to the government, not the people. Like how the current scandals in the Canadian government are dangerous to the government. Chaos might very well ensue if the people found out that the current government was horribly corrupt and needed to be replaced about 8 years ago, but really, the solution to that isn't rewriting history books or shutting down newspapers. The solution is to allow the public to know as soon as possible, so the problem doesn't get worse, and then demonstratably remove the corrupt elements.

      --
      "No problem. I have the capacity to do infinite work so long as you don't mind that my quality approaches zero."-Dilbert
    70. Re:Back to (Tiananmen) Square One? by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      Um, duh.

      Of course Wikipedia is banned because of ideas dangerous to the government. That's the whole point of the government banning them.

      The debate in this thread has been about whether or not punishing the government with economic sanctions will bring about the change of heart we desire, or only make the problem worse.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  2. Advice: Revolution. by RalphTWaP · · Score: 1

    Soap, Ballot, Ammo; yes, of course.
    Unfortunately the first use must often be in reverse order.

    1. Re:Advice: Revolution. by tomhudson · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Others said the blocking of Wikipedia has been a major blow to their research projects and even to their prospects of passing civil-service exams. 'How can I do my thesis now?' a university student asked on another Chinese website."

      Soap, Ballot, Ammo; yes, of course.

      Unfortunately the first use must often be in reverse order.

      There is a more peaceful solution - just go to the friging library and READ (oh, but that's too hard. I can't just google for the "good bits" - I'll have to read everything IN CONTEXT!)

      "Research" is not the same as a quick google or yahoo. Anyone caught depending entirely on cut-n-paste citations from the web deserves a zero, and only because you can-t award a lower mark.

    2. Re:Advice: Revolution. by Daniel_Staal · · Score: 1

      That depends, of course, on what they are researching. Perhaps they are researching Wikipeida itself, or the social construct that supports collaborative systems.

      Both would make valid, and interesting, topics for a Masters/Phd thesis.

      --
      'Sensible' is a curse word.
    3. Re:Advice: Revolution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Unfortunately for them guns are banned from private citizen(subject/serf) ownership.

      Thankfully in the US such totalitarizn attitudes towards gun ownership have not prevailed, except in NYC, Chicago, NJ, and California. Mostly pushed by power hungry and often hypocritical democrats who do not trust their constituents, yet pack concealed handguns of their own.

      Europe with the exception of Finland and Switzerland seems to have its head up its collective ass too.

    4. Re:Advice: Revolution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, always use in that order; and if you don't have access to one of the boxes, skip, and go to the next one. As they don't have access to the first two; you get the same result.....

    5. Re:Advice: Revolution. by Metasquares · · Score: 1
      From one doing real research, I have to say that the web is far more useful than most libraries when dealing with an esoteric subject or problem. I stopped by my library yesterday looking for some information on a number theory proof I'm constructing. They had nothing, and this is the best library in a sizable portion of New Jersey. All of the useful information I've found so far has come from the web - and it's just about enough to complete the proof with.

      There are no grades in this sort of research. An answer is either correct or incorrect (in math, there's also "probably correct but not a theorem, since you screwed up somewhere along the way" and "too complicated for us to understand so you'll have to do it over"). The goal of the researcher is to use whatever is available to him, including the web, to find the correct answer.


      Besides, what makes you think that they aren't censoring the libraries as well? (Granted, they probably wouldn't care much about subjects like computer science, but what about history or political science?)

    6. Re:Advice: Revolution. by programic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That isn't the approach Eisenhower took with the Soviets. His idea was that to compete globally, they must educate themselves, and that would "sow the seeds of their own destruction." (meaning the destruction of communism). It did.

      It is interesting to know this and see all the Chinese students enrolled in our American universities. I think it is just a matter of time--"holding the line" as Eisenhower called it.

      --
      -- yawn. --
    7. Re:Advice: Revolution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They have no access to the last one either:

      By 1935 the Nationalist government of China forbade the Chinese people to own firearms. This certainly didn't make the Chinese people safer when from 1942-44 four million people died from starvation when the government confiscated their crops. Another four million were tortured and murdered when they didn't want to join the military or were "uncooperative" soldiers. In 1937 hundreds of thousands of the women and children of Nanking were left defenseless against Japanese invaders because of gun control laws forbidding them to defend themselves. They were raped, buried alive, burned alive and forced to watch as their own organs were cut out of them. The worst was yet to come in 1949 when the Communist takeover brought about the murder of another 35 million Chinese. Some historians put the death toll by the Communists as high as 100 million. We can believe Chairman Mao when he told us that guns are the ultimate source of all political power.

    8. Re:Advice: Revolution. by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      My point was that blocking wikipedia wasn't the end of the world.

      The end result of blocking the "Cliff's Notes of the Internet" will probably be an improvement in chinese research relative to the rest of the world.

      Last i looked, wikipedia != Teh IntarWeb :-)

    9. Re:Advice: Revolution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It doesn't matter anyway. The kinds of weapons that are legal for private citizens of the USA to own aren't going to overthrow any modern government. To think otherwise is self-delusion.

    10. Re:Advice: Revolution. by turg · · Score: 1

      I think you're missing the point -- even Googling is too hard. They want to just go to wikipedia and get all the information there.

      --
      <sig>Guvf vf abg n frperg zrffntr
    11. Re:Advice: Revolution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're not? Oh sure, that 30-06 hiding in your basement isn't going to touch a tank, or even pose a major threat to more than three soldiers... But you have to remember, there are fewer of them, and more of us, and by 'them' I mean the administration. Piss off enough people and someone's gonna get it. Too bad someone hasn't been pissed off enough.

    12. Re:Advice: Revolution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Dream on. If it gets to the point where your revolution is warranted, and they suspect you of using your 30-06 against them, they're going to come in the middle of the night and take away you and your family, and you'll never be heard from again. If you try to fight, they'll destroy your house and everything in it.

      In today's world, information, not puny firearms, is power, and any tyrannical government will have a monopoly on information. The only weapons that have any traction at all today are IEDs, and that's only because today's governments allow television news to obsess over these militarily insignificant attacks. Such news coverage surely won't be allowed during your revolution.

  3. ROR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


  4. Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by erick99 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I do enjoy using Wikipedia for day-to-day use but I would not have used it for either of my Masters Thesis' as I don't think either oral defense committee would have accepted Wiki as an authoritative source. Perhaps that is different from school to school. Still, I wonder about the student puzzling how he/she will finish a thesis. I would suggest using mostly journal articles.

    --
    http://www.busyweather.com/
    1. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by MoonFog · · Score: 4, Informative

      I found Wikipedia to be an excellent starting point on several issues when I was writing my thesis, but I did not use it as the source itself. The explanations on wikipedia are often very good and will give some insight into a topic you can explore further with more indepth research papers.

    2. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      If you are using any encyclopedia as an authoritative source of information, I would be highly skeptical.

      I guess if you were doing your masters thesis on some aspect of the Wikipedia community, then I guess it would be authoritative on that, but not much else...

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    3. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      I'd go so far as to say any student using primarily Wikipedia as a source hasn't learned how to search for information- or how to discern a good source from a bad one. On that alone, their doctorate should be denied.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    4. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by NanoGradStudent · · Score: 1

      I agree. It's good for a quick lookup or as a starting point (especially into a subject with which you have little/no familiarity) or even some mental loitering, but sure as heck shouldn't be the determining factor of a thesis (unless it's some kind of sociology thesis on Wikipedia itself)

      --
      Just a little guy, y'know?
    5. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by The+Man · · Score: 1

      Agreed. The only value wikipedia could have is as a starting point to look for material, or perhaps to select a topic of interest. It's unusable as a source; the format, anonymous nature, and lack of qualified peer review are fatal. The concept is right but the rigor and accountability necessary to give an article credibility are absent. Worse still, encyclopedias (not just wikipedia) don't normally describe the process of arriving at facts, only the facts themselves, and without the background and process the articles have little credibility no matter who's writing them. I have to wonder what a student would need Wikipedia for if he's already working on his thesis. Uncyclopedia is a much better way to waste time while you're supposed to be writing.

    6. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by ziggyzig · · Score: 1

      It's not the fact that these Chinese students are using Wiki as a source, but more an issue because the Chinese government is banning access to information that they do not find aggreable.

    7. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. If you're using a Wiki as a thesis source, then perhaps you haven't been taught the proper way to approach research. China has already had problems with students faking GRE scores and coming over to the US. I've seen 2 instances where the person interviewed on the phone and the person who showed up for the postdoc position were not the same person.

    8. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by DrEldarion · · Score: 1

      Also, many articles link to other, more respected sources. You may not be able to use the wiki article itself, but it does give you a range of other places to look at.

    9. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by Loether · · Score: 1

      I had the same thought initially. Then I thought maybe the students thesis is on Wiki or multi editor anonymous information systems.

      I bet it's closer to a general frustration. "First you shut down this useful site now you shut down Wiki. What's next?"

      The US isn't perfect but at least it's not China. ;)

      --
      TODO create witty sig.
    10. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by kula.shinoda · · Score: 1

      While wikipedia may not be a good source to cite, articles often link to more authoritive, valuable sources (including references to papers etc.). Wikipedia is a good way to find relevant websites and documents quickly.

      Of course, anything written on wikipedia should be taken with a grain of salt.

      --
      Real men don't write sigs
    11. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by AxelBoldt · · Score: 1
      I would suggest using mostly journal articles.

      I would suggest not trusting those either.

    12. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To further support this guys argument, Wikipedia isn't peer reviewed. An older article on Slashdot appeared quite some time ago where someone tested Wikipedia for wrong information. They intentionally submitted incorrect information to see how long it would remain. I believe he said after two years, it was never corrected, and he fixed it himself.

      I actually do teach on the college level, and I wouldn't allow Wikipedia as a source to be cited. That said, it is a good source of information. But get the info there first, then track down the original works for the proper citations.

    13. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by NitsujTPU · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely correct. I have never ever used Wikipedia as an aid in research. Most of the professors that I have studied under or worked for would be horrified if I cited it. I have seen few, if any papers cite it ever.

      Wikipedia just has little to nothing to do with that.

    14. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by cryfreedomlove · · Score: 1

      Does this mean the Chinese ban is ok?

    15. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by Krach42 · · Score: 1

      The only value wikipedia could have is as a starting point to look for material, or perhaps to select a topic of interest. It's unusable as a source; the format, anonymous nature, and lack of qualified peer review are fatal. The concept is right but the rigor and accountability necessary to give an article credibility are absent.

      Wikipedia also lends weight of credibility upon validation of the information it contains.

      Interestingly, as far as everyone faults Wikipedia for containing "lies" and "damned lies", it's surprising that Wikipedia is as accurate as it is.

      For informal research, Wikipedia is an invaluable resource.

      --

      I am unamerican, and proud of it!
    16. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by idlemachine · · Score: 1
      Still, I wonder about the student puzzling how he/she will finish a thesis.

      Perhaps their thesis is actually about some aspect of the Wikipedia project?

      Given the frequency of Wikipedia articles lately, it'd be nice if just once we could discuss the site without everyone having to register their yays & nays for the project first.

    17. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by The+Man · · Score: 1
      For informal research, Wikipedia is an invaluable resource.

      Sure, it's fine for informal research, idle curiosity, and perhaps even settling bar bets although I wouldn't recommend it for that. It's completely inappropriate for scholarly work, which is what this particular thread is about. Note also that wikipedia is only a little worse for scholarly work than any other encyclopedia, and that has nothing to do with the accuracy of any particular article or even the collection as a whole. I'm not suggesting that wikipedia is a cesspool of lies. I'm suggesting that to an uninformed researcher there's no way to know whether a particular article is accurate (to say nothing of complete), who wrote it, or - most importantly - how the conclusions in it were arrived at.

    18. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by Krach42 · · Score: 1

      I can only agree.

      Many people imply though that wikipedia is essentially wrong (competing research products often present this view, of course they're biased) or at least so to the point that it is worthless as an academic or for any research.

      Of course it's valid for research. It's hardly credible enough to use as a citation for a fact, or detail, but it's certainly sufficient for research. Depending on how strict citation and demonstrating sources are, it may even be sufficient for use in lower levels of education, where the standards of evidence are minimal, and the important thing is to learn how to support ideas from other sources.

      Hell, in my High School we had some 10 year old Encyclopedias that were essentially all that we had available to do research with.

      --

      I am unamerican, and proud of it!
    19. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a real thesis is about work that has never been done before - so how can the word of some 3rd party person help your new research out?

    20. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      I do enjoy using Wikipedia for day-to-day use but I would not have used it for either of my Masters Thesis' as I don't think either oral defense committee would have accepted Wiki as an authoritative source.

      No one claims Wikipedia should be used as an "authoritative source". In fact, Wikipedia is quite clear that Original Research is not even allowed there.

    21. Re:Wikipedia may not always be the best choice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like seriously, how did anyone ever get anything done without the Internet? It's amazing to think that people actually survived without computers during a very small portion of the history of the world! Wow!

  5. Must be pretty bad off in China.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if you are using Wikipedia as a sole source of information.

    our professor wont even let us cite it in college. he makes us use a crummy encyclopedia that isn't checked for accuracy like Wikipedia is such as Britanica.

    1. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 1
      if you are using Wikipedia as a sole source of information. our professor wont even let us cite it in college. he makes us use a crummy encyclopedia that isn't checked for accuracy like Wikipedia is such as Britanica.

      Does your school offer any English language classes such as introductory grammar and spelling?

      --
      "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    2. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by donnyspi · · Score: 1

      Just think, people like him could be contributing stuff to Wikipedia *this very moment*.

    3. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by LionMage · · Score: 2, Interesting
      he makes us use a crummy encyclopedia that isn't checked for accuracy like Wikipedia is such as Britanica.

      Are you serious?

      First of all, I can't imagine a college professor letting you get away with citing an encyclopedia at all. The whole point of doing college assignments is learning to use primary sources of information. This isn't high school!

      Secondly, Britannica has much better fact checking than Wikipedia. The fact that some Wikipedia articles have glaring errors that don't get caught and corrected for months at a stretch is bad; some of these errors are the result of intentional vandalism, and unless you've been living under a rock the last few months, you're no doubt aware that some of this vandalism is in fact libel. I'd link to the Slashdot coverage of the most famous of these events, but it looks like you need a refresher course in doing basic research...

      Don't assume that just because Wikipedia is being scanned by a bunch of eyeballs every day, that Wikipedia must automatically be better fact-checked. Not every reader of Wikipedia is an expert, so not every reader is qualified to make revisions or write authoritatively on the "facts" presented. Furthermore, not all articles on Wikipedia are checked equally; the more popular articles get more eyeballs than the obscure articles.
    4. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by edunbar93 · · Score: 1

      He makes us use a crummy encyclopedia that isn't checked for accuracy like Wikipedia is; such as Britanica

      Yeah, that's why they refer to it as "Canonical". ;)

      --
      "No problem. I have the capacity to do infinite work so long as you don't mind that my quality approaches zero."-Dilbert
    5. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could at least be fair to the poster.

      You only partially quoted him and then removed the linebreaks to make it appear he wrote a fragmented run-on sentence.

    6. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by d-e-w · · Score: 1
      Secondly, Britannica has much better fact checking than Wikipedia.

      Actually, having known people who have worked for Britannica, that's not quite true. None of them were surprised by the recent research that showed that Wikipedia's accuracy and Britannica's accuracy were pretty similar on well-researched and popular topics.

      (In fact, at least one of the said something along the lines that *only* finding three major errors per article in Britannica was pretty damn good. ;)

    7. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 1
      You only partially quoted him and then removed the line breaks to make it appear he wrote a fragmented run-on sentence.

      OK, I didn't get the line break in there, but the quote is complete , as is the capitalization and punctuation.

      --
      "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    8. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by jacoplane · · Score: 1

      While the parent was probably just flaming, you haven't exactly "checked your facts" either. ;)

    9. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 1
      Don't assume that just because Wikipedia is being scanned by a bunch of eyeballs every day, that Wikipedia must automatically be better fact-checked.

      Isn't this the backbone of Open Source's argument of superiority? More eyeballs? So are you saying there may be a critical flaw in this idea? That it might just be blind dogma and politics?

      --
      "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    10. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      No its not. He started the sentence off in the subject line and continued it in the body.

      Maybe he didn't punctuate or capitalize very well but at least he communicated his thoughts clearly, which is more than can be said for a majority of the posters here.

      It is a pretty sad statement of the sate of things here when you would rather talk about grammatical mechanics than actually debate the merits of the argument.

    11. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FWIW, Nature only checked a small subset of article in both encyclopedias.

      It is not really fair to make a blanket statement about either encyclopedia as a whole based on one study of a small subset of articles.

      Should I dare go check Nature's history of errors and then try to paint that picture on their credibility of being able to check other people's information for accuracy?

    12. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by jacoplane · · Score: 1

      I agree, so saying that either Britannica or Wikipedia has better fact checking is pretty much a baseless claim.

    13. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      It is a pretty sad statement of the sate of things here when you would rather talk about grammatical mechanics than actually debate the merits of the argument.

      The "merits" of his argument are as solid as the piss-poor grammer. And, I think you will find the majority of "eyeballs" at Slashdot today agree.

      Toodles...

      --
      "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    14. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by tabbser · · Score: 0

      I agree wholeheartedly.
      I think that if the poster cannot be bothered to construct a real sentence then the chances of his argument being well constructed approach zero.

    15. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by LionMage · · Score: 1

      More eyeballs is not an automatic guarantee of anything... so I guess in a sense I am saying yes, there may be a flaw in the OS argument for that paradigm's superiority. I think there is a measure of blind dogma and politics underlying the Open Source movement.

      However, I'd be hard pressed to call this a critical flaw as you have done. And surely there are OS projects where the contributors are all competent people; the users of Wikipedia, on the other hand, are all over the spectrum of competency. See the difference?

      Furthermore, I haven't said anything regarding the other benefits and advantages of Open Source. So don't go putting words in my mouth. :-)

    16. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 0, Troll

      Just making wild assumptions. This is Slashdot, you know.

      --
      "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    17. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by LionMage · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Wikipedia's accuracy and Britannica's accuracy were pretty similar on well-researched and popular topics

      I quoted the above snippet from your comment to amplify a point -- what about the Wikipedia articles that aren't as popular and aren't as well-researched? At least with more traditional encyclopedias like Britannica, there's a certain minimum standard of fact checking and research that goes into each article before it is included. I don't think the same can be said for Wikipedia.

      And, as I've said elsewhere, Britannica doesn't have a problem with vandalism.

      This isn't to say that I don't find Wikipedia useful... just not authoritative from an academic standpoint.
    18. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by d-e-w · · Score: 1

      the Wikipedia articles that aren't as popular and aren't as well-researched

      A lot of those aren't even going to be in Britannica. No, Wikipedia isn't authoritative from an academic standpoint, but neither is Britannica once you get past the 4th grade. In reality, they're just about equal in the academic viewpoint: they're both pretty much a pile of crap.

      (Or, the 4th grade was the last time I was allowed to use any of the Britannica-like sources for much of anything in school.)

    19. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by d-e-w · · Score: 1

      As a followup to my other post: what I'm trying to say is that I find the Britannica versus Wikipedia arguments both useless and amusing. Not because Wikipedia is (or should be acknowledged to be) that good a source of information, but because--within K-12 education and academia--Britannica is widely acknowledged to be just about as academically useless a resource as Wikipedia.

    20. Re:Must be pretty bad off in China.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And, as I've said elsewhere, Britannica doesn't have a problem with vandalism.

      Au contraire! I once drew a peepee in the margins.

  6. I am surprised by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not by the ban, but that in fact some people cannot do their thesis? Is so much information actually valid and only on wikipedia, that they cannot do their thesis work?

    1. Re:I am surprised by muyuubyou · · Score: 1

      They could also do some research on HTTP proxies.

    2. Re:I am surprised by craigob · · Score: 1

      That's a nice thought. Too bad someone who does that in China is subject to going to prison if caught. The U.S. government isn't too far behind if we keep letting it get away with assuming more power.

  7. Sorry, but using wiki for research is like by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    using an Encyclopedia. There was a reason they stopped letting you use them after the 6th grade.

  8. They're just mad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    That wikipedia blamed John Seigenthaler for the Tiananmen Square conspiracy.

    1. Re:They're just mad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, now that's funny. Proof that humor can be found in even the darkest corners.

  9. what will they do!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its hard to plagiarize when you can't find someone else's work to steal.

  10. Haven't they heard... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that you're not supposed to use wikipedia for "real research"(tm)?

    1. Re:Haven't they heard... by compro01 · · Score: 1

      that you're not supposed to use wikipedia for "real research"(tm)?

      yes, but wikipedia is often a very handy springboard. well-written articles are essays in of themselves, and thus have several referenced sources, ranging from books, to published scientific studies available on the web, and such studies are often very difficult to find using normal search methods (Google, for example), as they're buried deep in various databases, and sometimes aren't indexed by Google due to the robots.txt being configured to prevent that.

      and also, even if the study is in the results, the whole "sifting through the crap" in a web search makes it further problematic.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    2. Re:Haven't they heard... by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

      that you're not supposed to use wikipedia for "real research"(tm)?

      *AHEM*

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Trees_(struc ture)
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_mining

      doo dee dum...

    3. Re:Haven't they heard... by voice_of_all_reason · · Score: 1

      I think you're confusing their policy on not putting "original research" into Wikipedia.

      Like, for example, I edit the article on Meat to add "My Uncle Billy says eating pork makes you smart."

  11. "Research" on Wikipedia? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Surely you mean "reference." People actually use Wikipedia as a primary source?

  12. If this guy's thesis depends on Wikipedia... by winkydink · · Score: 4, Funny

    then one has to question the quality of Chinese degrees.

    --

    "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    1. Re:If this guy's thesis depends on Wikipedia... by rellix · · Score: 1

      Let's just say he wouldn't exactly pass with flying colors. I'm sure not *every* degree seeking student uses wikipedia.

      --
      rellix
    2. Re:If this guy's thesis depends on Wikipedia... by mymaxx · · Score: 1

      If its anything like their cars then I wouldn't put too much stock in them.

    3. Re:If this guy's thesis depends on Wikipedia... by Surt · · Score: 1

      then? If you haven't been questioning the quality of chinese degrees until now ...

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    4. Re:If this guy's thesis depends on Wikipedia... by globalar · · Score: 1

      I agree, Wikipedia is not a source for scholarship. (The concept and application are not reliable to that end.) I disagree that a thesis cannot depend upon Wikipedia.

          Wikipedia can be used as an object of scholarship - to inquire about the successfulness of collaboration on the Internet, the evolution of articles over time, and as a case study for any number of things. Wikipedia can be studied and it is a fascinating phenomena - NPOV vs. POV debates, mechanism of accountability (such as they are), and how the community functions are all interesting. An economic, political, psychological, or sociological analysis of Wikipedia could be very enlightening. One could even consider philosophical claims in light of Wikipedia's alleged success. The point being, research studying the Internet is valid - Wikipedia included.

    5. Re:If this guy's thesis depends on Wikipedia... by badmammajamma · · Score: 1

      Yeah, cuz U.S. degrees mean so much...

      Please, unless you go to an ivy league school, Cal Tech, MIT, etc. your degree doesn't mean jack shit. I know WAY too many people who coast through college. It's a joke.

      --
      Any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood. -- H. L. Mencken
    6. Re:If this guy's thesis depends on Wikipedia... by Jester6641 · · Score: 1

      Hey, I've worked at a Chinese school. You should be concerned about Chinese degrees. Most of the papers I recieved got big "F"s after I'd put the first line into google and find the whole thing written already. I have no doubt that the loss of Wikipedia means a significant loss of readable English papers in the halls of higher education throughout China.

      --
      Jester

      Warning: This sig may be legally binding in England.
    7. Re:If this guy's thesis depends on Wikipedia... by typical · · Score: 1

      Please, unless you go to an ivy league school, Cal Tech, MIT, etc. your degree doesn't mean jack shit.

      Your degree still doesn't need to mean jack shit.

      What you learn depends mostly on what you want to learn. You can coast along and get decent grades by just cramming before exams and not reading any of your textbooks or reading until you really, fully understand everything. You aren't gonna learn much, though.

      --
      Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    8. Re:If this guy's thesis depends on Wikipedia... by badmammajamma · · Score: 1

      "You can coast along and get decent grades by just cramming before exams and not reading any of your textbooks or reading until you really, fully understand everything."

      Not at Cal Tech or MIT. You'll wash out.

      --
      Any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood. -- H. L. Mencken
  13. duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Others said the blocking of Wikipedia has been a major blow to their research projects and even to their prospects of passing civil-service exams. 'How can I do my thesis now?' a university student asked on another Chinese website."

    how about use a real encyclopedia?

  14. Quality Graduates by biocute · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Does that mean China is serious about competing with the world, thus imposing the ban to ensure quality graduates in the future?

  15. And why... by Quaoar · · Score: 0, Redundant

    ...are they using Wikipedia for thesis work in the first place? Not that I agree with it being banned, but Wikipedia isn't exactly a "trusted" source anyway.

    --
    I'll form my OWN solar system! With blackjack! And hookers!
  16. Research? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since when is Wikipedia a good source for research or a thesis?

    1. Re:Research? by khallow · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Read through the disclaimers sometime. I can see how Wikipedia could help with some types of research. It does usually provide references to real sources, but (*boggle*) government service exams? I use Wikipedia for checking out technologies, fads, people, expressions, etc, but I wouldn't ever rely on them as a credible source.

  17. Can't do research? Don't use Wikipedia for it! by TwentyLeaguesUnderLa · · Score: 0, Redundant

    While banning Wikipedia is certainly a significant inconvenience, it shouldn't impact anyone's actual research... it's not the kind of source one would use in even an undergraduate thesis.

  18. Quit Whining! by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 4, Funny

    They may have blocked wikipedia, but they still have the uncyclopedia as a backup, so they should be good to go on their research- especially considering today's WotD;-)

    --
    If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
    1. Re:Quit Whining! by Inquisitor911 · · Score: 1

      Uncyclopedia is NOT a reliable source at all.

  19. "How can I do my thesis now?" by AxemRed · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Use a paper encyclopedia.

    //Sorry, the quote made me laugh.

    1. Re:"How can I do my thesis now?" by Ibag · · Score: 1

      The commend made me laugh too, but not because the answer is to use an encyclopedia. Encyclopedias might be useful for getting a quick summery of ideas related to a topic, perhaps to suggest directions for research, but it is an entirely innapropriate source for information for a thesis. Even if one ignores the fact that a thesis should be mostly new research, the resources one uses should be books, scholarly journals, primary sources, and the like. If a wikipedia article is useful for more than inspiration and a list of references, you are doing your thesis completely wrong.

      That said, there are a lot of times when Wikipedia is both useful and convenient. Just, not when one is writing a thesis.

    2. Re:"How can I do my thesis now?" by AxemRed · · Score: 1

      Ya, I agree with you. The "paper encyclopedia" comment was just the first thing that popped into my head.

    3. Re:"How can I do my thesis now?" by fiendy · · Score: 1

      As one of the previous posters correctly pointed out, no type of encyclopedia is appropriate for thesis research. Primary sources should be used. I wouldn't even use an encyclopedia in a high school essay. Its just bad form.

      Not to mention including it in a References/Works Cited section would get you laughed at.

      I suppose he could have been using Wiki for its links to other primary sources on a topic, however there are many other (better) ways of finding that - library searches, search engines, etc.

      I would never use wiki to do anything other than a quick background myself.

  20. Chinese need a Satmodem by digitaldc · · Score: 3, Informative

    Using a satellite modem or Satmodem, you can bypass the censors.
    Read more about it here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satellite_modem
    Or, maybe not.

    For anyone who can read this in China...try http://www.zensur.freerk.com/

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
    1. Re:Chinese need a Satmodem by Kojo · · Score: 1

      I'm in China now. I can't get to that last link, just like Wikipedia and a lot of other stuff.

  21. Thesis? by Beetle+B. · · Score: 1

    "'How can I do my thesis now?'"

    Journals?

    --
    Beetle B.
    1. Re:Thesis? by jqpublic13 · · Score: 1

      Hmmm... I seem to recall a recent South Korean researcher making the journal option just slightly less trust-worthy...

      --
      Non calor sed umor est qui nobis incommodat.
  22. 0==000~~ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Me chinese, me play joke, me put pee pee in your coke.

  23. Thesis project? by jonathonjones · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Are the Chinese really so starved for research material that Wikipedia would be an appropriate source for writing a thesis? Unless the thesis is about websites or the way information is processed online, or something similar (so that they are using Wikipedia as a paradigm), it just seems bizarre that Wikipedia would actually be used in this way. Maybe it is much worse over there than I had thought.

  24. Major blow to research?? by truthsearch · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Wikipedia has been a major blow to their research projects...

    Unless their researching social networking and open content systems that's really sad. I can't believe the content on Wikipedia should serve as a very significant source to any research other than to it's social influences. That would be like saying Britannica was a major source for a research project... that couldn't possibly be taken seriously.

    It's certainly a blow to free speech. But if this hurts any unrelated research projects those projects should find much better sources anyway.

    1. Re:Major blow to research?? by bigpat · · Score: 1

      Unless their researching social networking and open content systems that's really sad. I can't believe the content on Wikipedia should serve as a very significant source to any research other than to it's social influences. That would be like saying Britannica was a major source for a research project... that couldn't possibly be taken seriously.

      I think that is exactly right. Neither Britannica, Wikipedia or any encyclopedia type publication should be used as a primary source or even to verify information for any purpose except for the most trivial. I was taught to use encyclopedias as primary sources in elementary school and was untaught this practice in high school and college. If anything an encyclopedia should be used to help learn more about a subject so that you can figure out where to start doing real research using primary sources. I think the education system would be well served by teaching this as early as possible.

  25. Re:What is this, fourth grade? by jmnormand · · Score: 1

    perhaps wiki was part of the subject and not the sources?

  26. The nerve! by DietCoke · · Score: 1

    A real encyclopedia? What the hell are you thinking? That'd require getting off one's ass for 30 seconds.

  27. Other sources of research by khaledh · · Score: 3, Insightful
    How can I do my thesis now? a university student asked on another Chinese website.

    How did all grad students complete their theses before the Wikipedia era? As a matter of fact, grads don't refer to encyclopedias when doing research. They refer more often to the literature (books, scientific journals, conference proceedings, etc.)

    There's even sites dedicated to research literature. Try CiteSeer http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/, or even Google Scholar http://scholar.google.com/.

    Of coures Wikipedia can help a lot when you want to have a quick reference on subject matter, but there are also much more comprehensive avenues of research that can be used.

    1. Re:Other sources of research by kebes · · Score: 1

      How did all grad students complete their theses before the Wikipedia era?

      Okay, you're right. It's silly to say that you cannot complete a thesis without access to Wikipedia. Obviously it can be done. Many grad students in North America don't even know Wikipedia exists, yet somehow they finish their thesis.

      But the greater issue here is, obviously, the censoring of information. The more sources you restrict, the less useful the remaining information you have is. If you had access to *only* Wikipedia, that wouldn't be very good, because you can't double-check any of its facts. But not having access to Wikipedia also sucks, because you've lost an invaluable tool for learning about new subjects and finding new references.

      The point is that this student, apparently, found Wikipedia to be a very valuable tool, and now he can't use. Yes there are other tools out there, but as more and more sources are systematically removed, his life (writing his thesis) becomes harder and harder. The fact that data is being censored systematically (not randomly) obviously makes this even worse. You KNOW that the information you have access to is biased. Wikipiedia is one source that works hard to remove bias, and present balanced accounts, and now that source is gone.

      As a matter of fact, grads don't refer to encyclopedias when doing research.

      Well that's not really fair. When I do research, I never quote Wikipedia (or any encyclopedia) as a "source"... but I look up things on Wikipedia about 10 to 80 times a day. It's amazing for getting a quick definition, and introductory explanation, or whatever. When reading all kinds of obscure scientific articles, I often need a quick definition of some new word or field. Wikipedia gives me that. So while Wikipedia never ends up being cited in papers I publish, it is nevertheless one of the best time-saving tools I have at my disposal. So yes, scientists and grad students use wikipedia quite a bit when doing research. (Although not as a primary, quotable source.)

      To summarize: I don't think this issue is about Wikipedia per se. Wikipedia is one very painful loss on a long list of things that have been censored in China. Any individual thing won't make writing a thesis impossible... but taken together: yes it is impossible to write a decent thesis when access to information has been restricted.

    2. Re:Other sources of research by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      There's even sites dedicated to research literature. Try CiteSeer http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/, or even Google Scholar http://scholar.google.com/.

      Or a building called "a library".

      I'm pretty sure that all universities have those, even in China.

  28. Chinese Encyclopedia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a major loss. Have you ever tried to use a Chinese encyclopedia? It consists of 30,000 volumes, each with a single entry.

  29. Does nyud.net:8090 work in china? by Killer+Instinct · · Score: 1

    Just curious, but wouldnt it be simple to just use the nyud.net:8090 "trick" for viewing wikpedia? Or is that blocked in China as well?

    --
    #include bier;
    1. Re:Does nyud.net:8090 work in china? by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 2, Funny

      Of course it works. The Chinese censors know nothing of these complicated "Interweb" tricks.

      --
      "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
  30. Re:What is this, fourth grade? by MrTester · · Score: 1

    Unless, of course, their thesis is on the unreliability of Wikipedia....

  31. SMTP? by JLennox · · Score: 1

    They'd be doing the world a favor by blocking access to anon. SMTP servers.

  32. Do any of you understand the research process? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Wikipedia is a great source of information for research papers, specifically the Wikipedia citations. Wikipedia allows a broad overview of a subject, which is helpful in guiding the author, but overall its principle value is a collection of relevant, human-verified links, many of which lead to primary authorities on the subject matter.

    I almost always head to Wikipedia before Google when doing research, for this reason. (I work in SEO, by the way)

    1. Re:Do any of you understand the research process? by VMaN · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia is a great source of information for research papers, specifically the Wikipedia citations. Wikipedia allows a broad overview of a subject, which is helpful in guiding the author, but overall its principle value is a collection of relevant, human-verified links, many of which lead to primary authorities on the subject matter.

      I almost always head to Wikipedia before Google when doing research, for this reason. (I work in SEO, by the way)


      Exactly, had to read thrugh 100 posts complaining about wikipedia being useless for this sort of work, when the true value isn't the article itself, but the sources to all those nice little tidbits.

    2. Re:Do any of you understand the research process? by Winterblink · · Score: 1

      All I understand is that people were able to write papers before Wikipedia, Google, and the internet.

      --
      "I'm a leaf on the wind. Watch how I soar."
      -Hoban Washburn
    3. Re:Do any of you understand the research process? by Knara · · Score: 1

      Shallow Earth Orbit?

  33. American Left by the+computer+guy+nex · · Score: 0, Troll

    Saddam has killed hundreds of thousands of innocent citizens. He has tried to invade other countries and attempted to extend his missle program to ICBM's. America frees the country, backed by a 99-0 vote in the senate, then the Left complains.

    When another country simply rejects access to a website filled with unsubstantiated information, the Left is up in arms demanding action.

    The hypocracy of the radical left in this country is truely amazing.

    1. Re:American Left by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The word you're looking for is "hypocrisy".

    2. Re:American Left by deKernel · · Score: 1

      I really hope you have your flame-suit on with this. By the way, I completely agree with you.

    3. Re:American Left by k4_pacific · · Score: 1

      Hypocracy, n. A lack of leadership. From Greek hypos (little) and kratein (to rule). Thus you seem to be saying that it is amazing the left is not in charge. I concur completely after how well Iraq went.

      --
      Unknown host pong.
    4. Re:American Left by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hypocracy

      Spelling, n. The forming of words from letters according to accepted usage.

    5. Re:American Left by unix_core · · Score: 1

      So you think the chinese goverment really is spending very large resources censoring the internet just becase they don't want their pepole to read information from uncertain sources? They are sencoring it so that pepole won't find out about what they've done in the past! China does not even have free elections! The funny thing is, the only reason the american right doesn't hate China above anything else (like before) is because their large corporations are now able to exploit the chineese market and cheap labour. Suddenly, human rights and weapons of mass destruction doesn't mean shit to the american right, well, except for in Irak which they're not making money from yet... (well, I guess they will soon unless the country falls apart completely). If China would suddenly stop cooperating with the US, you can be sure that FhoaxNews would be reporing about the lack of human rights in China 24/7.

    6. Re:American Left by idsofmarch · · Score: 1
      I think this is a textbook example of a troll. If I had mod points I'd label you offtopic to boot.

      Also, Saddam is no longer in power, so you would use the past tense.

      Dummy.

      --
      Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
  34. Imagine, if you will... by Billosaur · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Every government official in China editing a Wikipedia entry - talk about re-writing history! Perhaps Wikipedia should be blocking China.

    --
    GetOuttaMySpace - The Anti-Social Network
    1. Re:Imagine, if you will... by OakDragon · · Score: 1
      Perhaps Wikipedia should be blocking China

      In Soviet Russia...

      Nah, I'm not gonna say it...

    2. Re:Imagine, if you will... by cryptochrome · · Score: 1

      Rewriting history in broken english maybe... but this gweilo isn't too worried about that.

      --

      ---If you can't trust a nerd, who can you trust?

    3. Re:Imagine, if you will... by Hugonz · · Score: 1

      In Communist China, Wikipedia bans YOU!

    4. Re:Imagine, if you will... by EiZei · · Score: 1

      Try looking up falun gong or tianamen edit histories.. don't know if it's inviduals, trolls or the chinese goverment but sometimes you occasionally see somebody trying to turn the thing into a PRC-approved textbook history.

  35. Hmm...context missing. by Benanov · · Score: 1

    True, but what if his thesis is about Wikipedia itself?

    1. Re:Hmm...context missing. by digitaldc · · Score: 1

      True, but what if his thesis is about Wikipedia itself?

      Simple, just start a Revolution.

      --
      He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  36. Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Roadkills-R-Us · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't know if China as we know it is more doomed by their absurd governmental policies, or by the fact that their uyounger generation's research seems to depend on the archived wisdom of random people on the street. I'll grant Wikipedia is getting better, but (a) to depend on it as a primary source of scholarship at this point is absurd and (b) even in China, especially at universities, there are other options.

    Unless one's thesis is on the Wikipedia, anyone depending oslely on Wikipedia for research needs a reality slap.

  37. This is why free trade does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The so called "free trade" theory that says we have to let in all the H1-B visas and illegal immigrants and that China can cherry pick whichever industries they want to is a failure for this reason. China and India and Mexico can force us into accepting their predatory pricing on labor and cheap goods, but we can't export the "New York Times" and "Fox News". Mexicans can buy houses in America but Americans can't buy beach front property in Mexico.

    If China bans our products, I say we ban Chinese products.

    1. Re:This is why free trade does not work. by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Your arguments would be applicable if the current global economy was in fact a "free trade" market. However in most places, it is far, far away from such a state.

      The current outsourcing to China has less to do with free markets than it has to do with artifical barriers creating global imbalance over the last 60 years.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    2. Re:This is why free trade does not work. by VaamYob · · Score: 1
      If China bans our products, I say we ban Chinese products.
      Yeah, I never liked those ipods, or my nike sneakers, or my laptop...
  38. Remember the tanks by matt+me · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Excuse me, think back to that guy, standing in the path of the line of tanks, and stopping them. Even if it accomplished nothing locally, that has to be one of THE most touching images of the last century, that has inspired thousands to get up stand up for their rights.

    1. Re:Remember the tanks by eldavojohn · · Score: 1
      Excuse me, think back to that guy, standing in the path of the line of tanks, and stopping them. Even if it accomplished nothing locally, that has to be one of THE most touching images of the last century, that has inspired thousands to get up stand up for their rights.
      You're excused.

      But certainly you can think of more moving moments than that. What about the buddhist monk who set himself on fire in public to protest Vietnam?

      I'm not saying anyone should go to that length. I'm just saying if he only inspired thousands (like you said), then he certainly fell short as China has a population near one billion.
      --
      My work here is dung.
    2. Re:Remember the tanks by matt+me · · Score: 1

      I don't think many of us would consider burning ourselves as a form of protest even if the situation was useless. Hum was he inspired by the Rage cover :P

    3. Re:Remember the tanks by eldavojohn · · Score: 0, Troll
      I don't think many of us would consider burning ourselves as a form of protest even if the situation was useless.
      I would consider burning one's self alive the ultimate form of protest.

      Hum was he inspired by the Rage cover :P
      A man burns and a band capitalizes off of it. Further more, you joke about it. I guess death isn't as serious as it used to be.
      --
      My work here is dung.
    4. Re:Remember the tanks by susano_otter · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The thing about death is, the only thing you can do about it is laugh.

      It's inevitable. What are you going to do? Spend your time moping about the end in store for you? Or live your life with verve and panache?

      "Was he inspired by the Rage cover"? Good stuff.

      Almost as good as that Fark p-shop showing the Vietnamese general holding a Starbucks coffee mug to the head of a captured Viet Cong guerrilla. That was comedy gold.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    5. Re:Remember the tanks by iceperson · · Score: 1

      [i]I would consider burning one's self alive the ultimate form of protest.[/i] yeah. in the same was as me looking at a guy raping my sister and saying "if you don't stop i'll kick her in the face."

    6. Re:Remember the tanks by BewireNomali · · Score: 1

      verve and panache. lol. well said.

      If I had mod points...

      --
      un burrito me trampeó.
    7. Re:Remember the tanks by anaesthetica · · Score: 1
      That guy is known as "Tank Man" or "The Unknown Rebel".

      Here's the picture: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Tianasquare.jpg

    8. Re:Remember the tanks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      remember New Orleans - Katrina.

    9. Re:Remember the tanks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A man burns and a band capitalizes off of it. Further more, you joke about it. I guess death isn't as serious as it used to be.

      You think that's a new thing? Humor about death has always existed. If you haven't noticed yet, people use humor to deal with hardship. And thank god! If I didn't have humor to take the edge off I'd kill myself!

  39. Red China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Such a waste

  40. In other news... by hosecoat · · Score: 5, Funny
    "'How can I do my thesis now?' a university student asked on another Chinese website."

    China's response was to block the 'other Chinese website' as well.

    1. Re:In other news... by BobearQSI · · Score: 1

      What about an encrypted tunnel to a proxy server in the US, or anywhere for that matter?

    2. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps it's already been said, but if you can't write your thesis without Wikipedia, you probably don't deserve the degree...

  41. Nothing beats a gumshoe by dclydew · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There seems to be a common theme in cop and detective stories... young hero that wants to use the latest technology to solve crimes and an old grizzled cop that says something like "In the end, you only solve crimes by hitting the pavement and asking questions".

    It seems that the advice could apply in many areas. The Internet and its features may be great tools... but in the end, if you're trying to honestly research something, nothing beats cracking some books and reading, comprehending and putting it all together. Wikipedia should not be a critical resource for anyone but blog commenters, and then only because speed and words that sound authoritative seem more in demand than facts.

    --
    Get a life, not a lifestyle. - Hikem Bey
    1. Re:Nothing beats a gumshoe by slavemowgli · · Score: 1

      That's like saying that you shouldn't be disappointed when your car's taken away because you can always walk. Sure, you can, but it's rather inconvenient, especially when you *know* that everyone else has access to a fantastic tool - just not you.

      --
      quidquid latine dictum sit altum videtur.
    2. Re:Nothing beats a gumshoe by vertinox · · Score: 1

      The Internet and its features may be great tools... but in the end, if you're trying to honestly research something, nothing beats cracking some books and reading, comprehending and putting it all together.

      But aren't books faced with the same problem? Or do they seem to be authorities because no one can simply walk up to your book while you are reading it and change a few lines here and there if they were incorrect.

      I've run across a few books with these kind of errors, but on the bright side good authors will correct their mistakes and publish better editions. Take Stephen Hawking's 10th Anniversary book of the "Brief History of Time". He went back and modified it to correct certian areas (mostly about the bets that he lost that at the time) in he believed to be correct and admitted his mistake in the book and revised it to meet the current theory.

      Books maybe the better reference, but you still have to be careful.

      Then again... If we have to use my analogy of someone modifying your book on the fly like Wiki, then you run the risk of opening your book to find someone has put goatse man on page 54.

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
  42. lols by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "How do I do my thesis?" Uhhhhhh.. how about the traditional way?

  43. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by eldavojohn · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Unless one's thesis is on the Wikipedia, anyone depending oslely on Wikipedia for research needs a reality slap.

    I don't think it's really fair for you to say something like this unless you live in China and get along fine with the suppression of websites.

    Afterall, I've found very helpful things on Wikipedia. I just wrote a Hidden Markov Model using the Viterbi Algorithm and did it from scratch in Java using WordNet and this page. Am I saying I could write a paper off of Wikipedia? No, but when that's all you have to work with, it may be more important than you think.
    --
    My work here is dung.
  44. Reverse the tables by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its time for wikipedia to ban china. See how they like some of their own medicine!

  45. Re:What is this, fourth grade? by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 1

    Perhaps. Perhaps not.

    --
    "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
  46. why not this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why can't they just use a american or canadian proxy and use it... a simple solution?

  47. Context? by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    In context of what?

    1. Re:Context? by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Well, most books are quite a bit longer than a wiki article. They give more context, more background, more information than a wiki entry.

    2. Re:Context? by hackwrench · · Score: 1

      Nah, books give more data. It is up to the reader to process it itno information and apply context.

  48. Wikipedia for Research??? by Techguy666 · · Score: 1

    "'How can I do my thesis now?' a university student asked on another Chinese website."

    Gah! The Chinese government's ban of Wikipedia may force their students to research and experiment and think on their own. They may not realize it yet, but China may have just stumbled upon a way to save themselves from creating a North American-style population of instant-gratification seekers.

    True, not having access to knowledge is probably worse than having too much knowledge, but Wikipedia is not an authoritative source and to treat it as such is dangerous. A university or high school paper may start with Wikipedia to gain ideas or a broad (if not completely vague or inaccurate) overview of a topic - but then primary sources or multiple peer-reviewed sources should be pulled in to develop the ideas.

    Being stonewalled by a lack of a single resource speaks volumes about the student. Government censorship is a pain but it ought to develop more resourceful and creative researchers - or bright, highly sought-after, emigrants. If a student complains about being denied access to Wikipedia, not from an ethical/philosophical point of view but an egocentric one, I have no sympathy.

    1. Re:Wikipedia for Research??? by Mutatis+Mutandis · · Score: 1

      Let us not exaggerate the problem. There is no such thing as an "authoritative" source; while some are indeed (much) better than others, all sources have their problems and faults. Articles in peer-reviewed journals are not necessarily free of error or reliable, as the recent problems around Dr. Hwang Woo-Suk clearly illustrates. And that particular work was published in Nature.

      One of the fundamental qualities a student should develop is a critical sense towards published materials, no matter how highly recommended, and a tendency to think things over for himself. If handled with sufficient wisdom, Wikipedia may indeed be useful to the researcher, because it is a very accessible quick reference. However, he would be stupid to stop at only one reference.

      Access to high-quality journals is not always easy. We are not all so fortunate to have good scientific libraries next door, or a large bunch of institutional subscriptions to e-journals. And if you have to order publications from other libraries, you may have to wait for weeks and/or pay a hefty price for them. I suppose China might be as bad as any other place.

    2. Re:Wikipedia for Research??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Recent sociological research has a much more empirism-based explanation for certain US societal problems: popular religion. When comparing to China, where religion exists but is largely denigrated, this might give some insights. The study only compared first-world democracies, though.

  49. Lies are everywhere... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wiki has been released on DVD already. And therefore should be available around the corner. Chinese Goverment just want to save bandwidth.

    You americans should better care about (your) Guantanamo since it certainly supports anti-americanism. Or is critique about american concentration camps banned?

    1. Re:Lies are everywhere... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You americans should better care about (your) Guantanamo since it certainly supports anti-americanism. Or is critique about american concentration camps banned?

      A "concentration camp" is a place where LARGE groups of people are sent for the sole purpose of killing them by first starving them, then gassing, burning them in ovens, or burying them alive. The resulting corpses are stacked like cord wood in the open air to decompose.

      Guantanomo houses a few people, perhaps illegally, with an avowed and demonstrable propensity to kill people themselves, but who have been given three square meals a day, their version of the Bible, and a prayer rug to keep them company. As enemy combatants they are bnot subject to the Bill of Rights, nor, likely, are you.

  50. You're correct of course by flyinwhitey · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In cases like this there are always individuals that forget what's going on around them long enough to prove themselves idiots.

    It always struck me as funny how often the same people bitching about American imperialism conveniently forget their previous arguments when it comes to the internet in China.

    Sorry hypocrites, you can't have it both ways. China is a sovereign state, so while you may disagree, YOU have no right sticking your nose in their business, or spreading so-called "American values".

    And you can thank the left for that particular argument, because I stole it straight from an anti-war in Iraq website.

    --
    How pathetic are you that you follow me from topic to topic and waste all your mod points at once modding me down?
    1. Re:You're correct of course by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      I don't get your point. Are you saying that we shouldn't go to war with them to save their people from their oppressive government (in which case I, along with everybody else, would agree with), or that we shouldn't discuss it at all (which I don't think anybody would agree with).

      It seems you are trying to make a strawman argument. If we complain it means we want to go to war with them to fix it, which is wrong, so therefore we can't complain.

    2. Re:You're correct of course by ichandarin · · Score: 1

      Apples to oranges. That argument would be valid if the US were thinking of invading China, infringing on the soveriegnty of the Chinese government. Despite pressure that the US is putting on China, the Chinese government still has ultimate soveriegnty over its territory.

      Moreover, arguments like this one are not limited to the Left. What do American conservatives have to say about the International Criminal Court, for example?

      --
      Denn wir sind wie Baumstaemme im Schnee. Scheinbar liegen sei glatt auf, mit kleinem anstoss sollte man sie wegschieben
    3. Re:You're correct of course by N1XIM · · Score: 1
      Sorry hypocrites, you can't have it both ways. China is a sovereign state, so while you may disagree, YOU have no right sticking your nose in their business, or spreading so-called "American values".

      So I suppose that Americans (or more properly, USA-ians) shouldn't buy Chinese goods (or stop buying them--take you pick as it doesn't matter which example you want to use) either, because doing so changes the economic balance of China?

      Which is more disrespectful of Eastern Cultures and Peoples: Providing "help" that isn't wanted, or failing to provide it when it is wanted?

  51. What I'd like know... by gfxguy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I already know the answer is money, but why do we continue to do business with China when we boycott Cuba and N. Korea? When was the last time Cuba made one of our planes crash and held it captive? When was the last time N. Korea did that? Why is it so important for Yahoo, Google, and MS to continue to kowtow to China? Do these companies have no ethics?

    Why do people in the U.S. buy cheap American flags made in China?

    The whole thing disgusts me, and it has nothing to do with left/right, democrats/republicans - they all love the open policy towards China.

    --
    Stupid sexy Flanders.
    1. Re:What I'd like know... by bhima · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I dare sare you've hit on one of the most fundamental flaws in capitalism

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    2. Re:What I'd like know... by funtime · · Score: 0

      You stupid idiot. You spied on China and crashed one of its planes and killed a man. They very nicely gave you your crew back. After a few stir fries and no torture! Moron! You boycott Cuba because you are idiots, and likewise North Korea because you are embarrassed to be taken to a draw. Suck on my little yellow balls!

    3. Re:What I'd like know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      here's the easy answer: china's big. n.korea and cuba aren't.

      > Why is it so important for Yahoo, Google, and MS to continue to kowtow to China? Do these companies have no ethics?

      ooh i got this one too. yes.

  52. What the hell?? by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 1
    If Wikipedia is a major resource to a student writing a thesis, their intellectual community has WAY bigger problems than mere freedom of speech on the Internet issues.

    This is so ludicrous that methinks a Wikipedia advocate is trying to create a bit of artificial drama.

    --
    Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
  53. Internet censorship in mainland China (fix) by jacoplane · · Score: 2, Interesting

    See the article on Internet censhorship in China too. It's probably articles like this that have the Chinese Govt annoyed. However, I would agree with the article that by blocking off access they are pretty much ensuring that articles such as this will have a more western-oriented tilt. Of course, Wikipedia has a policy of NPOV, which should allow both criticism and supporting viewpoints. If there's one thing I've learned about the Chinese govt from seeing how they handled SARS and the recent factory disaster, it's that this kind of transparency is something they cannot get to grips with.

  54. Answers.com by Equis · · Score: 1

    Can't they use Answers.com or some other site to get the same Wikipedia goodness through different channels?

  55. When they want it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Until the Chinese people are willing to die to gain the rights the we Americans have, they will not gain them. Period.
    Not just a few, not 100K. A clear and unmistakable MAJORITY. And then, with that majority, they need to reform their government.

  56. archive.org? by phaetonic · · Score: 1

    Why not use an anonymous proxy or archive.org?

  57. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by GoodOmens · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think your missing the point (or I'm reading to much into it). China is denying citizens access to information that it can't censor itself.

    Sure a student could go read a regular encyclopedia, but what good is it if the goverment took all the "good" information out of it before he had a chance to read it?

  58. Hyperbole and not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "'How can I do my thesis now?' a university student asked"

    Oh, please. Get off your butt and use the library. What kind of a thesis relies on Wikipedia, or any conventional paper encyclopedia, as a primary source of information? It might be useful for some background information, but not for the really important content in a decent thesis project (unless Wikipedia *is* the topic of the project ;-)).

    On the other hand, yeah, the censorship of Wikipedia by China is silly and is impossible to justify on any rational grounds. It's a political move that demonstrates how much the Chinese leadership fears information about the real world.

    If the Chinese leadership doesn't like what is said on Wikipedia, then Hu Jintao should sign up for an account and submit changes to it just like everyone else does :-)

  59. Recursive research by MonkeyT · · Score: 1

    While Wikipedia shouldn't ever be considered authoritative, it's pretty damned good at pointing a researcher towards other resources that can meet that strict requirement. Useful for research? yes. Irreplaceable? Not just no: hell no.

  60. Nah... by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    Based on my interactions with numerous people holing degrees up to doctorates, I've come to the conclusion that degrees just mean the person might be a walking encyclopedia or some such sort... But then my Dad, holding a Law doctorate, CLEPed out of as many classes he could, and I understand he did only the workload for a few of them, never attending. Then I deal with Psychaiatrists that drug people so that their behavior meets some sort of aesthetic standard, and what have you?

    Then you have the professionals that think they should be turned to as the first resort as opposed to people attempting to figure out things on their own first, so have at you!

    1. Re:Nah... by damsa · · Score: 1

      All law degrees are law doctorates. JD is short for Juris Doctor. You might be thinking of LLM. Masters in laws.

    2. Re:Nah... by hackwrench · · Score: 1

      No, I'm thinking of the fact that he has a law degree, has been registered with the Bar in Ohio, but has been working as a salesman at Kaufmann's for many years now.

  61. If there is not wikipedia for your thesis by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    There is always the reliable uncylopedia for real reputable research.

    Uncyclopida is so politically correct that I am sure the chinesse government would approve.

  62. Re:What is this, fourth grade? by Millennium · · Score: 1

    No research should be relying so heavily on Wikipedia that if access goes down the whole project is in danger, except perhaps for research about Wikipedia itself. The same would be true of any encyclopedia. The kind of knowledge you find in an encyclopedia is shallow and unauthoritiative, and that's OK; it's what that type of reference material is meant to be. But for serious research, the only real value of an encyclopedia is in its bibliography. Wikipedia's cross-linking capability gives it a bit more use in its regard, but the fact remains that for real research, an encyclopedia's main use is in its own sources, not in its ability to act as a source itself.

    Seriously. Whoever admitted that his thesis was in danger because Wikipedia went down doesn't deserve the degree he's going for unless that thesis was actually about Wikipedia. There are many reasons that access to Wikipedia can go down, and most of them are far less sinister than government censorship. No graduate worth his salt should have such poor research skills that they're crippled because they can't get to, of all things, an encyclopedia.

    Again I say to you, what the Chinese government is doing with Wikipedia is loathsome in the extreme: after all, it [i]is[/i] censorship. The evil of this does not need to be inflated even further by claiming that it harms serious research.

  63. So, if it were up to you... by truthsearch · · Score: 1

    So, if it were up to you we'd invade China. They've killed hundreds of thousands of innocent citizens, invaded other countries, and have nuclear weapons. Yet our 1.2 million soldiers spread thin across the planet wouldn't fare too well against their 2.5 million, would they? But of course the radical right claims they'll remove all tyrants and terrorists, then can't follow through. Instead they open trade to China, destroying small US businesses and making the Chinese rich.

    The incompetance and hypocracy of the radical right in this country is truely amazing.

    1. Re:So, if it were up to you... by the+computer+guy+nex · · Score: 1

      I'm a conservative (the "Right", you would say) and in no way would I want to invade China.

      Besides the obvious "Never fight a land war in Asia", China has not been slaughtering hundreds of thousands of their own citizens and does not present a threat to our American way of life.

    2. Re:So, if it were up to you... by truthsearch · · Score: 2, Informative

      Since the major media doesn't regularly report on Chinese attrocities like they do Iraq's that means their not performing them? You don't know about the thousands of tortured prisoners? And the people who've killed their first born child to hide the fact it was a girl to prevent government penalties? And the children who work in practically slave labor, endangering their health?

      And how about the nuclear weapons pointed at us? And the economic threat as they undercut us in production costs? But that's ok because the top echelon of wealthiest Americans are becoming richer because of it. Therefore China isn't a threat to the rest of us Americans, right?

      Stop watching Fox News and start reading.

    3. Re:So, if it were up to you... by imthesponge · · Score: 1

      Iraq didn't present a threat to our way of life either, and that was the only reason going into Iraq was approved in the first place. "They're gonna bomb us! They're gonna bomb us! Don't take time to think about it, if we think about it the terrorists win!"

    4. Re:So, if it were up to you... by sydneyfong · · Score: 1

      You know what? Most of your points are valid against the USA too...

      And by your argument, do you mean that the mere fact that
      1. Others did something "wrong" (yet not worse than what you are doing yourself)
      2. They are a threat to you

      means that you are justified in sending over an army to kill the people?

      No wonder the rest of the world hates the USA.

      --
      Don't quote me on this.
    5. Re:So, if it were up to you... by truthsearch · · Score: 1

      I'm merely pointing out that the Chinese aren't any better than Iraq was. The arguments used by supporters of the invasion of Iraq aren't being applied universally. In no way do I support the invasion of Iraq, China, or any other country (since WWII). And in no way do I claim the US innocent of attrocities. I'm quite ashamed of my own government.

  64. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Loconut1389 · · Score: 1

    also keep in mind, people make links to the original sources on wikipedia as well.

    Almost never should you cite wikipedia directly, but use it to find cites.

  65. American Right is just as Hypocritical Dude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Saddam has killed hundreds of thousands of innocent citizens.
    #### Many other countries including the US have killed innocent citizens, what's your point?

    He has tried to invade other countries and attempted to extend his missle program to ICBM's. America frees the country, backed by a 99-0 vote in the senate, then the Left complains.
    #### The US was created by invading and killing many American Indians and you forgot? Typically they (broadly speaking of course) are complaining about the misinformation and outright lies of the Bush Admin. and about the tragedy of war itself.

    When another country simply rejects access to a website filled with unsubstantiated information, the Left is up in arms demanding action.
    #### Wikipedia is very accurate, you need to check your facts dude. Noone is demanding action that I can see, do you?

    The hypocracy of the radical left in this country is truely amazing.
    #### The hypocrisy of the Republicans/Right is truly astounding, you need to wake up and watch another channel than Faux News and start reading history.

  66. Basic Economics by snwobird122 · · Score: 0

    When China continues to pull this stuff, I wonder about their entire rebuilding proposition. Anyone with an open mind and some basic economics education can agree that suppressing access to information hurts society as a whole. This basically sums up communism to me - I don't understand how a communistic country can ever be a good one, except on paper.

  67. Remember books? by Itninja · · Score: 0

    'How can I do my thesis now?' a university student asked

    Ummm, pick up a book? Assuming, that is, China still allows public libraries.

    --
    I judt got a nre Kinesis keybiartf so please excusr ant egregiou typos.
  68. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Skreems · · Score: 1

    except for all those studies that point out that wikipedia is, on average, very close in quality to Britannica...

    --
    Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
    The Urban Hippie
  69. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Bad+Boy+Marty · · Score: 1

    Perhaps it is that Wikipedia is the information source they have (had) access to that was least influenced by the Chinese government, and must therefore be infinitely more reliable than any other source?

    Some folks over there might be able to use http://answers.com/ to circumvent the direct censorship of Wikipedia; are there other sites that repackage Wikipedia's data?

    --
    RHCE; are you certified? Karma: ambiguous.
  70. Poor chinese guy by doctorjay · · Score: 1

    'How can I do my thesis now?' a university student asked on another Chinese website."

    Who was then subsequently imprisoned.

  71. Vietnam by D+H+NG · · Score: 1

    This is a stark contrast to Vietnam, another communist country. The Vietnamese Wikipedia, albeit comparatively small, have been given some positive media exposure in some major Vietnamese publications. It's even linked to from the official government encyclopedia.

  72. they could do a local wiki, persish the thought by zenst · · Score: 1

    I can see why the Chinse have blocked it, given the content is community dirreved and mainly from external sources outside china. As such it woudl be a conciren for them given there nature of possible decent.

    No all that said, us in the western world look at this act as total cencorship and were right it is. But that is how China opperates, so we should count ourselves lucky.

    All that said, I cant see why some local folks over in china cant start there own wiki. there is enough interlectual scrape artists out there and intelligent people who could and would propergate it.

    That and given that 99.99% of definitions would be totaly accptable to the most stringent of authorita's (thats cartman south park speak for powers that be) then the issues become more managable and tangable as would be inside the wall and not out.

    I half expect china to one day go IPV999 and mirror anything worthwile out there.

    On the plus side I'd like a firewall like China just to cover all popup porn add's and other spam, or is that an issue over there as well still. Sure there are some positive aspects along with the obvious negative ones. Oh and remember cencorship; and that is what this is is something we all get subjected too, albiet at different levels. Now if there was a wiki on how to make a bomb or become a terrorist, well - would it get blocked, nope. Men in suits come and take there box's away. So in some ways China's approach is more democratic as they only effect those within there responsibility and not imposse there lawas onto all. Just a interesting side thought there. Not that anybody needs to know such things anyhow.

    1. Re:they could do a local wiki, persish the thought by AppyPappy · · Score: 1

      That was the strangest, most convoluted attempt to justify censorship that I have even seen. Perhaps you should have stuck to the old "The government knows what is best for us" routine or even the old Joe Biden "You don't ride in a limo. They do. They get paid more than you because they know more than you" concept.

      China doesn't want their people to hear dissent about the government because they might learn the truth about their government. Or at least confront the truth they already know.

      --

      If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem

    2. Re:they could do a local wiki, persish the thought by zenst · · Score: 1

      was no attempt to justify it at all, mearly highlighting it for what it is.

            Personaly I totaly beleieve in self-censorship as long as it dosn't effect others. Now when we have one internet for adults and one for children. Or perhaps an internet driving test, alas censorship will prevail.

          As it is the internet is as censorship free as you want it to be. nomatter what the next man says.

          You do highlight the real issue and that is that censorship impossed by the few onto the many is not just. Take wiki's by definition there censored, but censored by the community in much the same way as /. posts are. Now a community drioven firewall, perhaps htere is a market there :).

          But to censor something that is already censored by the majority as is the case of China blocking wiki then its a kick in the teeth for the common man. ALL countries censor, some more openly than others and most a mixture of stealth and openess. As for China's stance I can see were there comming from given the govements culture. Though it hardly acts as a definitive block, lets face it I've never met a Chinaman who thinks the Earth is flat, even historicaly. Though i could name a few religious countries that used to percecute people for even thinking otherwise historicaly.

      Maybe some comparision to fashion and censorship can be derived given what is censored here today is censored there tomorrow and open here today. Moods change as do goverments. As with most goverments they will usualy try something to test the water and if they get away with it they carry on until enough people cry foul to the extent that they cant ignore it. Not saying people should go lock themselves to the outside railing near Chinise internet cafe's in protest, but if enough did; Maybe just maybe things would change.

      But for now a loca wiki done localy by local people would fill the needs of the many who are unable to access the input from the many outside side firewall. And no firewall is 100% secure, several million schoolchildren around the World prove that on a daily bases one way or another.

  73. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by gkhan1 · · Score: 1
    I see that most of the comments on this story are variations on "How the hell can people even consider using Wikipedia for reasearch?" I mostly agree with that sentiment, but we have to remember one thing, this is CHINA we're talking about. This is a ruthless dictatorship in which any information not considered to be kosher to the communist government is banned. What if you were doing a thesis on Chinese foreign policy in China and all books you get hold of start with "When the glorious Chairman Mau....."? For simple, accurate, verifiable and neutral facts, Wikipedia can be extrordinary. I am sure that the english wikipedia page on the cultural revolution is much better than any chinese textbook on the subject.

    In europe and america, using Wikipedia for a thesis is questionable at best. In China, they may not have any other choice.

  74. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    britannica shouldn't be your one and only source for a thesis either, so what are you talking about?

  75. I lived in traveled in China for several months by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I lived and traveled in China for several months. Most people in western countries complain that China has such strict laws: While most laws are strict in China, they aren't very often enforced. E.g. in Western Countries you have more liberal laws but they are always enforced. In China you often have the chance to argue with the police so that the law isn't enforced (and in fact most car drivers loudly insult policeofficers who are standing in the streets without any consequences. So while this isn't an ideal system it isn't as bad as it looks from the outside.

  76. Cultural differences? by alphaseven · · Score: 1
    I agree that wikipedia shouldn't be used as an authoratative source, and that it makes a good starting point.

    Perhaps the term "thesis" in China is different from the Western term, with different expectations? This article mentioned an emphasis on "a lot of background information" in essay writing and that the "argumentative essay" was a somewhat foreign idea. I recall hearing similar criticism of the Chinese essay format anecdotally.

    1. Re:Cultural differences? by belmolis · · Score: 1

      I wonder if the Chinese student who said he needed Wikipedia for his thesis was referring to a senior thesis? A senior thesis is relatively uncommon in the US but more common in some other countries.

  77. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by bjohnson · · Score: 1

    One study, on a very narrow subject scope.

  78. solidarity begins at home by porky_pig_jr · · Score: 1

    So China is a typical totalitarian oppresive state, right, whereas US is a free country. Well, a few more years of Bushism, and see if anyone can tell the difference, eh?

  79. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By "all those studies" you mean just the one, right? The one that found Wikipedia to be almost as accurate as Britannica, and that only in the context of scientific articles?

  80. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're assumptions are a little wrong. First, it sounds like you used one resource to develope an alogrithm - good thing that everything is correct at the time you read it. Yeah yeah someone will correct it eventually but it dosn't fit within my cone of events. Also, how do you know that blocking the website will prevent civial war which might kill millions of chineses? You too have no room to comment on China unless you are a master planner of civility wihin that country. Which brings up the point, why do you have to live in that few degrees of latitude to comment about something that is good or bad? If I tell you that eating mercury could shorten your life then because I live over the river from you should you not listen? My post will be marked as a troll but trolling of your type is common on /. It's like a points are given out for snappy comebacks instead of material worth.

  81. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by dpiven · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I don't think it's really fair for you to say something like this unless you live in China and get along fine with the suppression of websites.

    [...]

    Am I saying I could write a paper off of Wikipedia? No, but when that's all you have to work with, it may be more important than you think.

    Anyone else think this could be the Intelligent Design Manifesto? After all, if all one has is the Book of Genesis from which to teach biology... or, for that matter, videos of "The 700 Club" from which to teach Modern Western Religion...
  82. Hypocracy by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

    Hypocracy could have been a typo. On the other hand, if answers.com serves me correctly, hypo-cracy should stand for something liike..."government of the underhanded", so perhaps the inital poster was trying to coin a phrase.

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
  83. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by ajs · · Score: 1

    "China [is doomed] by the fact that their younger generation's research seems to depend on the archived wisdom of random people on the street"

    As far as I can tell, no one who says this (and it's said often) actually knows how to use an encyclopedia for research. Let me explain how you go about this mysterious process:

    First, you establish your topic (let's say, "history of dog breeding in Europe").

    Now you need to work out the specific topics in the reference source that pertain to your topic. For example, in this case, we find that Dog breeding gives some overview information and sends us to Purebred and a number of dog breed pages. On one of thos dog breed pages (Greater Swiss Mountain Dog), we find a side-bar with breeding standards pages, etc. This particular breed also has some historical context that's quite useful. All of this is encapsulated in the researcher's notes.

    Quickly checking the history of edits on the pages in question also gives us some detail. We discover which topics are controvercial, which have changed recently, what references have been removed, etc.

    By this point, you have some notes, some terminology you may not have been aware of, and more importantly, on each one of those pages, you probably have a wealth of on and off-line sources and new topics to check up on.

    This is called research. It's a very different process from "depending on the archived wisdom of people on the street," and it really doesn't vary much from encyclopedia to encyclopedia (other than in the one respect that WP can be easier to use than most). Anyone who simply copies information from any encyclopedia is not performing research, they are instead quoting, that that's not the same thing at all.

  84. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by pla · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I don't think it's really fair for you to say something like this unless you live in China and get along fine with the suppression of websites.

    Do you live in the US?

    Can you legally visit child porn sites (or if certain people have their way, ANY porn sites in the near future)?

    Oh, but that breaks the law, you no doubt protest... Well, guess who writes the law? The government. And China has one of those as well, to write their laws.

    But perhaps you'd prefer a more "fair" comparison? Okay...

    Can you go download Grokster? Visit I2Hub? LokiTorrent? Run the original Napster client (successfully)?

    All societies have taboos, and all societies believe that those taboos protect either all of society or the target of the taboo. Sometimes that holds true, and sometimes it does not.

    In the US, we believe in practically ANYTHING justified by "for the kids". We believe corporate profit and domestic security trump personal freedoms. We believe we have quite a lot of rights that the courts regularly laugh out of court.

    China believes certain religious, political, and economic philosophies constitute a grave danger to their society. And actually, they have that correct, in that at least on the political and economic front, those banned ideas will eventually destroy their existing government. But if you replace "democracy" with "theocracy", "Falun Gong" with "Radical Islam", and "capitalism" with "socialism", can Americans really claim themselves as so much more enlightened?

  85. doesn't matter by spir0 · · Score: 1

    wikipedia is full of misinformation anyway. yes, some of it is good material, but when so much of it is false, or the result of petty bickering between posters, how can you use it for anything other than recreation?

    the misinformation that is prolific means that you have to take everything else with a grain of salt, and check and recheck the sources to make sure they're true. which means you're doing double the work.

    why not just skip wikipedia and go to other sources of information?

    the people who cling to wikipedia like it's the almighty source of all knowledge are either contributers themselves, kids who don't know any better, or geeks who think wikis are the 'cool' thing. Reading the posts, 90% on slashdot seem to be in the latter crowd. I can see it now. Some mod will be clicking on the Flamebait button while covering his ears singing 'lalalalala I'm not listening. wikipedia is the greatest site in the world.'

    --
    The reason girls and Windows users don't understand UNIX is because all the documentation is in Man files.
  86. say wha? by delong · · Score: 1

    "How can I do my thesis now?" What sort of intellectual mouse uses Wikipedia (!!) for serious scholarly research?

    What a joke. Lesson: be careful about citing to any Chinese research.

  87. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by slashdotnickname · · Score: 1

    I just wrote a Hidden Markov Model using the Viterbi Algorithm and did it from scratch in Java using WordNet and this page [wikipedia.org].

    You could of saved yourself some time by just googling for the source code.

  88. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by delong · · Score: 1

    No, but when that's all you have to work with, it may be more important than you think

    That's such a false alternative. My suggestion: crack open a book. Remember what those things were, kids? They're in libraries - those rows of things beyond the computer terminals.

  89. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by AviLazar · · Score: 1

    I think what the GP was trying to say, and I thought he did a clear job of it, is that Wikipedia is not that hot of a resource...really it isn't and falls short of being called scholarly. I like wikipedia, and have my browser set to hit it's random facts page. It is nice, and I would use it as a tertiary resource - but to cry about it for scholarly works...yea right.

    --

    I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
  90. wtf by Jugalator · · Score: 1

    'How can I do my thesis now?' a university student asked on another Chinese website."

    1. Don't JUST rely on Wikipedia!
    2. The world didn't stand still before Wikipedia.

    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    1. Re:wtf by AtomicBomb · · Score: 1

      3) Don't rely on the any news source before digesting it.

      The 'How can I do my thesis now?' quote is paste-and-cut from a Chinese website. It can well be from a chatting forum way more causal than even slashdot. Then, the lazy report paste-and-cut that to Global-and-Mail and, now, a causal quote becomes news....

  91. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Roadkills-R-Us · · Score: 1

    And i think it rather silly that you take that one line, and quote it out of context, ignoring everything else said, nevermind implied.

  92. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 0

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  93. Hurray for China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As long as China's government continues to think that knowledge must be controlled to maintain its dominance, China will not become the world leader they think they must.

    Suck it up, China, and prepare for yet another health crisis like the bird flu outbreak worsened by coverup and lies or yet another round of mass starvation brought on by central planning.

    Those who ignore the past are doomed to repeat it.

  94. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by NotoriousQ · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Can you legally visit child porn sites (or if certain people have their way, ANY porn sites in the near future)?

    No, I can not.

    Is it legal for the government to place filters in place so that I can not find them?

    No, it is not.

    Is it legal for the government to take down those site, and arrest the owners?

    Yes, it is.

    Can you go download Grokster? Visit I2Hub? LokiTorrent? Run the original Napster client (successfully)?

    Yes, from p2p networks, quite legally too.
    Probably not any more (unless I2hub is decentralized).
    Do not know what lokitorrent is. I suppose it is down.
    No, it is down.

    Is any of it due to government cencorship?
    No.

    Please be careful distinguishing government intervention and bulk censorship (as opposed to personal responsibility) with perfectly sane laws quite endorsed by the society.

    Is it legal to commit murder? No
    Is it legal to threaten with murder? No
    Is it legal to think about murder? Yes

    Cencorship begins only when that last question has to be answered with a "no".

    --
    badness 10000
  95. Nine Commentaries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love how everyone is "shocked" and "appalled."

    Originially published in Chinese, read http://ninecommentaries.com/

  96. Wikipedia Alternative by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 2, Funny

    Try http://uncyclopedia.org/wiki/Main_Page> Uncyclopedia , a bold and innovative new way to catalogue and disseminate the knowlege of the world.

    China (real name, Christina Longford) will be ready, willing and able to do the bird all night.

    BTW: What kind of Doctoral candidate is threatened by inavailability of ONE general resource?

    --
    "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
    1. Re:Wikipedia Alternative by anonymous+cowherd+(m · · Score: 1
      BTW: What kind of Doctoral candidate is threatened by inavailability of ONE general resource?
      Perhaps one writing his dissertation *about* wikipedia?
      --
      http://neokosmos.blogsome.com
    2. Re:Wikipedia Alternative by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 1

      Touche!

      --
      "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
  97. Wha wha wha? by Mortisoul · · Score: 1

    Look I know the Chinese have a very rigorous education system that is in itself an impressive thing. BUT if these kids are using an UNreliable source of information for their thesis it might be best if they don't have access to it. I am all for using wikipedia as a place to figure out where to go and get ideas, but if you HAVE to have it for your research then it is starting to sound like you are giving it a more reliable credit then it is. wikipedia as in its name is a very complicated "wiki" There are just too many people who don't have a clue putting bad information into this thing. I know its not intentional always and I know that sometimes it is, but if the person is so very sure he is right they could keep changing the updates to always go back to the bad information. These guys need to find real reliable confirmable sources of information, NOT a public billboard that is modifiable by anyone with a connection to the internet. This is just my thoughts, I use wikipedia myself to point me in the right direction to find good siteable information, but I could with more work and gratuitous use of google find the information on my own. Wikipedia just makes life easier.

  98. You might want to re-read that Nature article too by LionMage · · Score: 1

    The Nature article you cite still finds Britannica's accuracy in science articles to be marginally better than that of Wikipedia's. (The average is stated as: 4 errors per article in Wikipedia, 3 per article in Britannica.) This is hardly something you can spin doctor into "Wikipedia is more accurate than Britannica," although I will concede that the difference is statistically small.

    The methodology of the study cited in Nature has come into question; the article contains an addendum linking to supplementary information about how the data was collected.

    So... according to Nature, Wikipedia "comes close" to Britannica in terms of accuracy, but does not seem to exceed it.

    Furthermore, there are notorious examples of outright fabrications and falsehoods masquerading as fact in Wikipedia articles, mainly due to vandalism. This is a problem that Britannica doesn't seem to have. So... I stand by my statements.

  99. Why not use Wikipedia as propoganda? by potus98 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Instead of blatently blocking the Wikipedia site, couldn't it be more effective for the communists to update the content of the articles to refelct more positiviely on China and their policies?

    --
    This one gang kept wanting me to join cause I'm pretty good with a bo staff.
    1. Re:Why not use Wikipedia as propoganda? by BBird · · Score: 1

      Until these guys understand they cannot and soulh not control what their people think, they should be considered a represive dictatorhip and be subject to sanction. But in this world of pussies and liar politics, we keep pretending they are a special type of regime. f them

  100. Why not leave? by Ka+D'Argo · · Score: 1
    Forgive me if this is a "stupid" question but I honestly don't know the answer:

    If some citizens in China hate it so bad because of the political situation, why not just leave China?

    Is it a money issue? Can they not afford to travel some where else and start a new life? I know visa's and living in a different country as one of it's citizens might pose an issue depending on the country they move too. However I'm also sure out of all the nations in the world, at least one would help them out if they requested asylum from their former government.

    I was maybe, 5 years old when the Tiananmen Square ordeal happened, so what I know of it from a typical American standpoint is just what my parents remember or I can read online. But in the last year or so we all know of the crack down on blocked sites by the Chinese government. Hell /. reports on them all the time. But each time I read a story about them (and they do seem to be getting progressively "worse" as time goes on), I never understand how if the dictatorship is so bad for their freedom and quality of life, why they don't just leave.

    Who knows maybe what some people say is just descriptions being blown out of porportions. Maybe what some people say is true and all the insane things said about day to day life in China is true. I can't say, nor I assume can an everyday American who has never traveled or lived there. But I can question why those that hate it have not left.

    One thing though, while some might say "Well it's their homeland. That might mean a great deal to them and they don't wish to leave even under the conditions imposed on them." I can understand that, to a degree. I wouldn't want to leave my hometown ever, after having lived all my life here. But I can speak for myself when I say if America or whichever country I was living in, became like China I'd rather move to a place foreign to me than risk my life and the lives of my family.

    --
    Aw Frell this
    1. Re:Why not leave? by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      In Soviet Russia, they shot anyone trying to leave the country. I don't know if they do that in China, but I wouldn't be surprised. Also, do they have any place to flee to? The refugees from Soviet Blok countries could run to Western Europe. If the US goes bad, we could flee to Canada (if we don't freeze to death). Is there any place a broke Chinese refugee could get to?

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    2. Re:Why not leave? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      If some citizens in China hate it so bad because of the political situation, why not just leave China?

      You make the all-too-common incorrect assumption among young Americans that people in other countries have rights that are essentially similar to rights in the USA. In this case, you assume that a Chinese citizen has a right to be issued a passport the way Americans have.

      It's not as difficult to get a Chinese passport as it was 25 years ago. Nonetheless, passports are issued only at discretion. Basically, you apply to the police, and maybe you'll hear at some future date that you can come and pick up your passport. [The same is true in other Communist countries.]

      If you are on the police shit-list, you don't get a passport. It doesn't matter if you haven't been accused of any crime.

      Getting the passport is only the first step of your problems. There's also the small matter of affording foreign travel. The cost of foreign travel is way beyond the budget of the average Chinese. A foreign trip is an extravagance for the average American, who earns many times the income of the average Chinese. The cost of living is considerably cheaper in China than the USA, but the cost of foreign travel is the same.

      It may no longer be the case today, but in the past there was a limit as to how much money you could take with you for expenses, something like 100 yuan (about $12).

      The bottom line here is that foreign travel is a luxury of the privileged with overseas connections; if you don't have some "back door" you don't go.

      Now, as for emigrating from China to some other country, that's a lot more complex. The Chinese government see-saws between issuing passports to malcontents (in the hope that their trip will be one-way) and denying them. Even assuming you get out, there's a complex process that you have to take to get in to another country.

      If you're Chinese, Canada will sell you a permanent residency for a 6-digit sum. (White) Americans only have to badmouth the USA and its government, and the Canadian government will happily give them "landed immigrant" status. The USA government isn't so generous with its green cards.

      The most common way for Chinese to make it to the USA is to have a relative who is a US citizen and sponsors their way in.

      Pretty (or even average-looking) Chinese girls may try to marry an American boy; the problem is that there are plenty of yucky/abusive/immatures/etc. guys in that meat market. So, selecting a decent boy is quite difficult (sometimes his problems are not immediately obvious), especially if you have self-respect and actually intend to have a real marriage with him (and if you don't you have other problems because the INS is going to try to trip you up). There's a much smaller number of Chinese boys who try to marry American girls.

      If neither of those back-doors work, then if you're really bright you might get to come to the USA on a student visa (a lot of Chinese kids come, but a lot more try and fail; the competition is fierce). Then, once you're here, you go all the way on your education and hopefully by the time you're a post-doctoral student you've made enough contacts that some school or company will go to bat for you with INS to get you a green card.

      If you're a pretty girl, once you're in an American school you have a somewhat better selection of American boys to pick over, although you will have to deal with vicious criticism and bad-mouthing from other Chinese students. You can also pick a Chinese boy and make your parents happy, as long as he already has his back-door and doesn't intent to go back.

      It's a Darwinian process. Many try. Only a few succeed.
    3. Re:Why not leave? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Two words: exit visa. You can't leave unless they let you. The government controls the transportation in and out, and if they don't want to let you out, they don't. It's not as bad as the Soviet's iron curtain (ie they don't generally shoot you if you try to escape by land), but they definitely don't make it easy.

      And where are they going to go? Most countries have the PRC on a list of "countries whose citizens we don't want". In order to emigrate, you need to have somewhere willing to accept you, otherwise you just get shipped back to the people who didn't want you to leave in the first place. The situation in China isn't considered bad enough that you could claim refugee status (usually requires proof that you would be killed if you were sent back instead of merely jailed for life, and realistically, China isn't on the Darfur scale of bad. I'm not saying it's not bad, just that there are worse, and our refugee laws tend to be oriented to rescuing people from the worst, not from the bad).

      And totalitarian governments like China are notoriously good at communal punishment: are you going to flee the country if you know it means your entire extended family will be jailed or executed? Or even just lose their jobs and end up living on the street? Or are you going to try to smuggle 20 people including children and the elderly out and hope for the best?

    4. Re:Why not leave? by xenocide2 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, I'll take on your bear of a question. Keep in mind that I don't particularly favor China's administration or its policies.

      First off, according to the CIA World factbook, China's population is about 1.5 billion. This is out of about 6.5 billion world wide. Their unemployment rate is about ten percent nationally, with a reported "unemployment and underemployment rate" at twice that. I think its safe to say that very few of these people have the weath required to simply leave. Also remember that few Chinese have the kind of means access to the internet you have in the first place. I don't just mean unfiltered content, but a physical computer and stable and affordable electricity to power it. Of course, this isn't the only means of censoring dissent. Newspapers are frequently accused of whitewashing and publishing only approved content. But even if 1 billion Chinese who felt oppressed and/or unserved by the current authorities wanted and could afford to migrate, it would be difficult to accomodate them. Putting these people to work, in say France, would be difficult since few would have the language skills nessecary, among other things. Shifting that many people is simply untenable in the short term.

      Furthermore, even if nations had the available housing and whatnot to accomodate this, many are unwilling to accept large numbers of immigrants. The nation most able to accommodate Chinese immigrants is probably the US, as we've got plenty of land and are a next exporter of food. But I'm sure you've witnessed the backlash to border patrolling and outsourcing lately. Protectionist laws favoring the current labor pool are a large force to recon with and would quickly moblize to squash any such mass immigration bill in Congress. Additionally, the current administration seems paralyzed, in a way, by the terrorist attacks on the WTC. Because such a immigration allowance would be considered a security risk, theres no way the administration would ever propose this. Hell, even student visas are down after 9/11, as some of the attackers were here on visas. It seems some people love America's prosperity, and others love it's freedom, but nobody will trade one to give the other to everyone.

      In the long term, the best option is to reform China's pratices. Theoretically, China has democratic means to address social problems. In some ways, the authoritarian executive branch (unelected, btw) is an ally of change, and an enemy. For example, take the number from the CIA world factbook for China's male to female birth rate. 115:100 is a pretty damn high number, and you probably know why. Wikipedia suggests that a recent finding thinks its partly to do with hepatitis, but there's still a cultural bias against having a daughter. The Chinese administration has taken a couple of good steps towards solving the problem of infanctide. On the otherhand, the administration also takes very poorly to criticism of its policies, and allowing the public to hear it. I subscribe to the John Stuart Mill's philosophy that both truth and opinion are public goods, and look forward to the day in which the administration submits to the democratic process as well. But I expect that as long as their economy is doing better, there won't be any leverage for that to happen. There's still humanitarian things that could be addressed, but perhaps we should look in the mirror before preaching abroad.

      Simply put, people deserve a government that acts in their own interests without having to resort to democracy of the foot.

      --
      I Browse at +4 Flamebait

      Open Source Sysadmin

    5. Re:Why not leave? by sydneyfong · · Score: 1

      > The nation most able to accommodate Chinese immigrants is probably the US

      > In the long term, the best option is to reform China's pratices.

      Typical USA thinking -- We're the saviors of the world.

      Get real. If a billion people migrated from China to the USA, it's going to be renamed the USC -- the United States of China. And I know you probably know it's not feasible either, but you should know that the mere thought of a possibility of a mass migration is totally absurd, and moreso that you think that the USA is any better at accomodating a billion people than any other country.

      And what business does anybody else except the people in China have with its politics or policies? You know, the best option for the USA is to have the federal govt send me a billion bucks every year, because otherwise they'd have too much money to spend on secret surveillance, secret prisons, unauthorized investigation techniques and such. And you'd probably want the whole congress to do housekeeping for me. Then they won't ever be able to pass stupid laws again! Bingo!

      Before you label me as a troll for trolling above, let me point out that's how absurd your ideas are. Yep, you will never understand how absurd your suggestions are to those who are even remotely knowledgable about what really is going on in China.

      But then, the conventional Chinese wisdom is to avoid poking one's nose into other people's family matters. It's not only rude, it's usually a lose-lose too. So (at least for me), I've been puzzled at why people seem to be so passionately interested in the politics of China when they're not the single bit affliated with it? Perhaps it affects the world regarding its economic side, but these "internal" issues? And worse, although they seem to want to make it a better place, they are still absolutely clueless to the real situation, and naively think that China is simply a piece of land that could be molded to function like (in particular) the USA.

      Excuse me for my flames, but if that is what is warranted to give you guys a more realistic view of what (at least some of) the Chinese people really think, I could sacrifice a few of my mod points for that.

      --
      Don't quote me on this.
    6. Re:Why not leave? by xenocide2 · · Score: 1

      Honestly, the number I mentioned was simply to place the idea that it wasn't simply feasible, and maybe bring up the notion that there's more to the equation than civil liberties, such as the economy. The administration is doing an okay job there, although undoing years of communist regime naturally times time (though the numbers coming from Beijing are likely fraudulent, I believe them to be only overstating an already good number). The rest of arguments can be equally applied at the margins of immigration. Why dont more people leave China? Because France is already in deep(er) shit reguarding immigration after the riots recently. Moreover, none of the countries surrounding China are friendly enough to accept immigrants on any serious basis. Or maybe you think Australia is better equipped? They're certainly doing an okay job of it, but they may already be close to the locally tolerable limits.

      On a side topic, maybe traditional Chinese wisdom is wrong. Should I close the blinds when my neighbors beat their wife and children? Or turn the volume on my ipod up when passing beggars? Does free speech not apply when the majority dissents with the opinion? Would anything have been done about the birth gaps if other societies hadn't noticed, and verbally complained? If Taiwan or a border state suddenly found itself under attack, are we to maintain a neutral position at all costs? If Mississippi wants to attack blacks with water hoses and dogs, is it rude to suggest they stop?

      As best I can decipher the logic, the chinese administration feels its population incapable of distinguishing truth from lies, even in the long run. If they believed differently, then the widespread dissemination of information on all topics would be a positive societal gain obstructed by the administration. Alternatively, it wouldn't be difficult to imagine that the administration is afraid that allowing free global communication would quickly lead to their own undoing, despite the economic progress they've made. I can't say I like governments lying to the people they're charged with protecting, domestic or abroad.

      --
      I Browse at +4 Flamebait

      Open Source Sysadmin

  101. Research by gilign2b · · Score: 1

    Any discussion of censorship aside, the assertation that you can't do research without Wikipedia is absurd. How am I supposed to do my research now? The same way you would have five years ago, by actually going to the library and doing research. For those arguing that Wikipedia is an invaluable research tool that can't be replaced, clearly you've never written any type of signifigant research paper. In some cases you can use a source such as Wikipedia, but for anything more indepth than a two page paper for a 100 level class, you wouldn't. There are tons of other sites, books, journal articles, etc... that go much more indepth on any given subject. Especially if you're writing a thesis and you're quoting Wikipedia, you seriously need to look at the quality of your research.

  102. I have a solution! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    'How can I do my thesis now?'

    There's always Uncyclopedia!

  103. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Can you legally visit child porn sites

    I understand your point, but some of you free speech wonks need to find better poster- er... children.

  104. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A government that would be brought down by mere public knowledge of international criticism and ideals has no right to stand.

  105. uhm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love wikipedia and use it all the time, but I would never use it for my graduate thesis. Its been known to have some reliability issues and sticking to published papaers is generally a better route for that.

  106. But hey, what's more important, civil rights... by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

    ...for non-whites (i.e. sub-human), or a cheap supplier for millions of Happy Meal toys?!?!

    --
    This space available.
  107. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by pla · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is it legal for the government to place filters in place so that I can not find them?

    We'll have to wait for the rather conservative USSC to decide on Utah's most recent attempt to do exactly that, before we can say "no".


    Is it legal for the government to take down those site, and arrest the owners?

    Which differs how from China taking down sites and arresting people who blog about any of a number of banned subjects?

    Oh, right... Because our hangups express the highest degree of enlightenment possible, while China's come from ignorance and greed. Silly me.


    Is any of it due to government cencorship?

    Yes, actually, three of those four shut down as a result of GOVERNMENT intervention (and the fourth just from the threat thereof), because someone, somewhere, might use them to commit a victimless civil-penalties-only crime.


    perfectly sane laws quite endorsed by the society.

    Forgive me if I err, but that statement leads me to strongly suspect you of trolling...

  108. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by StikyPad · · Score: 1

    if you replace "democracy" with "theocracy", "Falun Gong" with "Radical Islam", and "capitalism" with "socialism", can Americans really claim themselves as so much more enlightened?

    Q. How many legs does a dog have if you call its tail a leg?

    A. Four. Calling a tail a leg doesn't make it a leg.

  109. In Communist China... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...website brocks you!

  110. No problem by PMuse · · Score: 2, Funny

    'How can I do my thesis now?' a university student asked on another Chinese website.

    Answer: the same way they did theses way back in 2000. Unless, of course, Wikipedia was in some way the subject of this poor unfortunate's research, in which case he is well and truly screwed. If so, he needs to pay a visit to Droz.

    Droz: Okay, what's your major?
    Supplicant1: - Um, particle physics.
    Droz: - Ooh, that's a tough one. Let me see... Ooh. "Motion of Helium Atoms In An Excited State." Watch out. It's a scorcher.

    Droz: - Next.
    Supplicant1:- Uh, Sanskrit.
    Droz: Sanskrit. You're majoring in a 5000-year-old dead language.
    Supplicant2: Yeah.
    Droz: Okay... Ooh. Latin. It's the best I can do.

    Droz: - Next.
    Supplicant3:- Phys Ed.
    Droz: Phys Ed. Okay, you're out of my room. Seriously. Get out.

    --
    "We reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals." --The American President (20.1.2009)
  111. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by GrayCalx · · Score: 1

    Unless one's thesis is on the Wikipedia, anyone depending oslely on Wikipedia for research needs a reality slap.

    I don't think it's really fair for you to say something like this unless you live in China and get along fine with the suppression of websites.


    That has nothing to do with what the OP was saying. All he's talking about is the Chinese user who complained "How am I going to finish my thesis now?" As the OP said, if he's depending solely on Wikipedia to write his thesis, unless its specifically on Wikipedia, he needs to learn how to research.

    Not saying anything on the wrongness or correctness of what China is doing.

  112. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by warkda+rrior · · Score: 4, Insightful
    [...] if you replace [...] "Falun Gong" with "Radical Islam" [...] can Americans really claim themselves as so much more enlightened?

    This parallel kills your whole argument.

    Falun Gong has not killed anyone and, as far as I know, does not promote killing people who do follow Falun Gong. On the other hand, Radical Islam has killed people and continuously promotes killing the "infidels" who do not believe in Radical Islam.

    Apples... oranges...

    --
    You need to install an RTFM interface.
  113. revision by argStyopa · · Score: 1

    Chinese Ban on Wikipedia Prevents Research

    In other news, students report using an ancient technology called "books" to discover facts. "It's amazing," one student reported, "it's like, so STATIC. I mean, I was reading about something that wasn't constantly being updated, and actually had REFERENCES and a BIBLIOGRAPHY, which led me to other books."
    She paused, amazed. "I wonder just how far these links go? I mean, there could be like an endless chain of information out there that none of us would have ever checked? Well, until Google digitized them of course."

    --
    -Styopa
    1. Re:revision by Slungfish · · Score: 1

      Imagine if this article were posted after the Bush Administration had banned Wikipedia. What do you think most of the posts would look like? Seeing that half the posts state some variation of "Wikipedia is not an accurate resource anyway!" makes me sick! The mood would be much differant if this had happned in America. The main topic of the posts would be ones of outrage, which they should be! However, because it is not happening here, people seem to be more concerned with weither or not Wikipedia is a reliable source. Why is it that when the Bush Administration commits even a minor act that violats Civil Rights, all of Slashdot is up in arms, but abroad when atrocities such as this are commited, more people seem to let those who commit these acts off the hook. My first post on Slashdot, I hope I did it right. Also, don't mistake me for a Bush supporter, please.

  114. Jesus Christ. Why piss off citizens and countries? by Douglas+Simmons · · Score: 1

    The upside to this relative to the bad publicity and straight-up being mean completely eludes me and my imagination. Who's the guy in China's old men's smoke-filled room that insists blocking wiki is good for the country? What kind of argument could he have made that's unique to Wiki versus similar projects? Anyone here capable of defending the government's actions?

  115. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by hogfat · · Score: 1

    But writing an algorithm on one's own has certain advantages, not the least of which being free of the GPL. Whether you can actually trust the data from wikipedia on which code is based . . . that's another story.

  116. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Hasai · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why is it, do you think, that every totalitatian regime that comes along seems to somehow automatically spawn an army of apologists?

    --

    Regards;

    Hasai

  117. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Last time I checked I could study or believe in socialism, islam, or Falun Gong. Heck I can look them up on Wikipedia.


      (I didn't say Radical Islam because I refuse to justify murder by religion. Imagine a society frowning on the sanctioned use of murder. Shocking.)
  118. Without Wikipedia, We Have Nothing by nick_davison · · Score: 1

    It kind of makes one wonder what exactly was accomplished in 1989 when 100,000 protesters marched in Beijing.

    From the article: "'How can I do my thesis now?' a university student asked on another Chinese website."

    Nothing was achieved in 1989. They didn't have the Wikipedia back. Apparently, without it, all work in China grinds to a halt.

    Or, it might, you know, be an incredibly lazy student bitching because he has to consult a whole second source to complete his degree thesis. I wasn't aware DeVry had a Chinese campus.

  119. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The viability of this option depends on the quality of your local library.

  120. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    They haven't blocked my conversations or my ability to learn about these ideas but yes the patriot act is bull. Good thing both the media and I are allowed to publicly criticize it. Maybe next time around it won't be renewed.

  121. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by taybin · · Score: 1

    The US does have problems. But that doesn't mean that China is a-okay with censoring discussion of forms of government.

    Who the hell are you to defend such a practice?

  122. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by hackstraw · · Score: 0

    All societies have taboos, and all societies believe that those taboos protect either all of society or the target of the taboo.

    Yeah, but we got over most of ours. Remember the "Red scare"? Its not like the FBI will investigate a college student for retrieving "The Little Red Book" from a library system or anything, right?

    Oh, I must have forgot.

    Inhibition of freedom, especially of basic information, only alienates people from the government. By making crimes out of non-crimes (morality, silly stuff) it only hurts the authority that the government has, because people give them less authority and then have to question which laws are really important or not.

    Keep in mind that the US government did away with slavery in 1865 (or so), gave basic rights to women in 1920, and more rights (mostly lip service) to blacks and other minorities in 1964. It seems pretty common for governments to make egregious mistakes.

    Oh, and we are part of the government process so long as we follow it, wether or not we approve of it.

  123. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by XMilkProject · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You make an invalid point. These things are kept secret not to keep the government from being brought down, but to keep Americans from getting killed. Do you really think anyone just feels the need to spy for their own benefit? How does it benefit them? They are spying to try to keep people alive, not to benefit themselves.

    Feel free to argue that their methods are flawed, as they very likely are, but it certainly is not done to protect the government in the way that Chinese censorship is, but rather the people.

    I'm completely baffled by this American feeling that no government department should keep secrets from the general public. I guess our American media has started this sentiment. But /. readers of all people should understand that much of the general public is incapable of dealing with various types of information. And apart from that, you must remember that it's not possible to just share information with Americans, anything that we are told is also told to the entire rest of the world.

    --
    Big ones, small ones, some as big as yer 'ead!
    Give 'em a twist, a flick o' the wrist...
  124. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Yartrebo · · Score: 1

    Actually, we're quite spotty when it comes to kids. We give them one of the worst educations in the developed world and we spend very little time with them. Our car-centric society isn't exactly beneficial for kids either. Children are much more likely to be in poverty than adults. Kids are on the receiving end of the worst that our marketing profession can deliver.

    All kids are is a great excuse for minority interests to push through things that would have a hard time passing otherwise (war on drugs, war on video games, war on porn, etc).

  125. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by aulou05 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, yeah. Everyone is picking on the fact that Wikipedia is not a reliable source of information for a thesis:

    'How can I do my thesis now?' a university student asked on another Chinese website."

    Am I the only one that finds humor in the fact that everyone is making claims about the state of research in China based on this quote? Anyone think this might not be relevant in any way what-so-ever? Who cares if one iddiot can't do his paper now?

    *Sighs.* Seriously, have you seen some of the people they let into four year accredited universities in the U.S.?

  126. You're correct of course by StikyPad · · Score: 1

    Exactly. And his sig is particularly ironic.

  127. The internet should be OPEN and FREE by sammydee · · Score: 1

    The internet was based on the principle of being open and free for anyone to use for anything. Whether that is spreading dissent, being racist or hosting an open encyclopedia. Anybody out there who has a broadband connection and can spare some bandwidth should host a proxy server with one or two open slots. Open up the internet for everyone.

  128. Compare and contrast... by msauve · · Score: 2, Insightful
    China has the power to plunge the world into violent chaos, if it does not get its way, and if its needs are not met. What would you have the U.S. government do? Forsake peace and prosperity and an incremental approach to reforming China, in favor of cutting them off, putting their backs against a wall, and taking us all straight to World War IV?
    -Susano Otter, 1/10/2006

    We are resolved that the method of consultation shall be the method adopted to deal with any other questions that may concern our two countries, and we are determined to continue our efforts to remove possible sources of difference, and thus to contribute to assure the peace of Europe...My good friends this is the second time in our history that there has come back from Germany to Downing Street peace with honor. I believe it is peace in our time.
    -Neville Chamberlain, 9/30/1938
    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    1. Re:Compare and contrast... by bersl2 · · Score: 1

      Creepy.

      My question, then, is whether the Chinese truly have the ambition to initiate an economic "war" which may lead to conventional or nuclear war, and if so, how suddenly will the effects manifest? We know that they have the means and the will to defend themselves on all such fronts, but do they plan on starting something with no direct provocation?

      The answer to that is critical. If they do not plan to reign economic chaos on the world unless we do something brash, then continued gentle pressure is acceptable. If they do have such plans, then World War III is inevitable, with the ETA varying with how quickly someone in power figures it out.

    2. Re:Compare and contrast... by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what you're getting at.

      Hitler's policy was to take Germany to war at the earliest possible moment, and to exploit every attempt at peace by his neighbors to strengthen his war machine for the violent conflict he envisioned.

      Are you saying China is doing the same thing now?

      The alternative to appeasing Hitler in the late 30s would have been to isolate Hitler in the late 30s. Winston Churchill found a lot to commend this course of action, as he believed that at that time Germany was too weak to respond to isolation by going to war, and that a stern rebuke in 1938 would have prevented the whole horrible disaster altogether.

      Are you saying that China, equipped modern military technology and infrastructure, boasting the manpower to stand up the largest army in the world, and armed with nuclear weapons, is in a similarly weak position, such that a stern rebuke and a policy of economic isolation would bring them rapidly to heel, rather than sparking a world war?

      Chamberlain sincerely believed that taking a hard line with Germany in the '30s would lead to a violent and bloody conflict that the people of Europe did not have the stomach for (Hitler exploited this sentiment, especially in war-ravaged France, to great effect).

      Are you saying that you, today, do have the stomach for war with China? That the people of China (who would probably be slaughtered in the millions during such a war) would be better off if we isolated China right now?

      It is my view that Chamberlain's appeasement of Hitler was needless, as Germany was not a power in 1938, and Hitler was on the verge of being ousted by calmer heads in the German power structure anyway at that time.

      It is my view that "appeasement" of China is needful, as China is now a power in both conventional arms and nuclear weapons, its ruling cabal is not currently teetering on the verge of a coup by more tractable elements in the regime, and its position in the world is much more influential and disruptive than Germany's was at the time. I also think that China, far from being ruled by a megalomaniac bent on world domination, is ruled by a cabal of old men who have a vested interest in the status quo. Rather than planning a violent takeover of the entire world, I believe they're much more interested in maintaining their control over a stable and subservient populace. This means, in practical terms, that their best course of action is to ease in the freedoms that their people hunger for, but not so quickly as to undermine their own power base. Thus, pressuring them to pursue this course as quickly as possible is a good idea, while forcing them to consider other options such as crackdowns and wars of agression for resources, is a bad idea.

      Of course, I could be just as wrong as Chamberlain was. I doubt it, though, given the extreme nature of the differences between the two scenarios.

      What do you think?

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    3. Re:Compare and contrast... by ichigo+2.0 · · Score: 1

      I think you underestimate the power Hitler had over Nazi Germany. If some calmer heads had tried to oust him out of the power structure, these calm heads would have found themselves in a labor camp or dead. He could possibly have been ousted by someone from Gestapo or by someone close to him, but I'm not so sure if that would have been an improvement. Calmer heads might have made more realistic decisions, maybe even avoided a war with the Soviets, and tried to keep the U.S. out of the war.


      But IMO the question of a war between China and the U.S. boils down to one point: is the U.S. prepared to relinquish the position of superpower status? I'd say no, the evidence being the military actions in Iraq (and soon Iran), the pressure on Japan to change their constitution to enable a larger military, and the research on a missile shield to protect from the Chinese. On the Chinese side the modernisation of the PLA, research on longer ranged missiles that will eventually be able to reach the U.S., the changes in law to make it "legal" to annex Taiwan, and the diplomatic overtures to closer ties with countries that have natural resources to trade but have difficulty trading with democracies because of internal issues, show that the Chinese government isn't about to give up either. I don't think a cold war would solve the problem either, as the population base is in China's favor. If a war erupts, it will happen no later than the next decade, any later than that and the balance of power would already have shifted too much.

    4. Re:Compare and contrast... by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      In 1938 Hitler's power was far from established, and the military leadership was seriously considering a coup.

      It wasn't until a couple years later, after he had successfully bluffed the world repeatedly in the Rhineland, Austria, and Czechoslovakia, that even the generals began to believe in him, and that his cult of personality became firmly entrenched among soldiers and civilians alike.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    5. Re:Compare and contrast... by ichigo+2.0 · · Score: 1

      Alright, your previous post made it sound like some nice old councilman would calmly push him out of office, but I guess I misunderstood you. :)

      No opinions on tomorrow's history? ;)

    6. Re:Compare and contrast... by Anonymous+Bullard · · Score: 1
      Yes, China is in a similar position to "pre-war" Germany, kind of.
      • Annexation of some neighboring territories. Check
      • All-encompassing propaganda and censorship machine. Check.
      • Ultra-nationalist populism playing upon past wrongs by foreign countries. Check.
      • Xenophobia and hatred of certain other nationalities. Check.
      • Ideology based on ethnic supremacy. Check.
      • Dependency on foreign sources of energy. Check.
      • Fascist/national-socialist economic and political system. Check.

      Some differences:

      • China territorial lebensraum expansion is more advanced than pre-1939 Germany's or USSR's (Tibet, East Turkestan, southern Mongolia etc.) and is aimed at conquest of neighbors whereas initally Germany annexed areas with historical German population (Austria, Sudetenland). China's policy is to overwhelm the occupied territories with a massive Chinese migrant population.
      • German militarism arose as a response to the clear and present threat by the already-mad and expansionist (since early 1920s) Stalinist USSR during the late era of Western colonialism, while Chinese militarism arose after the threat of the Imperial Japan had already been extinguished.
      • China's dictatorship absolutely depends on the massive foreign investment and trade and the wealth it creates to prevent a nationwide uprising.

      As you can see, the regime in China could be overthrown and the people in China and the neighboring peoples under its oppressive occupation liberated through coordinated economic action. Unfortunately the (currently) most powerful democratic economies have chosen a path of collusion and cooperation with the Chinese dictatorship instead of standing up for the values they claim to hold dear, i.e. freedom from oppression, democracy and peoples' right of self-determination. Instead, the West is targetting non-expansionist countries like Iraq, Iran and North Korea for punishment while the regime in China, which is in an advanced state of militaristic expansionism, is given royal red-carpet welcomes by western leaders and their sycophantic industrialist backers.

      The Nazi regime in Germany embarked on their Holocaust rampage in earnest around 1941-1942 onwards, without Britain or the USA even knowing about it when they declared war on Germany. The Chinese nazi regime is well known to be committing ethnic and cultural cleansing in the neighboring countries it has invaded and the democratic world is expected to do... nothing but collaborate with that regime?

      If the Chinese were only committing crimes against their own people, that would already be bad enough, but they're committing genocide against their peaceful neighbors they've kept under brutal occupation for decades.

      Chamberlain and especially Churchill were products of the British supremacist/colonial/imperial school of ideology and their actions, including the pact with fellow imperialist Stalin, reflected not the modern values of freedom the West (at least nominally) shares today, but their need was solely to protect the British Empire and its foreign dominions like their predecessors had been doing for centuries.

      The United Nations was founded by the victors of the WWII to perpetuate the post-war status quo and to protect the superpowers' interests and spheres of influence in a more coordinated manner instead of the past messy dealings and wheelings between individual empires. Western values have in the past been only used selectively within that UN framework to protect the victims of oppression and occupation when it suits the economic and political interests of a Western superpower but since we now know that this particular emperor has no clothes, why can't the West finally start acting according to the moral ideals it claims to uphold as the foundation of its whole civilization?

      It would be so simple in the case of China: just transfer the foreign investments to democratic and non-aggressive developing countries whi

      --

      Should invading one's peaceful neighbours be opposed, or rewarded with trade deals?

    7. Re:Compare and contrast... by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      The only quibble I have with this analysis is the facile disposition of the "economic and political interests" of the Western powers.

      It's not like China can be cut off from the global economy without having a severe impact, in the short term, at least, on the welfare and strength of the developed world. It's an ugly reality, but a reality nonetheless.

      Churchill firmly believed that the suffering brought about by an early confrontation with Hitlerite Germany would be a small price to pay to avoid the much greater suffering brought about by a later (and inevitable) confrontation with Hitlerite Germany.

      But then, Churchill didn't have to worry about the possibility of Hitlerite Germany funding terrorists and equipping them with nuclear weapons.

      It's my theory that the Chinese government wants to reform, and is in the process of a slow but steady liberalization of their regime, but that they wish to avoid the chaos brought about by rapid and unmanaged reform. They can see how the rapid reform process worked out in the former Soviet Union, and want no part of such a scenario.

      As a result, I strongly doubt that increased pressure, especially in the form of economic sanctions, will not encourage them to reform more rapidly. Rather, I expect that increased pressure would encourage them to seriously consider other options.

      One such option (one that I would be planning for already, if I were them), would be to use their propaganda power to poison the hearts and minds of their citizenry against the west, and to pursue a policy of destabilization of the developed world. Call in U.S. debt, arrange a few terrorist nukings of appropriate western population and industrial centers, disrupt the world economy, and in the resulting chaos emerge as the new hyperpower, well-positioned to dictate their own terms to the world.

      After sleeping on the subject, two more thoughts have occurred to me:

      One, that while every move Hitler made brought him closer to his horrible goal, the trend in Chinese policy over the last fifteen years or so has been in the other direction. It's one thing to punish and isolate a madman who keeps worsening the situation. It's another thing to punish and isolate a sane man whose self-improvement is taking longer than you would like.

      Two, that there is a bitter irony for me here, in that I actually do agree with Chamberlain's ideas in this context, even though I disagree with his ideas in the context in which he applied them.

      China is relatively stable, but its people are sorely oppressed--not as oppressed as they were ten years ago, and not as oppressed as they will be ten years from now, but still, they're oppressed. Economic sanctions will certainly make their situation worse before it makes their situation better. And in the best-case scenario, there's a very real risk that it won't make their situation better at all. Again, I draw your attention to the Russian fiasco.

      In the worst-case scenario, far from encouraging rapid reform, your plan could well drive the Chinese government back to their old ways. After all, nothing takes the minds of the masses off their own oppression and hardship like having an outside enemy to blame it all on. It could also encourage the Chinese government to pursue a policy of destabilizing and weakening its newfound economic enemies.

      Economic sanctions will also make the situation worse for all the free peoples of the west, whose economic and stability is unfortunately bound up in the Chinese economy. This is sure to happen even if the Chinese governement doesn't choose to exacerbate the situation with retaliatory economic attacks.

      These are my concerns. I wholeheartedly believe that the politicians who make these decisions are corrupt and incompetent in varying degrees. I'm sure that talented people of good will could find a way to improve the situation, and make us all less complicit in China's human rights violations, but I do believe it's a matter of degree.

      The drastic measur

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    8. Re:Compare and contrast... by Anonymous+Bullard · · Score: 1
      So instead of at least trying to do the right thing and cut the money flow to the criminal gang which can not be apprehended, it is better to take the convenient road and collaborate with them in the hope that they aren't actually just plotting to overtake you as the most powerful top dog around? Forget about the genocides they're committing to their neighbors and the human rights violations against their own billion-odd population. Just give them more cash to grow even more powerful? Your Chamberlainian approach failed to address the slight problem with western ideals of freedom and democracy, which we (apart from the ruling classes, that is) would kind of expect to remain as the foundation of the West's decision-making.

      It's not like the economic embargo didn't work with the USSR, right? Now almost all of the Soviet-invaded countries and territories are free from occupation and Russia is at least partially free, and generally a far lesser threat to the world than the Soviet empire was before its economic collapse.

      Apart from the growing nuke arsenal and massive military modernizing and buildup drive, the Chinese regime has *currently* little chance of creating chaos in the West through political and economic means, but look at their policies and you'll see that they're working furiously to get there. At this pace in a decade or two at most we'll have an expansionist totalitarian dictatorship controlling the majority of the world's energy and raw material markets (through state-subsidized free-market means, compatible with their national socialistic doctrines), and they'll be exporting their decicedly un-free and un-democratic ideals alongside their new trading muscle. USA will be the biggest loser since their current economic might is so largely based on underhanded manipulation of world's resources and market policies which they will lose control of (having made a number of enemies worldwide while they were at it).

      If you think that the ruling regime is voluntarily reforming, apart from the their fascist, proven efficient economic policies, you'll be sorely disappointed. They're counting on the democratic world to be too soft and too greedy to do anything about it until it's too late. If anything, I'd expect the waning, chaotic and perhaps fundamentalist-lead USA to be the one resorting to nuclear strikes (and bible; chapter armageddon) when they realize that China's got them by their economic balls.

      Either you stand behind your principles and swallow the modest pain while economic activity is shifted from China to more peaceful and democratic countries, or you keep rewarding the power-mad dragon until it's strong enough to call the shots. Eventually the declining democracies will find out whether freedom can co-exist in the shadow of the Chinese empire.

      Btw, the Chinese state-controlled firms have already proliferated their nuclear and missile knowhow to various islamic states via Pakistan.

      --

      Should invading one's peaceful neighbours be opposed, or rewarded with trade deals?

  129. The Little Red Book scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Man you aren't up to date on that story. Heck, did you even click the follow up story link right there under the title? Federal agents' visit was a hoax

    The kid made it all up. No G-Men visited him.

  130. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by syukton · · Score: 5, Informative

    UMass student admits "Little Red Book" Hoax:
    http://www.thecrimson.com/article.aspx?ref=510754

    In addition to forgetting, you also evidently didn't do any due diligence on the linked material.

    --
    Reinvent the wheel only at either a lower cost, greater effectiveness, or your own personal enrichment and satisfaction.
  131. can't do research without wikipedia? bullshit by HelloKitty · · Score: 1

    who uses only one source of info in their thesis?
    who uses an encyclopedia solely as their thesis source?

    wow. don't they have libraries in china?

  132. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by delong · · Score: 1

    The viability of this option depends on the quality of your local library

    If China's research colleges are in such bad array that they don't have the most basic tools of research and have to rely on freakin Wikipedia (!!!!!), the hype about a "Chinese Century" are laughably empty.

    Derek

  133. One good idea from the Chinese! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wikipedia is a useless tool, unless your looking to tap into the mass unconsciousness of the "learned masses" and further dilute the truth, confuse the topic or simply get it wrong x percent of the time.

          If Chinese students are relying on Wikipedia for "factual information", we have nothing to worry about!

        This probably explains why the Chinese cant make a fucking thing that will continue to to work beyond its warranty period!

    1. Re:One good idea from the Chinese! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "This probably explains why the Chinese cant make a fucking thing that will continue to to work beyond its warranty period! "

      you know, it is not that easy to make things work before the warranty and then break immediately after the warranty.

  134. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by misleb · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Is any of it due to government cencorship?
    No.


    Of course it is. The government censors child pornography. You can't view it, you can't dispplay it, you can't trade it. What else would you call this besides censorship?

    Please be careful distinguishing government intervention and bulk censorship (as opposed to personal responsibility) .

    So if it isn't done "bulk," it isn't censorship? What about broadcast TV, isn't that censored? Don't the networks have to pass their material by censors before they can put it on the air? Should we change their job title because you are uncomfortable with the fact that the US government employs censorship to some degree? You might argue that the networks hire their own censors, but what rules do you think the censors go by... the FCC, right?

    with perfectly sane laws quite endorsed by the society

    From what I understand, "bulk" censorship is quite endorsed by the majority of the Chinese population. Just as censorship of child pornography is quite endorsed by the majority of the US population.

    Is it legal to commit murder? No
    Is it legal to threaten with murder? No
    Is it legal to think about murder? Yes

    Cencorship begins only when that last question has to be answered with a "no".


    Hardly. Even the Chinese are allowed to think about the things that are censored. They might be oppressed, but they don't quite have thought police yet.

    -matthew

    --
    "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
  135. China's government is minimalist and efficient by Analogue+Kid · · Score: 1

    China's government is as unobtrusive and minimalist as they get. It like all governments is in the business of staying in power. Unlike the US government, the Chinese government is very direct about this. If you don't threaten their power, they don't mess with you.

    The US government is different. Of course it's still in the business of maintaining its own power, but it isn't very upfront about it. As a result, it uses a vast assortment of hand-waving and various levels of bullshit along with excessive taxes to accomplish the same result.

    I find the US media in absolute denial about this though. There are constant stories about this or that bad thing going on in China. If more Americans actually lived here, they wouldn't buy that load of crap. People don't have to "keep their heads down" and live in fear of the government at all times. Yes, there is capital punishment in China, but the Chinese government kills far fewer people than the US government does. Yes, there are people who have difficulties getting represented in court, but at least China doesn't openly flaunt international law by throwing people in jail indefinitely without trial and then claiming that international law doesn't apply to them. China doesn't go rampaging around the globe invading countries, or bombing embassies either.

    In terms of propaganda, France, the US, China, Japan, and all the other powerful countries soak their populace in it constantly. In Japan, nationalist comics portray Koreans and Chinese and filthy barbarians; in Canada one of the most popular TV shows is dedicated to nationalistic prejudice; in China, people call Zhang Zi Yi a race traitor for starring accross from a Japanese man in a romantic role. Propagana, restriction of the truth, and disinformation are out in full force everywhere. It's just a pity that people are usually so unaware of the propaganda coming from their own countries.

    --
    I'm a gnu world man.
    1. Re:China's government is minimalist and efficient by Pete · · Score: 1
      Analogue Kid:
      Yes, there is capital punishment in China, but the Chinese government kills far fewer people than the US government does.

      Uh..... what?

      Wikipedia article:

      According to Amnesty International's annual report on official judicial execution, in 2004 there were 3,797 executions in 25 countries. Nine of every ten executions took place in the People's Republic of China (PRC) which carried out at least 3,400 executions.

      Or were you trying to be clever and (for example) add the approximate tally of Iraq-invasion deaths to the USA's scoreboard?

      Seriously, the USA has a pretty corrupt and evil government. But China's government is, by any reasonable comparison, worse. :)

    2. Re:China's government is minimalist and efficient by Analogue+Kid · · Score: 1

      I was not "trying to be clever". The simple truth is, no other county sends soldiers all over the planet like the US does. I'm not speaking only of Iraq, but it is a good example. China doesn't do this at all. Do you feel that it doesn't count as "killing" as long as the US government is doing it in other countries? I think you can look at any time period you like within the last 200 years. It can be during the Qing dynasty and the US war against the Cherokee, during the boxer rebellions and the mining towns slaughters, during the cultural revolution and the Vietnam war, or it can be right now. In just about any case it is the US government doing more killing and yet somehow the US press is quite self-righteous about it all.

      On an unrelated issue, China's punishment systems, while brutal, are effective. The US on the other hand has a very high murder rate and a very high violent crime rate in general.

      --
      I'm a gnu world man.
    3. Re:China's government is minimalist and efficient by Pete · · Score: 1
      I think you can look at any time period you like within the last 200 years. It can be during the Qing dynasty and the US war against the Cherokee, during the boxer rebellions and the mining towns slaughters, during the cultural revolution and the Vietnam war, or it can be right now. In just about any case it is the US government doing more killing and yet somehow the US press is quite self-righteous about it all.

      Gee. Any time period within the last 200 years? Can it be from 1959 to 1962? *eyeroll*

      Or if you prefer, the invasion and occupation of Tibet?

      On an unrelated issue, China's punishment systems, while brutal, are effective.

      And you know this because...? Hang on, let me guess. Chinese government statistics?

    4. Re:China's government is minimalist and efficient by Analogue+Kid · · Score: 1

      1959-1962? The beginning of the Vietnam invasion!!?

      Have you ever looked at non-US statistics? Can you honestly say any other country goes around the world killing so many people, torturing war criminals, breaking international treaties and then acting high and mighty about it?

      How can American media point the finger at China?

      --
      I'm a gnu world man.
    5. Re:China's government is minimalist and efficient by Pete · · Score: 1
      1959-1962? The beginning of the Vietnam invasion!!?

      I was meaning the so-called Great Leap Forward. For which China apparently killed somewhere between 25-60 million of its own people.

      The US at its most bloodthirsty would have trouble beating that.

    6. Re:China's government is minimalist and efficient by Analogue+Kid · · Score: 1

      That is very untrue. Many people starved, but it's not the same as killed.

      --
      I'm a gnu world man.
    7. Re:China's government is minimalist and efficient by Pete · · Score: 1
      I guess we'll have to agree to disagree on that point. I'd consider the government's policies at the time to be a direct cause of the mass starvation, so they should be added to the tally of those dead due to Chinese government actions.

      It's kind of depressing that that death tally was so much higher than for China's invasions of Tibet and Vietnam. But, well, China has a lot of people to kill.

  136. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by modecx · · Score: 1

    Am I saying I could write a paper off of Wikipedia? No, but when that's all you have to work with, it may be more important than you think.

    Of course, the idea of writing an entire college level paper with precisely one source, let alone as few as two or three, no matter how accredited, is idiocy in the first place. It's all about diversity of information, people. Come on!

    That said, Wikipedia has its advantages. It's a great place to learn the basics of a topic, and then use that to branch off and further refine your knowledge. It's often good for up to date information, and in the case of writing a paper its often at least as good as other modern media, be they newspapers, magazines, the nightly news. It's also good for an overview of historical and regional events.

    Obviously, it's not often (that is to say, ever) going to be the last word in information if you're writing your thesis for a master's degree in Nuclear Engineering. There are better places to look for information related to any such focused field. However, I see nothing wrong with citing Wikipedia directly once or twice in a high school paper, especially if it's crossed referenced with other sources... And I have the feeling most teachers wouldn't have a problem with it either, as the goal of high school papers is often less about the content, and more about the experience of the whole thing.

    --
    Constitutional rights may be respected, repealed, or modified; but they must never be ignored.
  137. Will Be Corrected by Coming Sino-US Nuclear War... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    in which Beijing attacks Taiwan during the 2006 Olympics, believing that the U.S. would not respond. Instead Taiwan launches nukes destroying major Chinese coastal cities. The jewel of Shanghai is shattered forever but Hong Kong is left untouched. U.S. enters on the side of Taiwan and China's coastal defenses are obliterated along with all inland missile and air force facilities. China lies unprotected for 3 days as the old men in Beijing try to maintain control and arresting all non-Chinese Olympic visitors. This fails as Chinese generals overthrow the government and sue for peace with the U.S.

    Result: endless trials as the Communist Party in China is dismantled and most members executed or literally torn apart or burned alive by their subjects. China, reduced to a rubble with an economy of nothing, breaks into 7 countries, most led by warlords. The U.S. never invades but maintains hegemony over all of China, relentlessly searching for traces of nuclear weapons and obliterating anything that radiates gamma, alpha or b-rays. A unified Communist China is now a dream of the past, gone forever.

    Taiwan rebuilds and in 3 years Taiwan & Hong Kong are the New China.

  138. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by manifoldronin · · Score: 2, Insightful
    China believes certain religious, political, and economic philosophies constitute a grave danger to their society. And actually, they have that correct, in that at least on the political and economic front, those banned ideas will eventually destroy their existing government.
    There goes down the toilet your whole argument - ideas destroying "their society" are not necessarily those that would destroy "their existing government". What's interesting is, it's usually a government that's afraid of being overthrown would attempt to sneak in and substitute the two words and make its citizens believe that "the government is the society."
    --
    Tyranny isn't the worst enemy of a democracy. Cynicism is.
  139. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Look, you don't get it do you? China says Falun Gong members have killed people

    http://un.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/52796.html

    China's a sovereign government. The US government passes laws against some crimes, so does China.

    Only in the US do people whine and moan about other governments whilst watching their own government execute children as grown adults

    The thing is, whiny middle class US kids' views of the world don't upset other countries' citizens one bit. When you realise that, you whine even more.

    Anyone involved in actual *work* abroad doesn't give a shit what you think. fuck off back to Penny Arcade.

    'On the other hand, Radical Islam has killed people'

    what the fuck is Radical Islam?

    'Apples... oranges...'

    Idiots, Americans - is there any difference anymore?

  140. An alternate view point by warezthebeef · · Score: 1

    Everyone seems to have overlooked another possibility for the Chinese blocking of wikipedia (and Chinese internet censorship in general) and that is to prevent the easy dissemination of Chinese scientific secrets to anyone outside of China. Given that they are presently playing a game of economic catch up it would make sense that all new discoveries would be zealously guarded to be played as a trump card at some future date.

    I think that researchers' difficulties may just be a symptom of this, as many have said if one wants to research properly there are still many other avenues left open when the internet fails.

    wtb

  141. I think... by msauve · · Score: 1
    that turning a blind eye to Chinese violations of civil and IP rights and continuing, even encouraging, trade and economic development will be harmful, to the US and the rest of the world, in the long run. Are you suggesting that refusing to trade with them would result in their attacking us?

    To build on your dog training analogy, they're a dog begging at the table, and the rest of the world is giving them table scraps, hoping they'll go away. It doesn't work like that - it only encourages them.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    1. Re:I think... by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      I used the phrase "bring to heel" as a figure of speech, not as an analogy.

      I don't think China would attack the U.S. at least not directly. Rather, I think that China would probably resort to some combination of invasion of eastern Russia (for certain resources), nuclear blackmail, and covert funding and equipping of terrorist organizations.

      In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if some combination of the latter two isn't a factor in all our current negotiations with China.

      Anyway, my point is that there's been a slow but steady trend towards reform and liberalization in China, over the last couple of decades, and that that is a good thing, not to be given up lightly.

      I wish it would progress faster. I wish that our economy wasn't so entangled with the Chinese economy that disentangling the two would cause hardship and suffering here, and weaken our ability to counter Chinese power in worst-case scenarios. I wish that politicians the world over weren't corrupt and incompetent in varying degrees. But one thing I don't wish for is an ill-advised drastic increase in the economic and diplomatic pressure on a populous, disgruntled, nuclear power with a key role in the global economy.

      I'm curious: do you have in mind any specific examples of trade agreements with China, that if not made, would have hastened the process of human rights reforms in China, and would not have caused significant problems that, while not as bad as Chinese human rights violations, would nonetheless have required costly and time-consuming solutions we may not have had the resources to pursue?

      Or are you just assuming that such cases must exist, and if we only knew about them we could put the whole situation right?

      If it's the former, please share. I'd like to have some concrete data to adjust my opinions against.

      If it's the latter, then by the same token shouldn't you also assume that the opposite cases exist as well; that there are many specific instances of diplomacy and economic negotiation used successfully as a tool to bring about reforms in China without causing upheaval around the world? That much of the time, the process is actually working?

      On another note, how far would you go? Are you advocating nothing more than tougher negotiations? Or would you be in favor of actual sanctions? What do you think China would do, if we made a credible threat to cut off their oils supply?

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  142. Complete the sentence by clambake · · Score: 1

    'How can I do my thesis now?' a university student asked on another Chinese website shortly before being arrested for dissidance.

  143. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 0

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  144. To [paraphrase] one of the greats... by gcranston · · Score: 1

    "A book??... That's right. In my day [the internet] was called books!" -William Goldman The Princess Bride

    There are very special books called reference books that contain the wealth of human knowledge. It's like, just written down on paper and handily bound into volumes by subject area. Maybe people should open them again. Anyone who's thesis is based on that much internet research holds no academic weight at all. Believe me.

  145. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course! Censoring political and religious belief is equal to the United States not allowing you to download music or to look at porn whos creation HARMS A CHILD FOR LIFE. That's the one time where I will say "for the children." In the case of child porn, for the sake of "the children," kill the mother fuckers who make it and those that create a demand for it.

    Yes, sir, I will say that the United States is a bit more enlightened. I'm sorry you can't download music or kiddy porn. But hey, at least you can have peaceful political debate. And because of that debate, one day, you may be able to download music legally.

    But hey, they're just taboos and all taboos are equal. Do you actuall read what you write? Just because you can switch words doesn't make it true it just makes you look like an idiot. "pla is sucks" oh, my man, simply switch coo' with sucks and it makes it true.

  146. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    In the US, we believe in practically ANYTHING justified by "for the kids". We believe corporate profit and domestic security trump personal freedoms.

    Thank you for illustrating the utter absurdity of the proposal that the people and the government are one and the same.

    The government and "the people" (everyone else) are separated by one distinct, unambiguous point. Government holds the unique "right" to initiate force as a means to an end; everyone else does not (if they initiate force they become criminals, and rightly so).

    So maybe the problem isn't the way that "we" are thinking, or the powers that "we" have "granted" to government. Maybe the problem is that this "right" to initiate force exists in the first place.

  147. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by neodragonslayer · · Score: 3, Informative

    You must be new here.

    The reason it was modded Overrated was because Overrated and Underrated mods don't show up in Metamoderation.

  148. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by pla · · Score: 1

    Who the hell are you to defend such a practice?

    In case you missed my tone, I meant more to draw parallels to the problems of the US government, than to absolve the Chinese government of their own. I did ramble a bit, though, so I can understand your impression.

    Hopefully I didn't miss your tone, just in case you meant that tongue-in-cheek. :)

  149. Google is GOD! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am now starting to doubt the intellect of chinese students. Don't they know that google keeps a cached copy of pretty much most of the important and worthwhile stuff around on the 'net? just add site:wikipedia.org to ur search terms and look at the cached copy. it may not be up-to-date but should be usable enough to point to "acceptable" sources.

  150. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by baKanale · · Score: 1

    All societies have taboos, and all societies believe that those taboos protect either all of society or the target of the taboo. Sometimes that holds true, and sometimes it does not.

    In the US, we believe in practically ANYTHING justified by "for the kids". We believe corporate profit and domestic security trump personal freedoms. We believe we have quite a lot of rights that the courts regularly laugh out of court.

    China believes certain religious, political, and economic philosophies constitute a grave danger to their society. And actually, they have that correct, in that at least on the political and economic front, those banned ideas will eventually destroy their existing government.



    The difference is that the American government is elected by the people (it may have it's problems but it's 100 times better than the "you vote communist... or you vote communist" thing China has), and thus represents the people to an extent. With the child porn example, most Americans agree that having sex with 8 year old boys is wrong. With the filesharing example, it's all legal as long as you don't share copyrighted fles. Such sharing (debatedly) "hurts" the owners of the copyrights. (Not debating that the RIAA is right; I think the laws as they are today are too strict, but that with pobbying from citizens and whatnot HOPEFULLY we might be able to change that.)

    However, the Chinese government isn't censoring Wikipedia because the Chinese people find the concept of a wiki to be immoral, or whatever. They're censoring it because they don't like Wikipedia's "stubborn neutrality and independence on political issues such as Tibet and Taiwan". That's comparable to the US Government banning Wikipedia because George W. Bush's article has criticisms in it, or they dislike the fact that there are articles covering the Bay of Pigs invasion, Watergate, or the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal.

    My point is that they're not censoring Wikipedia because the people feel that the information contained within is wrong, immoral, or whatever. They're censoring it because it hurts their government. Yes, there's that kind of censoring in the US and that's wrong, but that still doesn't make China right (especially when they do it more).

  151. Longer than 10 weeks... by coolMikeUSC · · Score: 1

    I'm here in China and can't stand Chinese censorship, almost as much as I loathe their Orwellian "history-writing". The blockage, for example, has been going on for closer to 15 weeks. One of the posters said that the fact that the students are using Wikipedia is revealing of the quality of Chinese degrees. As a college professor, I could not agree more.

    --
    Ever notice how fast Windows runs? Neither do I - get Mac OS
    1. Re:Longer than 10 weeks... by Hosiah · · Score: 1
      I'm here in China

      God, don't know how that happened. As the only person in this entire thread with firsthand knowledge who speaks English clearly, could *you* answer some of the questions in this thread for us? China have libraries? Lots of books? Alternative research from Wiki? Available to the poorest, most disadvantaged citizen?

  152. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mod parent up for the tasteless yet appropriate pun!

  153. Trade agreements... by msauve · · Score: 1
    no need to be specific, any/all of them.

    We should have immediately stopped trading with China after Tianamen. In 2005, there was a $167 billon trade deficit, and it consists mostly of cheap crap. It was $10 billion in 1990, the year after Tianamen.The US isn't encouraging reform, it's rewarding the status quo.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    1. Re:Trade agreements... by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      Halt all trade with China?

      Can you give any details at all on how you think this would impact the Chinese economy, and how they might react? Any support at all for your claim that this would bring about immediate reforms? Any reasons at all to discount the possibility that forcing China into rapid reform could result in a situation similar to what's going on in the former Soviet Union right now? Any reasons at all to discount the concern that the Chinese government might choose something other than rapid reform under pressure, rather than risk the Russian outcome?

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  154. Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'How can I do my thesis now?'

    Like the rest of us. Research. Library. You lazy bum trying to rely on a single website based on non-peer reviewed user input.

    Next they'll complain schools ban sites that sell essays. Hope you fail.

  155. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think he's defending the practice. He just harbors self hatred for himself and his country (I assume US, maybe just for Western, capitalistic, civ.) I see this self hatred amongst the west everywhere and I've never understood it. Honestly, comparing radical Islam to "Falun Gong..."

    If you look at the theme of his post it is that "we are no better and have no right to question their actions." This is moral equivocalism taken to the point of pathology. All ideas are equal, the west/US is as bad as China because I can't download music and kiddy porn, Bush==Hitler, etc etc etc... This is a sign of someone who has never seen hardship and does not understand just how good that he has it. It's like a rich kind only getting one pony instead of two and thinking himself the most put upon and cheated individual in history.

    The talk of taboo is interesting. Take radical Islam... taboo for women to not be cloaked and accompanied by a male relative while out. Is the US really more enlightened than that? I'd say so. Of course, the original poster would probably say "but women can't go out naked..." But on the enlightment curve, it's still better than being shot in a scoker stadium. But of course not going naked == stadium. I'd laugh but this kind of thinking is destroying the West and it has to stop because it shits on the West's greates contributions to human thought and history - the simple freedom of thought.

  156. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by stor · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The government censors child pornography. You can't view it, you can't dispplay it, you can't trade it. What else would you call this besides censorship?

    Child pornography (as a product) requires commiting heinous crimes to produce it.

    Even if you were just a "consumer" of it and didn't produce it yourself, you'd still be supporting those who are commiting sexual crimes against children.

    It's a very different situation than, say, banning a violent/sexually explicit game.

    Cheers
    Stor

    --
    "Yeah well there's a lot of stuff that should be, but isn't"
  157. wiki on the Red Army by stock · · Score: 1

    Wikipedia has become a essential part of the internet, just like google has become. As i was looking for information about the Red Army during the cold war, this page seems a good source : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Army
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_history_of_t he_Soviet_Union

    however information about who actually were the Cold War Russian Army Generals not a lot can be found. Wiki is a good source for a start into a subject, but one will need to read books still.

    Robert

  158. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by misleb · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Child pornography (as a product) requires commiting heinous crimes to produce it.

    Even if you were just a "consumer" of it and didn't produce it yourself, you'd still be supporting those who are commiting sexual crimes against children.

    What if it is pirated kiddie porn and no money changes hands. Would it be OK then? I doubt it. Not by the law.

    Look, I'm not saying censoring kiddie porn isn't justifiable. I'm just pointing out that it is still censorship.

    It's a very different situation than, say, banning a violent/sexually explicit game.

    Different situation. Both censorship.

    -matthew

    --
    "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
  159. Kiwipedia mentioned intelligent design by heroine · · Score: 1

    So that makes China and u.s. as the only 2 governments to ban mentioning intelligent design in some way or another. Why do all the religion fanatics head for u.s. and China?

  160. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by superyanthrax · · Score: 1

    In fact I have lived in China for long stretches, and get along just fine with the banning of websites. Anything that I need I can get. One does not need Wikipedia to do their work; they should be able to find their information elsewhere (unless of course that information is related to counter-revolutionary activities, in which case there is a reason they're blocked...)

    If anyone considers Wikipedia a legitimate source for a thesis, they must be crazy. As an inspiration for ideas, and for general knowledge, it is a good source of information. But if you try to cite Wikipedia as a source on a serious thesis or other scholarly article, your work will not be accepted. It would be equivalent to citing some random web site as fact. It will take a long time and a lot of effort on wikipedia's part for people to even think of wikipedia as possibly being a legitimate source, and even then many will doubt the quality produced by the community-edited encyclopedia.

  161. So different from here... by mshurpik · · Score: 1

    Well if you think banning Wikipedia is bad, you should know that China has a history of civil rights abuses, including domestic spying, rigged elections, suspension of habeas corpus, torture, military invasion, and a media monopoly that prevents dissenters from appearing on television.

    Thank God we live in America!

  162. I really don't think so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, maybe, but, as far as I know, the Chinese content on Wikipedia is quite lacking compared with the content that is freely available on Chinese websites (bbs, forums). How many Chinese scholars really need to access the Chinese content in Wikipedia? Without any stastistics and based only on opinions of absolute minority people, the conclusion is not convincing. (The English content? in China, people can download Encyclopædia Britannica FREE. The situation is totally different than in the WEST. )

  163. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by superyanthrax · · Score: 1

    Yes, Falun Gong has killed people. Their belief of not going to hospitals to treat illnesses have killed on the order of thousands of people. See this:

    http://www.falungonginfo.org/index.html

  164. Thank you... by msauve · · Score: 1

    for verifying the validity of my initial observation. You support appeasement, for the same reasons as Sir Never Chainberlin.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    1. Re:Thank you... by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Except for the part that I don't see it as appeasement, that I believe the conditions which obtained in 1938 WRT Hitlerite Germany are radically different than the conditions that obtain in 2005 (and in 1995, and in 1985, and in 1975, and probably even in 1965) WRT Communist China, and that while I do understand and agree with Churchill's reasons for opposing Chamberlain's policy I do not understand or agree with your reasons for opposing my policy in that you have given no reasons at all beyond an anachronistic and ahistorical hangup on superficial similarities between two radically different situations. For a pleasant change of pace, feel free to explain how a policy of economic isolationism has pursuaded the Castro regime to put an end to Communist Cuba's human rights abuses.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  165. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yo, jackhole. The first line of your link says the Little Red Book story is a hoax. Apparently not only do you forget, you can't READ.

    For the love of Bog, people will believe anything they *want* to believe. And you want to believe the worst. You live a sad life.

    Oh. And don't forget in all this that the UN is demanding we turn control of the internet over to a regulatory group that includes China, among others! Yippeee! Censorship for everyone!

  166. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  167. In 1938... by msauve · · Score: 1

    Hitler became Supreme Commander of the German armed forces. In 1938, Hitler occupied Austria. In 1938, Hitler formed an alliance with Mussolini. In 1938, Goering warned all Jews to leave Austria. In 1938, Chamberlain thought he had appeased Hitler with the Sudetenland. In 1938, the Kristallnacht occurred. In 1938, Hitler had such an impact, he was named Time's "Man of the Year." By the end of 1938, about 82 percent of eligible youths were members of the "Hitler Youth."

    This is all well documented fact. Yet, you're silly enough to try to claim that Hitler was "far from established" in 1938.

    Sorry, the debate is over. You have lost.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    1. Re:In 1938... by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely right. I had mistaken the time frame, and should not have asserted that Hitler was still eligible for an easy coup by the German generals in that year. By '38, that time had passed. Nevertheless, I do believe Churchill's actual reasons for not appeasing Hitler in '38 (which did not include the prospects of a coup) were quite valid and should have guided Chamberlain to a very different course than the one he chose. But unless you believe that the Chinese government is currently vulnerable to a coup by friendly factions, I'm not sure how it's relevant to the point we're discussing, let alone the final word on the argument.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  168. Semantic Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    US could have done the same thing with Iraq by announcing that Iraq is and always was part of the US.

  169. Be serious by cdrdude · · Score: 0

    Speaking of John Seigenthaler, This is the most accurate and truthful source I have found yet.

    --
    This sig is neither interesting, nor humorous. Including meta-humor.
  170. Stone ages eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Jeez, what is this, the stone ages? Obviously if when a government prohibits communication, it has something to lose if it does not interfere. To me that implies there is some very significant corruption rooted in the state in question.

    Well, hopefully they'll come around without any major problems.

  171. Thesis??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude. If that student's thesis is entirely dependant upon Wikipedia, then Chinese education is way, way behind the US's. (Reminds me of 3rd grade when I was doing reports out the encyclopedia.) You geeks blaming your current employment situation on competition from China need to look inward. That is unless the thesis was on Wikipedia itself.

  172. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by NotoriousQ · · Score: 1

    I like how you equate endorsing the anti-child porn laws with trolling.

    --
    badness 10000
  173. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's set aside the massive differences in how the standardized comparison tests are administered in the U.S. and in other countries, which completely invalidate the "rankings" that get published by any scientific standard. By non-test, real-world measurements of productivity, invention, and the like, Americans clearly get more real-world benefit from the U.S. educational system than the people of most developed countries get from their educational systems.

    And certainly a higher percentage of kids are in poverty than adults. The easiest way for to wind up in poverty is to have kids you cannot afford, which by definition puts the kids in poverty, too. Kids raise the income requirement to stay out of poverty while not increasing income; households with kids by the very nature of things are going to be more prone to poverty than those without. Duh.

  174. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by NotoriousQ · · Score: 0

    So if it isn't done "bulk," it isn't censorship?
    It is not, because if I chose to do it, I can. I will be put in jail, but the government does not have a system in place to effectively prevent me. Personal responsibility, not government censorship is preventing me from doing these things. Look at the murder example: the government is not censoring my ability to murder. I can think about it, I can accomplish it, I will likely end up a criminal. But censorship has not been involved.

    From what I understand, "bulk" censorship is quite endorsed by the majority of the Chinese population.
    No, it is not. Otherwise, there would be no people protesting the blocking mechanism. You do not see people protesting the child porn laws in the US, do you? (Yea, there are a few nuts probably, but nothing like an actual protest)

    Even the Chinese are allowed to think about the things that are censored.
    That's the problem. They are not. Sites have been taken down that criticize the Great Firewall.

    They might be oppressed, but they don't quite have thought police yet.
    Not yet 1984, but not that far from it.

    --
    badness 10000
  175. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He doesn't care. It casts the current administration, whether the stopry is true or not, in a bad light. He'll just keep repeating it a long with another million people until it becomes true. It's a common ploy used by fascists. Though those that do so think they are doing good. Very few fascist recognize themselves in the mirror.

  176. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by edinjapan · · Score: 1

    Picture a library full of books and all the most interesting and controversial books are under lock and key. Picture large, unfriendly guards standing watch over who gets access to these works. This is a Chinese research library at a major university. Given the political situation and the conflicting need for information all the major Chinese libraries have a wealth of information on any subject that is deemed important. Unfortunately, most of the information is locked away with safeguards, rules and regulations as to who can see it and at what times they can see it. It's no wonder that Wikipedia is a useful resource for Chinese University students.

    --
    Fish....More than just sushi
  177. American Values? by fufinache · · Score: 1
    Sorry hypocrites, you can't have it both ways. China is a sovereign state, so while you may disagree, YOU have no right sticking your nose in their business, or spreading so-called "American values".

    It's always struck me as funny how some people imply that American imperialism is a contrast to Communism. Although I'm not a big fan of either capitalism or communism, I do believe that both systems has it's own flaws. We might not have a right to stick our nose into their business, but if they wanted help and needed help, I'd be willing to bend any rule or law there is to do what I can for them.

    And you can thank the left for that particular argument, because I stole it straight from an anti-war in Iraq website.

    What does war have to do with anything? You don't need to fight to help people. This is probably just me, but I hate it when people decide to classify beliefs as left/right thinking. Call me crazy, but it appears that all it does is just divide our society even more so we can discriminate for another reason.

    1. Re:American Values? by sydneyfong · · Score: 1

      > if they wanted help and needed help
      Let me just say one thing: most outsiders have no freaking clue when help is needed or NOT needed.

      Imagine somebody in the USA calling for help to bring down the white house. Would you be pleased if afterwards China sent over their army to "help" the "innocent US citizens" by dropping a few bombs in Washington?

      The fact is, some of the calls for "help" are no more than soliciting assistance to commit treason. And given Americans' (in particular) understanding of the East (people, culture, values, etc), I'd repeat this: most outsiders have no freaking clue when help is needed or NOT needed.

      --
      Don't quote me on this.
    2. Re:American Values? by fufinache · · Score: 1
      Imagine somebody in the USA calling for help to bring down the white house. Would you be pleased if afterwards China sent over their army to "help" the "innocent US citizens" by dropping a few bombs in Washington?

      Why are people always associating help with war and destruction? As I mentioned before, war has nothing to do with help. War is complete contrast to help. I should have mentioned this earlier, but I refer to help as the kind of work the U.N. does in 3rd world countries, setting up refugee camps, providing food and supplies.

      The fact is, some of the calls for "help" are no more than soliciting assistance to commit treason. And given Americans' (in particular) understanding of the East (people, culture, values, etc),

      You're right, some calls for help are for the purpose of soliciting assistance commit treason, and good example would be America's "either you're with us or you aren't" on their war for oil, I mean against terrorism. As someone was born in the east, I would have to say that very few Americans know anything about east (how many people do you know that can speak at least of 2 eastern languages fluently). They just think they do from all the media.

      I'd repeat this: most outsiders have no freaking clue when help is needed or NOT needed.

      Outsiders know exactly when or when not they need help, they ask for it when they need it (the call is usually unheard or ignored).

  178. China MORE FREE than America (in one sense) by ruedesursulines · · Score: 1

    I'm an expat and have been living in China for the last 5 months. While I have been pretty annoyed by the fact that Wikipedia is blocked, people in China do have one kind of freedom that Americans don't have...

    You see, over here in the PRC, they don't have any of those bastard weasel RIAA lawyers... I'm free to download all the music and movies I want with no possibility at all of being prosecuted by American legal system thugs!!

  179. heinous crimes? by danielsfca2 · · Score: 1

    Child pornography (as a product) requires commiting heinous crimes to produce it.

    That's not necessarily true. Maybe this is what you meant by "as a product," but in any case, consider the hypothetical case of a 15-year-old girl who takes a few sexy pictures of herself for the exclusive viewing of her 15-year-old boyfriend, who never shares them with anyone. If cops find those pics on his computer/desk/nightstand/sock drawer, he can probably get tried as an adult (and convicted and sent to federal pound-me-in-the-ass prison) for possession of child pornography...that's just how powerful those two words are. I'm not taking a position on whether that's sane, but surely you don't think Miss Teen Girl or Mr. Boyfriend committed heinous crimes in that case. Sure there are a lot of sick people out there, but "child porn" is a hot-button issue which turns most people from "let's see if any harm may have been done" to "BURN THE BASTARD AT THE STAKE!!"

  180. GUTENBERG.ORG also BANNED in China by ruedesursulines · · Score: 1

    Considering that gutenberg.org is also banned over here, I see this as a much broader attempt at keeping the people uneducated with regard to certain kinds of dangerous ideas which might be a threat to processes of exploitation.

    Of course, this kind of thing is going on in many countries, albeit using subtler methods, including the United States and Europe. Keep the people stupid, that is the best way to keep your power over them.

  181. I've seen the carrots... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...thrown at china's fascist rulers and generals/businessmen, but I have yet to see a single substantial stick. So far it looks like the axis of maximum profits partners, the western businessmen and investors in cahoots with the chinese rulers have pulled a pretty big fast one over everybody.

    When someone actually uses a stick on those swine, let us know, because it hasn't made the news yet. And no, those pipsqueak sanctions where they close down one PLA front company then open up the same thing under a new name two hours later don't count.

  182. Ironically... by r6144 · · Score: 1

    I'm in PRC now and today I had a politics exam (yes, Marxism and all). In order to prepare for it I looked for some material about the recent meetings of the Party, and it turned out that www.people.com.cn, a government-owned website that is about as official as People's Daily, was inaccessible unless with foreign proxies. Talk about the irony...

  183. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by pilkul · · Score: 1
    Even if you were just a "consumer" of it and didn't produce it yourself, you'd still be supporting those who are commiting sexual crimes against children.

    In reality, today's pedophiles don't buy child pornography, they download it for free over the internet. Does that still amount to "supporting" those who committed the crimes?

    The case for criminalizing simple viewing of child pornography is much weaker than the case for banning its distribution. It amounts to putting someone to jail purely for being a pedophile, not for having actually hurt any children. Simply having a certain sexual orientation doesn't seem like a valid reason to be put in jail, no matter how heinous that orientation might be. (Perhaps it's a valid rationale for being put in a mental hospital, but not a jail.)

    Even if we were absolutely sure that there is no such thing as a pedophile who is able to keep his desires under control and that every pedophile will actually molest a child in the future, arresting him as a preventative measure still amounts to Minority Report-style Future Crimes Police. Most people, after seeing that movie, felt convinced that such a thing is not acceptable from a civil rights point of view. Why then is nobody uneasy at our draconian child pornography laws?

  184. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1

    Wikipedia is extremely useful as a starting ground for gathering information about a topic. Like Google, I wouldn't base all my research on Google search results pages, but not having access to Google would put a *huge* damper on my ability to research topics on the web.

  185. Wikipedia article on this topic by andyr · · Score: 1
    --
    Andy Rabagliati
  186. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Eivind · · Score: 1
    Oh, but that breaks the law, you no doubt protest... Well, guess who writes the law? The government. And China has one of those as well, to write their laws.

    Yes. But in China that's the end of it. In some other countries, atleast on paper, the government is *not* the top-power in the land. In a democratic country you can then continue: "Well, guess who controls the goverment ?"

  187. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by pla · · Score: 1

    I like how you equate endorsing the anti-child porn laws with trolling.

    So, have you stopped beating your wife yet?

    You just don't seem to get it (but it appears you didn't mean that as a troll, so I'll patiently elaborate on my issue with what you wrote).

    "Child" renderotica breaks US child porn laws, despite not having a human "victim" to protect. Two 16YO lovers snapping a few digital pics of themselves getting it on breaks US child porn laws - Twice. A court-emancipated late-17YO posing for tasteful nude photos in a college photography class breaks US child porn laws. As of July 2005, nude pictures of young looking but perfectly legal models can and have violated US child porn laws. A video of a naked 4YO happily playing hopscotch, which you would NEVER question as "porn" if in a family photo album, magically turns into porn if in the posession of a single middle-aged male, even if he bought it in a bag of videos at a yard sale and didn't even know he had it. All real cases, BTW.

    So when you call that "sane", yes, I take issue with it. Personally, I agree that when talking about explicit or otherwise-compromising nude pics of children, you have a victim, and a good reason to call such content illegal. But when you can run afoul of the law without requiring anything you could even remotely twist into calling a victim, you have nothing more than mindless adherence to the fringes of a societal taboo.

    As for the people looking at this stuff... Can you justify a prison term and permanant "sexual predator" record merely for looking at what amount to victimless cartoons? I'd call such people "sick", but criminals?

  188. "How can I do my thesis now?" by james_bray · · Score: 1

    Use a web proxy?

    Seems simple enough to me....

    James

    --
    http://www.reeb.freeserve.co.uk
  189. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by ClioCJS · · Score: 1
    So an 18-year old having sex with a 17-year old is committing a "heinous crime"? A couple made a sex tape of themselves and were charged for child porn because the 18/17 split in ages. Now he will have to report himself as a sex offender the rest of his life.

    Or the "heinous crime" of creating some 3-d models in Poseur, and making simulated child porn? Still illegal.

    Your point is technically wrong.

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  190. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by misleb · · Score: 2, Insightful
    It is not, because if I chose to do it, I can. I will be put in jail, but the government does not have a system in place to effectively prevent me.

    And the Chinese have ways of getting around website blocks using proxies and such. Are you saying that if there is some way aound the censorship, it isn't censorship? Perhaps it is a little more involved to get around teh Great Firewall, but it is certainly possible. You're really reaching here. I don't know why you are so loath to admit that the US government engages in censorship to some degree.

    BTW, I noticed that you conveniently snipped out my comments about broadcast TV censors. Why do you think they call them censors? Censorship doesn't have to be an all or nothing thing, ya know. There are all kinds of ways to limit and manipulate information to some end.

    Personal responsibility, not government censorship is preventing me from doing these things. Look at the murder example: the government is not censoring my ability to murder. I can think about it, I can accomplish it, I will likely end up a criminal. But censorship has not been involved.

    Bad example. Censorship generally deals with the dissemination of information, not actions. You can't really censor an action, per se.

    From what I understand, "bulk" censorship is quite endorsed by the majority of the Chinese population.

    No, it is not. Otherwise, there would be no people protesting the blocking mechanism. You do not see people protesting the child porn laws in the US, do you? (Yea, there are a few nuts probably, but nothing like an actual protest)


    People I've heard from who have lived in China seem to be under the impression that the bulk of the Chinese people support their government. China is a really big country. The few that are protesting represent a small minority. You might argue the people who are not protesting don't really know how horrible the government is because of censhorship and would probably be pretty disgusted if they know what was really going on, but the fact is that they support the government.

    As I am sure we all we be somewhat disgusted by our government if we knew what was REALLY going on behind closed doors. But we don't know. Besides profanities on broadcast TV and kiddie porn, there are many other things that the government does effectively prevent the people from knowing much about.

    Even the Chinese are allowed to think about the things that are censored.

    That's the problem. They are not. Sites have been taken down that criticize the Great Firewall.



    In what way does that stop them from thinking about these things? They know that a Great Firewall exists. What stops them from criticizing it in their own minds?

    -matthew

    --
    "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
  191. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by sandwiches · · Score: 1

    So, you're saying it's only government censorship if you don't consider the act being committed a "heinous crime"?

  192. Oh shut the fuck up by flyinwhitey · · Score: 1

    "The Un-American Activities Committee didn't kill people, but that is about the best thing that can be said for the organization and the org that became the FBI of that time. Hoover was the US Hilter."

    This is the stupidest thing I've ever seen.

    The house Un-American Activities Committe was an organization that got out of control and was reigned in by the very government you equate to China's and Nazi Germany's.

    That's the point your missing, and will ignore because your world view would be crippled. The US government makes mistakes, but as was stated, there are mechanisms for correcting those mistakes.

    And Hitler? Come on, don't be such a fucking idiot.

    "Look at the US history; we weren't that much better than the Germans. We had camps of Japanese-Americans. Ours just weren't "death" camps. They could have easily turned that way though."

    And said before, those grievances were righted. Comparing the US internment camps with Nazi death camps is the worst kind of moronic hyperbole.

    But since that's the entire body of your work, it doesn't surprise me that you rely on half truth and hyperbole, because the facts simply don't support you.

    It must be nice for you to mold history to your delusions. I wish I could ignore the truth for stupid political reasons like you do, but I'm not an imbecile, so you have what it takes and I don't.

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    How pathetic are you that you follow me from topic to topic and waste all your mod points at once modding me down?
    1. Re:Oh shut the fuck up by kabocox · · Score: 1

      The house Un-American Activities Committe was an organization that got out of control and was reigned in by the very government you equate to China's and Nazi Germany's.

      It is actually a very good US org. to compare to those 2 states. If anything, you could say it was a successful org that stamped out socialism and communism in the US at the mere expess of some civil liberties of those kicked out of the US. Kicked out of the country, or deported to a known communist's country, compared to disappearing people into work/death camps. In the US everyone knew that the Jap-Americans were being sent off somewhere and it was pretty much an approved of measure by the public. The German public also approved of "sending off" the Jews. Note, neither the US public nor the German public cared about them after that. The Jap-Americans were very lucky. Worse things could have easily happened to them. The US did have our moments of genocide. There is nothing else to call the forced relocation of the Native American population and their slow massacre by US armed forces.

      And said before, those grievances were righted. Comparing the US internment camps with Nazi death camps is the worst kind of moronic hyperbole.
      It isn't hyperbole. It's a comparison. The Jap-Americans came out alive but with a public dislike of and mistrust of them. The Jews only came out because of Allied forces freeing them. The US was different from Nazi Germany but only in degree. The US did the same things, but not to the same level. It's a very important difference. People like to pretend that the US is perfect and that we've never gone through those sorts of phases. The US isn't prefect. We were lucky that's all.

      It must be nice for you to mold history to your delusions. I wish I could ignore the truth for stupid political reasons like you do, but I'm not an imbecile, so you have what it takes and I don't.

      I'm sad that you could easily ignore all the dark spots in US history because you want the US to be the shining beacon of justice to the world. You seem to be just like the Un-American Activities Committe. If I don't agree with your opinion, let's call me names and try to mold public opinion against me.

  193. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by Skreems · · Score: 1

    average number of errors in a wide range of topics is a narrow scope?

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    Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
    The Urban Hippie
  194. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by NotoriousQ · · Score: 1

    "Child" renderotica breaks US child porn laws
    Does it? I have not heard of such a thing. But I may be uninformed on the issue.

    I am not surprised on the issue of 16-year old taking photos of themselves. I hope that judges properly interpret the laws in that case. OTOH I am not surprised if they did not.

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    badness 10000
  195. Re:Doomed. Doomed, I tell you! by NotoriousQ · · Score: 1

    What about broadcast TV, isn't that censored? Don't the networks have to pass their material by censors before they can put it on the air? Should we change their job title because you are uncomfortable with the fact that the US government employs censorship to some degree? You might argue that the networks hire their own censors, but what rules do you think the censors go by... the FCC, right?

    TV is censored based on the law of public decency. Personally, I think this is stupid. I think it is possible to declare this restriction unlawful, since the v-chip mandate no longer makes tv a public channel.

    Bad example. Censorship generally deals with the dissemination of information, not actions. You can't really censor an action, per se.

    I agree. Bad example. Censorship of intentions is different from censorship of disemination of information. However, it is hard to find government censoring any private property in the US (except in cases where it is publically displayed).

    People I've heard from who have lived in China seem to be under the impression that the bulk of the Chinese people support their government. China is a really big country. The few that are protesting represent a small minority. You might argue the people who are not protesting don't really know how horrible the government is because of censhorship and would probably be pretty disgusted if they know what was really going on, but the fact is that they support the government.

    I agree. It is called propaganda and nationalism.

    As I am sure we all we be somewhat disgusted by our government if we knew what was REALLY going on behind closed doors. But we don't know. Besides profanities on broadcast TV and kiddie porn, there are many other things that the government does effectively prevent the people from knowing much about.

    Probably there is. However, be careful to distinguish government secrecy from censorship. They are not the same. Both can be harmful. I accept a certain level of government secrecy...I will accept very little censorship.

    In what way does that stop them from thinking about these things? They know that a Great Firewall exists. What stops them from criticizing it in their own minds?

    The problem is that no one can share this idea safely. You share the idea with the wrong person, you go to jail, as sharing ideas against the government is a crime. US is getting a bit worse in that respect too. If you have violent ideas, you may end up being prosecuted. Not quite the guantanamo yet (enemy combatant weirdness...blah blah blah), but it is getting worse. (Taking pictures of infrastructure being illegal in certain places is nuts.....perhaps the worst case of censorship in the US. For now I am simply ignoring it. Arrest me if you want.)

    I am an optimist about the US government. And I am getting more and more disappointed in the Judicial branch lately. I always felt that if I get arrested for taking pictures of the subway, they will save me. Today I am not so sure. But there is still some freedom of thought here. It is still hard to end up in jail for simply thinking something, or doing something completely innocent.

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  196. Sadly... by Kojo · · Score: 1

    ...you've created a post full of links that CAN'T be seen from most points in China. I'm there now.