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China Hijacks Popular BitTorrent Sites

frogger writes "China is not new to censoring the Internet, but up until now, BitTorrent sites have never been blocked. Recently, however, several reports came in from China indicating that popular BitTorrent sites such as Mininova, isoHunt and The Pirate Bay had been hijacked. The sites became inaccessible, instead redirecting to the leading Chinese search engine Baidu."

3 of 174 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Hijacked? by lysergic.acid · · Score: 5, Informative

    in a word, no. they're committing DNS hijacking on file sharing sites. instead of domain names resolving to the correct IP address, the DNS resolution is being hijacked to send users to a different host to whom the requested domain does not belong. that's why the articles call it "hijacking."

  2. Has never worked for me.. by SpineZ · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm pretty sure that I've never been able to access piratebay from China. Even now, I don't even get redirected to Baidu. Nothing comes up in the browser at all. The "to"s below are timeouts *s that slashdot said I had too many junk characters ;)

    tracert -d thepiratebay.org

    Tracing route to thepiratebay.org [83.140.65.11]
    over a maximum of 30 hops:

        1 2 ms 1 ms 3 ms 192.168.1.1
        2 to to to Request timed out.
        3 4 ms 3 ms 3 ms 221.224.243.169
        4 4 ms 4 ms 4 ms 222.92.175.74
        5 4 ms 4 ms 4 ms 202.97.27.110
        6 7 ms 6 ms 6 ms 202.97.39.165
        7 9 ms 9 ms 14 ms 202.97.44.58
        8 to to to Request timed out.
        9 to to to Request timed out.
      10 to to to Request timed out.
      11 to ^C

  3. Re:So, what have they found? by iNaya · · Score: 5, Informative

    How long did you go for? 2 weeks? A month? You can't see a country in just that time.

    You will have to support your claims for it being communist... Because I've never seen anything to support that. Corruption in China, though not good, is much better than a lot of other countries, including India, and great pains are being made to reduce it.

    I never said that corruption was a capitalist thing - it's not a communist thing either. In fact, I don't know of any political ideology that supports corruption.

    The capitalist sentiment in China is very strong, especially in places like Shanghai. In Beijing, although the Mao Zedong 'religion' is thriving, things are not much different. The rich drive around in their BMW's while the poor try to carve out their lives in the slums, which were conveniently fenced off for the Olympics.

    I haven't met many people in China who were dumb enough to believe that it is anything other than Capitalist, not in the cities anyway. It is usually just uninformed foreigners who would deign to believe anything other than the blatantly obvious truth - which China goes through no lengths to hide.

    A lot of people in China still believe it is Communist, but that is mainly because they don't know what Communism is. They haven't read Karl Marx, or any other important Communist literature, and I wouldn't believe you have either.

    Communism requires Socialism. Almost none of that is present in China. Free education? Ha! For a poor person, they can never expect to get into a good school, unless they are absolutely BRILLIANT at their studies, while the rich mofos just pay a bit of cash, and so the best schools are filled with stupid, ignorant, rich kids. University is no better, except, the truly rich parents usually send their kids to study overseas, where results vary.

    No - China is a place for the rich, even more so than the US of A. True Communism has no place for the rich, but China does.

    One major tell-tale sign of the inherent capitalism is the fact that most Chinese students studying overseas are studying business. If you have access to a nearby University, a quick survey will show you what the majority of them study. At my University (Victoria University), there were hundreds of Chinese studying Bachelors of Commerce, while there were barely any studying anything else, a few, but not many. Why? Because their parents know, that to succeed in China, one has to do business.

    --
    The Unicode standard is over 20 years old. Why does Slashdot not support it?