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Chinese Version of Wikinews Blocked In China

DragonFire1024 writes with this story from Wikinews that says "access to the Chinese Wikinews website has been blocked in China. Wikinews can also confirm that the English version of the website is still available in China. ... Users using the social networking site called Twitter have reported that the site was "blockade[ed] today by the mainland" of China. Others, writing on the Wikimedia Foundation's mailing list also state that the Chinese version of Wikinews is blocked in major Chinese cities such as Beijing."

6 of 87 comments (clear)

  1. Poor productivity by Matt+Perry · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just imagine if the Chinese government used all this effort on something that was actually productive.

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    1. Re:Poor productivity by MartinSchou · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Do you honestly believe that 25% of the Chinese population works for the government?

  2. Blocking is not the worst thing by visible.frylock · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Wait till they start learning the tricks of Western governments. IOW, less emphasis on blocking and more emphasis on spin, misdirection, and obfuscation. Of course, all governments use both to different extents, but the Western governments are masters at the latter. At least with blocking, the government gives away the fact that something is being hidden.

    block : encryption :: spin : steganography

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  3. Re:Censorship never works by 4D6963 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In the context of damage control as the Chinese government is trying to do, the problem is not creating airtight censorship, because the news they try to silence come from mainland China itself, they just try to make sure as few as possible gain access to the news in question.

    Because for some reason, when you're pissed at your government because you emigrated from your village to not find a job and still be in a crappy situation, when you learn that people all across the country are protesting and on strikes, it makes you want to do the same thing. Revolutions are like Mexican waves, you can only help them happen if you know what your peers are up to.

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  4. Re:So what's next? by Yvanhoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Censorship is a subject of interest of Slashdot. It interests many people here, including myself. When Australia, US, France, Russia blocks a website of importance (or even a small website) for whatever reason, it is reported. What is gained by publicizing them is information. We know that if we go to China, Google won't yield trustworthy results about recent events concerning China. We know that Wikipedia, Wikinews or even Slashdot may be blocked. We know that Tor works to circumvent this. We know that the Chinese people is informed by biased media.

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  5. The Effectiveness of blocking sites. by arthurpaliden · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Go to ay school computer lab that has external internet access and blocks MySpace and FaceBook.

    Stay there all day and offer $50.00 to any kid that can get to one of those sites.

    By the end of the day you will be broke.