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China Blocks Google.com, Gmail, Maps and More During 18th Party Congress

DavidGilbert99 writes "In an extraordinary move, the Chinese authorities have blocked access to Google.com, Gmail, Google Maps, Google Docs, and many more Google services as the Communist Party of China holds the 18th Party Congress. The blocking of these sites was reported by Chinese web monitoring site GreatFire.org, which said, 'Never before have so many people been affected by a decision to block a website.' The latest move in a long line of disputes between the Chinese government and Google, it is unclear yet whether this denial will be temporary (like a similar one in 2010) or permanent."

7 of 129 comments (clear)

  1. Pretty Conventional by explosivejared · · Score: 5, Informative

    Ratcheting up Internet restrictions is the norm during times like this. Expect VPN's in-country to also be strangely slower.

    What's interesting to me are the new unconventional methods of restraint China always seems to be a pioneer in. It seems protesters throwing leaflets out of taxi cabs is a growing fear, so taxis are restricted in being able to travel around Tiananmen and will their windows locked, with some having control handles removed altogether.

    I was present in China during the Arab Spring, when it was feared protest would spread. Any mention of a meetup place for protesters would all of a sudden shoot up the priority list for construction repairs. Many areas were cordoned off with armadas of street sweet sweepers.

    Paranoia is an extremely inefficient use of ingenuity.

    --
    I got a catholic block.
  2. Possible outcome? by Ol+Biscuitbarrel · · Score: 5, Funny

    "The Chinese 18th Party Congress was cancelled after attendees were unable to find where it was located without using Google Maps."

  3. Re:Chinese Censorship Is Not Nerd News by Baloroth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You have no right to judge.

    Yes, yes we do. We have the right to say "that is wrong, you should stop that." Everyone does, about the actions of any political group (although they may be wrong, they have the right to say it). That's one of the things that "freedom of speech" and it's very very close partner "freedom of conscience", is all about.

    --
    "None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license." --John Milton
  4. Re:Comments by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Informative

    Are comments disabled on this post?

    No. I am in Shanghai, and Slashdot is not blocked. It is possible that it is blocked in Beijing, where the party congress is being held, but to the best of my knowledge, Slashdot has never been blocked in China. It just isn't popular enough here to matter.

  5. Re:screw 'em, then, let them be ignorant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Research without Google would be like life without electricity," says Xiong Zhenqin, an ecologist at Nanjing Agricultural University in Jiangsu province.

    It is generally possible to find information on the internet without using Google, but Google Scholar and the likes really is a world-class resource.

  6. Re:Is Slashdot blocked in China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I am in China now. Guangdong province.
    Slashdot is not blocked.
    google doesn't work 90% of the time and is horribly horribly slow even though the google Hong Kong server is only a few hours away by boat. The web browser keeps throwing errors about invalid compression and it stops loading the page after waiting about 5 mins.. Gmail is working off and on. The more you use google and Gmail, the slower and less reliable they get to the point where I have to use Bing or taobao instead and a mail client because Gmail sits there for 30 mins with a progress bar and connectivity problems while trying to load my inbox. Gmail's imap works well in that i canMeventually send and receive mail if i wait long enough. My OpenVPN to my home PC in the states works well for about 5 mins and then drops to 5KB/sec and stays there unless i get a new ip from my isp.

    I use reader on my tablet to get news via rss and the google proxy for that is almost always broken with messages about the google server having an error or the server timed out. It's very frustrating.

    Bing works very well here. It is much faster than baidu and it is never broken like google.

  7. Re:Chinese Censorship Is Not Nerd News by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What the hell hell part of "Communist " wouldn't a nerd understated?

    I would say the majority of Slashdot have no clue. I see repeated posts calling America a 'police state' or if there is some censorship there is a cry that there is nowhere worse on the planet than the USA. Those that have never left their mother's basement have no idea what a real police state means, or what censorship means. It doesn't occur to them as they post their rants on a forum that in a lot of the world that forum wouldn't exist in the first place.