China To Disable Great Firewall For The Olympics?
from the firewall,-what-firewall? dept
While the Chinese government has, at times, been known to deny that it censors the internet, it's a well-known phenomenon. In the last year or so, more and more details have come out about how the process works. Last fall a disgruntled censor explained the massive bureaucracy that goes into determining what is and what is not appropriate. There have also been reports noting the tens of thousands of people who are involved in censoring the internet, and how the system also relies on "volunteers" to both look out for "bad" content while also adding good content.However, most of those reports focused mainly on the people side of the Great Firewall. Reader Jon now points us to James Fallows' more detailed look at the technological side of the Great Firewall, and the different methods that are used to block sites. Apparently, China has gotten a lot more sophisticated over the past few years in blocking sites. All traffic in and out of the country is monitored, of course, and it's now possible for the system to ban specific pages or articles that have objectionable content, rather than blocking an entire site (as it used to do). There are times when it will still block entire sites, but they can be a lot more narrowly focused. Another interesting point is that China is now using that same Firewall in two directions: if it doesn't want outsiders to be able to access certain documents, it will block foreigners from reaching certain sites within the country as well.
Perhaps the most interesting revelation, however, goes back to the ridiculous denials by Chinese officials that the Great Firewall exists. According to Fallows' sources, during the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, the Great Firewall will be mostly turned off, so that visiting foreigners won't notice any problems accessing foreign sites, and will (or so officials hope) tell people that the concept that China is blocking many popular sites is simply a myth.
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Filed Under: china, great firewall, olympics, technology
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so, what about the chinese people?
doesnt make much sense really...
although i suppose i for one wouldnt be doing much surfing on chinese sites, and i suppose your average chinese wouldnt be doing much surfing on english websites, basically because of the language factor..
Although that said, the average shinese person has probably never seen a computer to be honest...
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Re: so, what about the chinese people?
you are missing the point. There will be many visitors to the country, and they will be using the internet.
The purpose of the article is to imply, they might be turning it off so those visitors do not experience blocked sites. and therefore report that china is not censoring nearly as much as the world thinks.
-J
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Re: so, what about the chinese people?
It's not like their browser will pop up and say "90% of the Internet just became readily available".
I'm a network admin, and we have certain sites blocked (myspace, youtube...etc) and when our subscription to our firewall expired accidentally, we left them unblocked for awhile. People didn't realize that their favorite sites became available because they stopped trying at work.
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Red China
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Re: Red China
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Re: Red China
I can smell a Republican like a fart in a car, because all of their rhetoric sounds exactly the same. They're told what to say by Bill O'Reilly, Rush, Fox News and all of the other spinmasters out there.
This article wasn't about Democrats / Republicans... but somehow there's always "That Guy" (you) who turns it into a divisional battle along party lines.
Wasn't it the BUSH administration.... the person "in power" now that wanted to inspect ALL internet traffic looking for 'terrrists'? You need clarity. If ever you decide you want to think for yourself and get the facts, let me know. I'll be more than happy to show you where the real power and liberty is in this country. You make it for yourself.
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Commie China
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idiot? me?
My point was that china do not only deny that the great firewall exists to us (the west) it also deny's it to its own people...
I just thought that it might be a bit strange for the chinese people to be on an uncensored internet, if only for a while...
Jonny,
i dont think for one minute that china gives a fuck what the west thinks... i think that they would much rather just keep the wool over the eyes of the re own people... the massive influx of westerners into china for the olympics will cause them to have to disable the firewall, only because they would have no deniability if it did..
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Ah... here's an interesting bit.. I think the answer will be "it depends where the access takes place".
In the Olympic Villages and the official media centers, you can bet the Internet will be wide open in both directions.
Now.. go a few blocks to a local internet cafe and compare. Who wants to place a bet it's going to be different?
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With the help of Cisco and other american companies, the chinese government improved the technology significantly.
Now if you are trying to access any webpage contains certain words or phrases which are in the filter list, you will be disconnected for a few minutes to the other side of the wall (from outside to china or from china to outside).
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When you try to access a blocked site, you get a typical message:
Error!
Could not connect to remote server
You tried to access the address http://www.wikipedia.org/, which is currently unavailable. Please make sure that the Web address (URL) is correctly spelled and punctuated, then try reloading the page.
Or in Internet Explorer:
The page cannot be displayed
The page you are looking for is currently unavailable. The Web site might be experiencing technical difficulties, or you may need to adjust your browser settings.
Your entire internet connection is not disabled. You are just "blocked" from access to the site in question. And if you're Chinese or foriegn alike, you know you've been blocked and that the site is not just down temporarily.
-China, as a nation of people, and China as a single-party government, care deeply what the West think of them. That's why they so badly wanted to win an Olympic bid. That's why so much of media discourse is related to what other countries say and report about China. Don't let your fantasies of an evil, oppressive, Red China encourage you to create your own facts.
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Bestial Chinese Athletes
http://cimg23.163.com/sports/2008/2/20/200802202137283e4b7.jpg
http://jp.youtube.com/w atch?v=l_cv1Qc4r0w
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