China Raises The Great Firewall Even Higher, Claims It's To Stop Piracy
from the higher-and-higher dept
The NY Times is reporting that the Chinese government appears to be raising the walls on the Great Firewall of China even higher, shutting down a bunch of sites, limiting the ability to let individuals put up their own websites, and completely restricting the ability to offer third party mobile content. Here's where it gets sneaky. The Chinese government claims that it's an effort to stop "piracy." And, indeed, some of the sites that were shut down appear to be sites related to file sharing. But this is great for the Chinese government -- because US lobbyists and diplomats have been complaining about Chinese "piracy" for ages, even as US diplomats have complained about free speech restrictions online in China. So, by hiding a more massive crackdown behind the claim that the government is really "cracking down on piracy," China knows that the US can't complain too much. After all, it's been demanding a crackdown on piracy for so long. So what if that "crackdown" also massively limits the ability of individuals to communicate freely online?Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: censorship, china, control, great firewall, piracy
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I See
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Then you should move to China. That should rid this site of your annoying presence.
Prat.
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Until you spend time there, you cannot understand their way of life and situation, and you cannot understand that not everyone desires or wants the type of freedom that is pushed here, the good old American brand of freedom.
It's an arrogant idea to think everyone wants to be like you.
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AC: What about Tiananmen Square?
AM: The US used to have slavery.
Everyone: WTF?
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On the payroll of the Chinese government, I suspect.
not everyone desires or wants the type of freedom that is pushed here, the good old American brand of freedom.
Especially those in the Chinese government, eh?
It's an arrogant idea to think everyone wants to be like you.
Yeah, people all over the world just hate freedom, don't they, comrade? [/sarcasm]
Unfortunately, there are far too many of your type in the world (some even in the good old U.S. of A.).
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You just forgot to chant "USA! USA! USA!" at the end. Your post is exactly the type of arrogance that gets Americans hated in so many countries.
Until you can accept that other people have other goals, other dreams, other desires, you won't understand why freedom is not an absolute, it is a relative thing. You really need to get out of your trailer park and go see the rest of the world, it might change your views.
No, I am not on the Chinese government's payroll (or the RIAA, or the MPAA, etc). However, I do tend to visit at least once or twice a year, if not more often. You should really try it, I suspect it would be an eye opening experience.
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Certainly not yourself - Noooo.
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Uh huh, sure.
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Funny argument
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Re: Funny argument
he brings nothing but opposition for oppositions sake even when his stated position is so transparent and... well... stupid, that my teenage kids tear it apart.
at least he used to keep the other side honest. but he doesnt even bring that to the table any longer. now its just...
...sad...
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Re: Re: Funny argument
I was trying to figure out how much time Mike Masnick has spent in China, how his personal experiences might make him better understand the story. I don't see any here. I see someone attempting to apply his own version of freedom and his own version of "the way the net should be" to everyone without having an understanding of why it may not be the best result.
TRC: If someone does not desire freedom (for whatever type, and for whatever reason), then must others not have it?
No, not at all. What most Americans don't understand is that their version of freedom (sort of an extreme sport version of freedom) isn't for everyone. Most of the chinese mainland people I know wouldn't know what to do with that sort of freedom, and in fact it would probably be very bad for their society to try to jump to that point directly.
Life in China today is significantly more free than it was 20 or 30 years ago. The people generally don't feel oppressed, they lead very normal lives like the rest of us, interested in working to make money, eating well, enjoying TV, movies, and shopping... they move around, they buy new houses, they change jobs, the move to other cities... they do all sorts of things that most of the xenophobes here would say is impossible to do. They have rich and they have poor, and so on. They generally are not complaining, certainly no more (and usually not much less) than anyone else in the world does.
You have to watch them argue with the government, they could teach the average American something about that too. Lacking American style freedom doesn't mean they eat what is shoveled at them without question. Those times disappeared a lifetime ago (about the time the US started to figure out that you can't make them black people sit in the back of the bus).
Don't judge a country or it's freedoms by the scare stories you read and the crap you were taught in school, gain personal knowledge and then apply it :)
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Re: Re: Re: Funny argument
You can go to anyone country and find the majority of the population is living a productive life, no matter where you are. Go to an African village and you'll be hard pressed to find people sitting around going "Woe is me, I don't have rights".
Lack of complaining is not due to a lack of wanting.
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Please, tell me, I want to know.
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The majority are ignorant but care deeply about their peers(chinese) and when they go to work outside they go with the mentality of f"#$% them and don't try to work hard but learn everything they can.
In a way they are exactly what americans were in 1920.
They are creating national pride and are learning how to organize even with all censorship which they know not to speak of in public to any stranger and as long as you don't do that you will have a happy life. But they are learning from close friends that did go abroad and other what they are missing and slowly things are building up, someday people will see the chinese that knows how to say no to their government.
Prosperity comes at a cost it empowers people soon a big chunk of china will have leverage enough to start making demands.
There is no progress without education and that ultimately will change China.
Xexe
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During your next visit, please tell them (Chinese) that we do not want their lead paint nor their melamine.
thanks much in advance,
Everyone in the rest of the world
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Most of the Chinese I've talked to there aren't happy about the censorship either. The only reason there's not a huge fuss over it is that the economy > freedom in a country that was starving a few decades only.
In fact, the censorship issues most likely to result in a shit-storm are probably those involving economic change. Censoring a blog post about Tiananmen Square? Eh. Censor a forum post about a crackdown on labor unions? Or how entire villages are being displaced by industrialization? Or how some rich CEO paid off the police to get out of a hit-and-run? Man, that's going to result in some serious pushback.
Also, the "you're an American and therefore don't understand" argument is an intellectually lazy one to make: (1) It may not always be true; (2) You don't actually explain how "Chinese freedom" is actually different.
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Now, what was that, again?
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Now, what was that, again?
Now look it up in a Communist Chinese dictionary.
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SEE Also: "we are watching"
SEE Also Also: "And we are coming."
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China invasion
Smart phones and netbooks are the rage and without the ability to play a DVD or CD there is little chance someone will be using any legal sounds on those.
The netbooks are facinating, they use a MIPs processor made in China called Lopsong(or something like that) and are being distributed in schools for the children but what they do have is a wirelles connection any doubt as to how those kids will get music?
But this is not just happening in China in Europe and in the U.S. a silent battle rages on.
Netbooks already have 7% of the market according to some and projected to occupy 12% next year and none of those devices have one optical drive in sight.
Going back to China. Did people know that internet cafe's in china offer TOR directly?
China tried to block TOR it didn't work.
http://blog.torproject.org/category/tags/china
China blocked and entire country to protect its presidents son even though the bugger was not directly implicated on the corruption scandal.
http://opennet.net/blog/2009/07/no-more-namibia-china-blocks-search-results-entire-country
Resources to see how censorship is being used.
http://www.chillingeffects.org/
http://www.citizenlab.org/
http://opennet.net/
Some countries try to block others for political reasons but the chilling effects site shows how copyright is really being used.
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Re: China invasion
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loongson
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tianhua_GX-1C
http ://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gdium
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using an OS where criticism and freedom are key elements in a Communist state.
Pure. simple. brilliance.
Linux will do what the fascist capitalistic monopoly, er Microsoft, can't.
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Re: China invasion
This is complete nonsense. Seriously, you know there are legal ways to obtain music (and movies) without using an optical disc, right?
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Dissent made safer
By the way using TOR you save american lifes.
That is right your heard me, the american navy intel community and probably other parts of the military also use TOR and in blending in with the crowd one don't know where they are.
Now will the U.S. government ever try to block TOR?
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Re: Dissent made safer
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Re: Re: Dissent made safer
I like me them ideas.
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Xunlei
The most used P2P client in use today.
It beats hands down uTorrent market share and any other site and it doesn't depend on sites to find anything.
The baidu(the chinese google) also shows the trend.
http://top.baidu.com/buzz/soft.html
A lot of emule, P2P streams, and other search sites for media.
P2PTV apparently is big in China LoL
And they show the U.S. blockbuster for free LoL
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P2PTV
I laugh everytime I see some news that China is blocking content because of piracy ROFL.
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Re: Xunlei
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Chinese Police Harrass Journalists
Violent Chinese Police Arrest
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4OovqdxijXQ&feature=related
Images are better to show what the China government really is.
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Anti-Mike's dream world.
Were the state have the power to raid anywhere anytime.
And full of Umbrella men
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QlBde_9Q7c&feature=related
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China blocks all external sites.
That way they have no competition with their own home grown solutions.
Is ingenious really. They got the U.S. by the balls, Europe is not that far away from it and they just simply forbid all foreigners to show something to their population.
China wants to meter the internet but only to traffic that others send them.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/8417680.stm
Why? probably because they are being billed and other small countries are too so they don't see any benefit in peering agreements. When you put money into the mix, connectivity suffers.
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China world invasion.
China is a funny place they export even people.
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Chinese drywall, sorry I meant FIREWALL
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Re: Chinese drywall, sorry I meant FIREWALL
It's not just those affected directly. Everyone who has to pay insurance is affected also, to a lesser degree.
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Re
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