Comments on: Olympic organizers cut deal to censor Net access
A senior IOC official admits that committee members had cut a deal to let the Chinese government block sensitive Web sites, despite earlier assurances to the contrary.
A senior IOC official admits that committee members had cut a deal to let the Chinese government block sensitive Web sites, despite earlier assurances to the contrary.
Don't buy these one-trick ponies--unless you like gizmos that gather dust.
The Net giant, ever eager for a faster Internet, debuts its Google Public DNS service. With it, Google could become even more central to the Net.
The Web is now the place to go for news and entertainment. Look here for the latest on blogs, music, video, virtual worlds, social networking and more.
Add this feed to your online news reader
In a move to avoid employing hundreds of extra staff, the Beijing government has left it up to the various community ISPs to enforce censorship rules, with the warning that if any ISP is found to be allowing access by customers to "unsavory" and "anti-government" or "anti-Chinese" websites, they will be "severely punished".
Since the exact meaning of what constitutes the above types of sites is unfathomably vague, ISPs energetically endeavor to block anything their staff may feel necessary (most of who speak little English or other foreign language -- thus allowing for a large number of otherwise harmless websites to be arbitrarily blocked).
Punishments have ranged from hefty fines, to shutting down the infringing company, to prison terms for management and responsible staff.
As it stands now, many of the writers here whose home reporting sites are now blocked will attempt to transmit encrypted text to alternate internet addresses, since all SMTP (email) is intercepted and run through keyword filters.
This will make it even worse for Chinese citizens, as the Chinese government has an even larger pool of guinea pigs to test out its various censoring tools to employ.
I wouldn't even blame China for the filtering fiasco, except that the Chinese should have been up front about their intentions. Doing so would have cost them the Olympics though, so to save face there was a little backroom deal with IOC *ussies. This makes me want to watch the Olympics even less and I've been to China!
http://www.thomascrampton.com/china/beijing-olympics-advice-from-ex-cnn-journalist/
America should just boycott the Olympics. What's the point, athletes won't be able to breathe anyway because of all the pollution in Beijing and all the coverage you'll see will be filtered down so that the truth of what really happened won't be evident. Screw it.
There goes most of the value in the internet for me. Censoring the internet is akin to Agents of the State visiting our libraries and culling material not deeming "suitable." Nice to know the political gestapo is alive and well... and still firmly in control of our lives.
- by rae2_2 August 2, 2008 10:11 AM PDT
- Too bad they aren't censoring what goes OUT as well... these Olympic "games" have become 95% pure BUSINESS and 5% sport. Who needs them? If the millions who'll be parking their ***** on the couch to watch would spend as much time actually DOING some activity, they and this country would be much better off.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(13 Comments)