(The following is part of a AP World History assignment revolving around human rights. The objective is to help raise awareness of violations of the above mentioned rights that are currently or have recently been violated around the world, and I thought a good place to start would be the Bay12 forum and its open-minded politically active inhabitants. That said, feel free to discuss the issue as if it were any other post in General Discussion.)
"Internet censorship in China is among the most stringent in the world. The government blocks Web sites that discuss the Dalai Lama, the 1989 crackdown on Tiananmen Square protesters, Falun Gong, the banned spiritual movement, and other Internet sites.
As revolts began to ricochet through the Middle East and North Africa in 2011, and homegrown efforts to organize protests began to circulate on the Internet, the Chinese government tightened its grip on electronic communications, and appeared to be more determined than ever to police cellphone calls, electronic messages, e-mail and access to the Internet in order to smother any hint of antigovernment sentiment.
The government’s computers intercept incoming data and compare it against an ever-changing list of banned keywords or Web sites, screening out even more information. The motive is often obvious: Since late 2010, the censors have prevented Google searches of the English word “freedom.”
In March 2011, Google accused the Chinese government of disrupting its Gmail service in the country and making it appear as if technical problems at Google — not government intervention — were to blame. At the same time, several popular virtual private-network services, or V.P.N.’s, designed to evade the government’s computerized censors, have been crippled. V.P.N.’s are popular with China’s huge expatriate community and Chinese entrepreneurs, researchers and scholars who expect to use the Internet freely.
Few analysts believe that the government will loosen controls any time soon, with events it considers politically sensitive swamping the calendar, including a turnover in the Communist Party’s top leadership in 2012."
Article here:
http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/news/international/countriesandterritories/china/internet_censorship/index.htmlOf course, the chinese government's hold on online information has been slipping recently. There are around 150,000,000 internet users in China, and it's estimated that nearly 3/10ths of them have used software widely available to 'Fanqiang', or scale the wall, such as UltraSurf. As to the projection that the system they've put in place will stay around for a while longer? That remains to be seen.
The whole censorship effort by the chinese government has been dubbed "The Golden Shield Project". Read, here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Firewall_of_ChinaFor the lazy and/or illiterate, here's a video that summarizes the issue quite nicely:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWfUOG0EA9w (go aussies
)
Discuss. What's Bay12's stance on the issue?