Posts Tagged ‘censorship’

Shanghai Maglev gives you mutant babies!

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

Maglev Protests

Yesterday, a good friend of mine (yes, I have friends) told me about Sunday’s protests around People’s Square here in Shanghai over the proposed extension of the Shanghai Maglev train. A few days earlier, there were similar protests (pictured above) around the XuJiaHui area also in Shanghai. Some protestors were out to complain about the dangers of the magnetic fields generated by the Maglev. Others may be exhibiting NIMBY motivations, fearing the construction of the Maglev train will reduce the value of their property. Still others questioned why the government seemed to keep the extension plans quiet, suspecting that the government had malicious reasons for not letting the public know.

Perhaps more interestingly (but somewhat expectedly), there was plenty of hearsay about the government cracking down on the protests and any dissemination of information, coverage, or discussion about the demonstrations. Supposedly, any threads about the incident posted on popular Chinese forums were promptly deleted within minutes and their posters punished (albeit by deducting various forum-based rewards points or whatnot). Several western blogs and forums still have some coverage and material so perhaps the censorship is mostly limited to preventing only the local Chinese from bitching too much amongst themselves.

What I found refreshing, however, was when my friend confided that this is perhaps the first time she has ever really felt upset and disturbed by government censorship. Maybe that’s the silver lining to this all.

Blogspot available in China again…for now.

Monday, January 14th, 2008

As most (especially foreign) internet users in China are aware, large chunks of the internet are regularly unavailable to view or use without some sort of proxy service. This can get really annoying for those looking for porn or regard the BBC as an authoritative news source. It can also prevent people from using Wikipedia to substantiate every argument they use for any internet debate, trolling, or flame-war they’re engaged in. 

While perusing Danwei this evening, I came across a short list that may be helpful for reminding us of what is blocked by the Great Firewall (GFW) or “Net Nanny” (which is not to be confused with the actual www.netnanny.com, I think):

Blocked sites
Wikipedia
Wordpress blogs
Livejournal
Opera blogs
Typepad blogs—although Typepad.com itself does not seem to blocked

Partially blocked or filtered
Large parts of the BBC website are unaccessible
Flickr—some photos on older servers do not load properly
Google.com’s Image Search and News are unreliable in China and seem to be heavily filtered

Blogspot has popped on and off the list randomly throughout the past and frankly, I wouldn’t bet on it staying available in China for long. Xanga seems to still be down as well which, at one point in time about 1.5 years ago, it wasn’t before. Google’s Image Search is particularly annoying for me, especially when it works for a bit then suddenly becomes red X hell.