In post-Google China, censorship is unfazed
Chinese Internet users have one less Web search option this week, but otherwise it's business as usual as the People's Republic of China uses technology and intimidation to keep citizens away from objectionable content.
Following several months of strategizing and negotiations, Google finally stopped censoring its search results in China and is redirecting visitors to Google.cn to a server based in Hong Kong.. dolce gabbana perfumes has been regarded as a revolutionary influence in international fashion design since its inception There they see unfiltered results and are able to visit sites about Falun Gong,. Our website offer many night gown, your will have choose from our websites. Tiananmen Square,. Jeans will be more slim look even better, plesae choose Skinny jeans from our website. and Tibetan independence.
As noble as the move might be on Google's part, it changes very little for the approximately 400 million Internet users in China who have lon. We have many fashionable sexy lingerie have style of nurse costume.g lived with restrictions on their online and offline activities.
The departure of Google search from the country is "an obvious reminder of how heavy censorship is in China," Hal Roberts, a fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University, said in an interview this week.
Meanwhile, a mysterious mix-up on Wednesday that sent Domain Name Server (DNS) traffic destined for Google's YouTube, Facebook and Twitter among other sites to servers behind the so-called Chinese Firewall of censorship has some speculating that it was retaliation against Google. How far will the People's Republic go in its geopolitical squabbles over freedom of the Internet?
Google's move out of China was a highly public stance against that country's censorship policies and was related to attacks that the company said originated within China late last year and which targeted Google and human rights activists who use Gmail.
"Google arguably provided a more neutral, more open platform" for about one-third of the Web surfers in China than the local market leader Baidu does, Roberts said on Wednesday before the DNS problems became public. The search is considered higher-quality, so "Google certainly has an effect on them."
Chinese Internet users have one less Web search option this week, but otherwise it's business as usual as the People's Republic of China uses technology and intimidation to keep citizens away from objectionable content.
Following several months of strategizing and negotiations, Google finally stopped censoring its search results in China and is redirecting visitors to Google.cn to a server based in Hong Kong.. dolce gabbana perfumes has been regarded as a revolutionary influence in international fashion design since its inception There they see unfiltered results and are able to visit sites about Falun Gong,. Our website offer many night gown, your will have choose from our websites. Tiananmen Square,. Jeans will be more slim look even better, plesae choose Skinny jeans from our website. and Tibetan independence.
As noble as the move might be on Google's part, it changes very little for the approximately 400 million Internet users in China who have lon. We have many fashionable sexy lingerie have style of nurse costume.g lived with restrictions on their online and offline activities.
The departure of Google search from the country is "an obvious reminder of how heavy censorship is in China," Hal Roberts, a fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University, said in an interview this week.
Meanwhile, a mysterious mix-up on Wednesday that sent Domain Name Server (DNS) traffic destined for Google's YouTube, Facebook and Twitter among other sites to servers behind the so-called Chinese Firewall of censorship has some speculating that it was retaliation against Google. How far will the People's Republic go in its geopolitical squabbles over freedom of the Internet?
Google's move out of China was a highly public stance against that country's censorship policies and was related to attacks that the company said originated within China late last year and which targeted Google and human rights activists who use Gmail.
"Google arguably provided a more neutral, more open platform" for about one-third of the Web surfers in China than the local market leader Baidu does, Roberts said on Wednesday before the DNS problems became public. The search is considered higher-quality, so "Google certainly has an effect on them."
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