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Topic: China asks world to impose 'code of conduct' on Internet - page 4. (Read 4969 times)

legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon
Estimates range



You should write "i have no data" and "no photo".
But You promise "They killed thousands of young, unarmed protesters with tanks."
So hard to have 0 photos on so huge event.


I should write whatever the heck I want, Mr. internet water army...

Candle
Fire
Torch
Oil lamp
Candle flame
Blood
Democracy
Autonomous
Twitter
Memorial event
Mobilize troops
Crush
Crush and destroy
Assemble
Revolt
Open fire
One-party dictatorship
Today
Tomorrow
Yesterday
Tiananmen
Square
Mourn
When spring becomes summer
That year
That day
Special day
Pillar of shame (a reference to sculptures symbolizing those who died in the massacre)
Victoria Park (where some of the sculptures were placed)
Evening event
Silent tribute
Recall
Ceremony
Little secretary
Black shirt
Black clothes
Redress
Commemorate
Demonstrate
Persecute
Conflict
Gunfire
Turmoil
Sensitive
Mothers of the Motherland
Hunger Strike Declaration
Operation Yellowbird
Non-violent non-cooperation
Chinese Spring
Take a walk
Member of standing committee
Gang of Four (Communist leaders)
Political bureau
Protest
Sit-in
Take to the streets
Go into the street
Never forget
Against bureaucratic profiteering (because it's part of a slogan from the Tiananmen protests)
Suppress
Tank
May 35
35
Six Four
64
June
Jun+4
Thirty-five
Twenty-four
Six+four
Six 4
6 four
Liusi (Pinyin for "six four")
Bajiu (Pinyin for "eight nine")
Six four
Eight nine
Eight eight
TAM (abbreviation for Tiananmen)
Jinshuiqiao
Changan Avenue
Muxidi
Gongzhufen
Martial law
Student movement
Student strike
Student federation
Massacre
March
Beijing massacred

 Cool


legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon



Apple Disables News App in China Amid Censorship Concerns

Beijing escalates campaign to restrict free flow of information from U.S. companies, journalists


Apple is reported to have deactivated its news app in China amid concerns that Beijing is escalating its campaign to restrict the flow of information from U.S. news outlets and technology companies.

The New York Times reported that, even for users who downloaded the app on their phones in the United States, content does not appear in China. Instead, the error message “news isn’t supported in your current region” appears.

Beijing requires most companies operating in the country to develop a censorship system, which can include automated software and designated workers, to block sensitive content. By disabling the app, Apple appears to be signaling that it has not yet committed to implementing such a system.

Apple’s press office did not respond to a request for comment.

Apple, which earned more than $13 billion in sales from China in the last quarter, is likely keeping a close watch on the censorship regulations that compose Beijing’s so-called “Great Firewall” against restricted information online. U.S. technology firms have lost billions of dollars in potential revenue from website blockages and other restrictions, including demands that the companies provide user data and intellectual property to the government.

Sarah Cook, a senior research analyst for Freedom House, wrote in an online post earlier this year that Beijing has heightened its efforts to crack down on U.S. companies and curtail the free flow of information.

“Pressure on foreign media companies and harassment of their correspondents—especially via website blocks, visa delays, and de facto expulsions—has increased over the past seven years, following a brief period of relaxation surrounding the 2008 Beijing Olympics,” she wrote. “Moreover, virtually any U.S. firm operating any information service or website that is accessible to Chinese users faces pressure to implement Communist Party surveillance and censorship directives. Those who refuse risk being shut out of the world’s largest web market.”

U.S. companies have taken different approaches to China’s expanding censorship regime. Google decided in 2010 to shut down its Internet search service in the country in response to the strict requirements, though it continued some of its other services.

LinkedIn, by contrast, acceded to some of Beijing’s demands and is reported to have censored articles last June about the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests, which were brutally suppressed by the Chinese military in 1989. Jeff Weiner, CEO of LinkedIn, told the Wall Street Journal last February that compromises would have to be made to operate in China.

“We are strongly in support of freedom of expression and we are opposed to censorship but recognize that in order to obtain a license [in China], there will be requests to filter content and that’s going to be necessary for us to achieve the kind of scale that we’d like,” he said.

Bloomberg News, which previously published investigative reports about the family wealth of Chinese President Xi Jinping, appeared to abstain from reporting critical of the Communist Party after government-linked companies stopped buying their terminals, Bloomberg’s chief revenue generator. Beijing has also denied residency visas to news reporters for Bloomberg and the Times.

Xi has only intensified the government’s crackdown against freedom of expression since he rose to power in 2012, Cook wrote in her post. The new measures include more blockages of U.S. websites and services that were previously accessible, the targeting of cloud services such as Dropbox that store and share data, massive cyber attacks against programs that circumvent Chinese censorship, and draft legislation that would make U.S. companies and civil society groups vulnerable to surveillance.

While Beijing often claims that it heavily regulates online activity to protect against foreign threats, Cook said the evidence suggests that the government has other concerns in mind.

“Rigorous research has repeatedly shown that the content targeted for censorship in China most often relates to critically important topics like official corruption, police brutality, religious persecution, ethnic relations, and public health,” she said. “Many measures also serve to ensure Communist Party control over key nodes in the information flow, regardless of what is being communicated.”


http://freebeacon.com/national-security/apple-disables-news-app-in-china-amid-censorship-concerns/


--------------------------------------------------------
China will keep the internet free... From free speech.



sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
Estimates range



You should write "i have no data" and "no photo".
But You promise "They killed thousands of young, unarmed protesters with tanks."
So hard to have 0 photos on so huge event.
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon



By the way, how can we explain all the views, in just two days? Almost 1700 as of this writing.

I know people love or hate my threads but... Come on.

 Roll Eyes

legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon



94 Search Terms That China Bans Because Of Tiananmen Square





The 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre is this week, and China is taking extreme measures to make sure nobody commemorates the event.

In 2012, China Digital Times identified more than 100 search terms China bans around the anniversary of Tiananmen Square. The country has already shut down Google services ahead of the 25th anniversary.

The government puts a lot of effort into erasing the 1989 massacre from books, TV, and internet resources that are available to its citizens. China's younger generation seems mostly unaware of the student-led, pro-democracy Tiananmen Square protests in Beijing that drove Chinese soldiers to kill hundreds (or possibly thousands) of people.

Some of the words and terms the government has blocked seem odd and out-of-place, but they're tied to the event and could bring up information about it. Some of these words were coded in an (unsuccessful) attempt to evade Chinese government censors.

Here's a list of some of the terms that have been blocked by censors both this year and in the past:

Big yellow duck (because an image circulated online showing giant toy ducks replacing military vehicles in the Tank Man photo, the same photo at the top of this post)
Tank Man (a reference to the above photo of a lone protester trying to block tanks)
Shanghai index (a reference to the Shanghai stock market closing down 64.89 points on 2012's anniversary)
63 + 1 (because it adds up to 64, or June 4th)
65-1
Candle (because the candle emoticon is commonly used online to mourn deaths)
Fire
Torch
Oil lamp
Candle flame
Blood
Democracy
Autonomous
Twitter
Memorial event
Mobilize troops
Crush
Crush and destroy
Assemble
Revolt
Open fire
One-party dictatorship
Today
Tomorrow
Yesterday
Tiananmen
Square
Mourn
When spring becomes summer
That year
That day
Special day
Pillar of shame (a reference to sculptures symbolizing those who died in the massacre)
Victoria Park (where some of the sculptures were placed)
Evening event
Silent tribute
Recall
Ceremony
Little secretary
Black shirt
Black clothes
Redress
Commemorate
Demonstrate
Persecute
Conflict
Gunfire
Turmoil
Sensitive
Mothers of the Motherland
Hunger Strike Declaration
Operation Yellowbird
Non-violent non-cooperation
Chinese Spring
Take a walk
Member of standing committee
Gang of Four (Communist leaders)
Political bureau
Protest
Sit-in
Take to the streets
Go into the street
Never forget
Against bureaucratic profiteering (because it's part of a slogan from the Tiananmen protests)
Suppress
Tank
May 35
35
Six Four
64
June
Jun+4
Thirty-five
Twenty-four
Six+four
Six 4
6 four
Liusi (Pinyin for "six four")
Bajiu (Pinyin for "eight nine")
Six four
Eight nine
Eight eight
TAM (abbreviation for Tiananmen)
Jinshuiqiao
Changan Avenue
Muxidi
Gongzhufen
Martial law
Student movement
Student strike
Student federation
Massacre
March
Beijing massacred


http://www.businessinsider.com/words-china-banned-from-search-engines-after-tiananmen-square-2014-6



-----------------------------------------------
Just for fun use any or all of those words when replying to the internet water army agent...

 Smiley Wink Smiley



legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon



25 photos from the bloody protests in China that happened 26 years ago today




This Thursday, June 4, marks the 26th anniversary of the pro-democracy student protests that led to bloodshed in China's Tiananmen Square in 1989.


China has done its best to scrub the event from collective memory.


The country has already detained dozens of dissidents and activists ahead of the anniversary, even putting some "on vacation" with police, Radio Free Asia reported. Meanwhile thousands rallied in Hong Kong last week to remember the victims from 1989.

On the major 25th anniversary last year, China went to great lengths to censor discussion about the tragedy, when Chinese troops killed unarmed civilians in the center of Beijing. (The exact death toll is in dispute, but some estimate that more than 1,000 pro-democracy protesters were killed.)

In an apparent effort to keep people from recalling the violence, China took the drastic measure last year of blocking access to Google in the country. The country also took measures to quell protestors themselves. For example, Chinese authorities arrested a well-known artist named Guo Jian after he created a diorama of Tiananmen Square covered in ground meat.

We've gathered some of more iconic images to remember the historic event.















Click on the images


http://www.businessinsider.com/tiananmen-square-photos-26th-anniversary-2015-6?op=1



---------------------------------------------------
Beware of the Chinese Internet Water Army...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Water_Army

http://www.technologyreview.com/view/426174/undercover-researchers-expose-chinese-internet-water-army/

http://www.wired.com/2010/06/the-chinese-online-water-army/


legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon
Amazing really, the propagandists and spammers are out in force lately on this forum.


This is so obvious.


legendary
Activity: 3066
Merit: 1147
The revolution will be monetized!
They killed thousands of young, unarmed protesters with tanks. Business friendly? WTF?

Ohh. Please, put here the font of such precious fake news.

If you live in under a totalitarian regime how would you know? Estimates range as low as 600-800 or as high as 10,000. And no one knows how many were rounded up later and murdered by the government. The most disturbing thing I remember from the protests was when a tank rolled up and a guy poped out. Everyone was worried he might shoot them but were relieved when he just produced a camera. A moment later you could see everyone realize that the camera was just as deadly for them, so they ran.  

sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
hero member
Activity: 504
Merit: 500

I have read that that image is virtually unknown in China.

Are avaiable pictures from other point of view of the same scene.

https://youtu.be/qq8zFLIftGk
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250

I have read that that image is virtually unknown in China.

Are avaiable pictures from other point of view of the same scene.
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
They killed thousands of young, unarmed protesters with tanks. Business friendly? WTF?

Ohh. Please, put here the font of such precious fake news.
legendary
Activity: 1540
Merit: 1000
Amazing really, the propagandists and spammers are out in force lately on this forum.
legendary
Activity: 3066
Merit: 1147
The revolution will be monetized!



Fake?
I have read that that image is virtually unknown in China.

Quote from: Vika NSFW
On this picture i see actions of legitimate government on stabilisation of normal business friendly life. This dude run away as alive.

That is a scary statement. They killed thousands of young, unarmed protesters with tanks. Business friendly? WTF?
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250

Fake?


LOL again, You need to decide, about what are You worry - or about China (Mainland) people or some Tibet fanatics in exile.
On this picture i see actions of legitimate government on stabilisation of normal business friendly life.
This dude run away as alive.

Please, explain Your point of view on Donetsk/Lugansk bombing by ZOG government in Kiev.
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon

Why is that guy holding a toy gun?

Becose this is a fake picture from Taipei, i just put the link about.
There is not enough evidences of supposed crimes, and China haters need make fake pictures to put them on forum like this.




Fake?


sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250

Why is that guy holding a toy gun?

Becose this is a fake picture from Taipei, i just put the link about.
There is not enough evidences of supposed crimes, and China haters need make fake pictures to put them on forum like this.
legendary
Activity: 3066
Merit: 1147
The revolution will be monetized!
How about a code of conduct with harsh penalties for governments who spy on us? If not then I prefer we hack the planet and leave no one in control of anything.

P.S. http://i.imgur.com/NXEJxFF.jp

Why is that guy holding a toy gun?
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon
The U.N. will be considering norms related to cyberspace security this month. A committee comprised of 20 nations published a proposal over the summer for the General Assembly to consider.

The U.N. advisory board has called for "effective cooperation among States to reduce risks to international peace and security" and says that state actors "should not conduct or knowingly support" cyber crime.


More worrying than China's call, is the fact that the UN is considering norms related to cyber security.
I hope governments don't use the "UN norms" to push regulation of the internet.


If you want a model for abusing the internet, the UN is doing fine using china as a model. China is afraid of the chinese citizens.


legendary
Activity: 1246
Merit: 1000
The U.N. will be considering norms related to cyberspace security this month. A committee comprised of 20 nations published a proposal over the summer for the General Assembly to consider.

The U.N. advisory board has called for "effective cooperation among States to reduce risks to international peace and security" and says that state actors "should not conduct or knowingly support" cyber crime.


More worrying than China's call, is the fact that the UN is considering norms related to cyber security.
I hope governments don't use the "UN norms" to push regulation of the internet.
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