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Topic: China asks world to impose 'code of conduct' on Internet - page 5. (Read 4969 times)

sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250

LOL
About what is evidence the fake picture from Taipei on March 12, 2011?
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon
I'm saying is how can the Chinese actually be trying to play the innocent card,

The Government of China (Mainland) will have the instrument to stop foregn forces in putting so huge amount of people in political and economical instability.
One of such experts is  "msc_de", he is 100% blind on US activity against China (Mainland).






sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
Actually the US don't want to censor or limit freedom of speech on the Internet.

Please, comment this news - https://www.rt.com/usa/318070-purdue-deletes-nsa-presentation/
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1000
I'm not saying that the U.S. Doesn't play part of shady activity on the Internet as well, all I'm saying is how can the Chinese actually be trying to play the innocent card, when everyone knows that they are apart of the problem they are trying to "solve".

Actually the US don't want to censor or limit freedom of speech on the Internet. They want to monitor it. ...and then "censor and limit" individuals or groups of individuals who looks dangerous for them. Limiting the platform instead of limiting some users make no sense. The more free talks and the deeper belief of "free internet" will yield the more information and more detailed results for them.
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
I'm saying is how can the Chinese actually be trying to play the innocent card,

The Government of China (Mainland) will have the instrument to stop foregn forces in putting so huge amount of people in political and economical instability.
One of such experts is  "msc_de", he is 100% blind on US activity against China (Mainland).
legendary
Activity: 1316
Merit: 1004

I'm not saying that the U.S. Doesn't play part of shady activity on the Internet as well, all I'm saying is how can the Chinese actually be trying to play the innocent card, when everyone knows that they are apart of the problem they are trying to "solve".
legendary
Activity: 1316
Merit: 1004



A Chinese official on Friday called on the United Nations to impose an international code of conduct on the Internet.


"It is highly necessary and pressing for the international community to jointly bring about an international code of conduct on cyberspace at an early date," said Wang Qun, director-general of the Arms Control Department of the Chinese Foreign Ministry, in comments to the U.N. General Assembly.

Wang's comments were reported by China's main state-owned press outlet, the Xinhua News Agency.

"China, for its part, will continue to commit itself to establishing a peaceful, secure, open and cooperative cyberspace and pushing for an early international code of conduct acceptable to all," Wang added.


Is this serious? China has been a big time hacker of international secure data for some time now, mainly going after secure US documents... How in the world is the Chinese trying to become the poster boy for a "peaceful internet" when it's government is known for hacking and censoring the internet they have?
member
Activity: 70
Merit: 10
COC for the internet.
Great! This will go along perfectly with America's war on drugs!

Where do I sign?



Excuse me while I puke.



(*******censored*******)
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon
That country is flooding the US with its counterfeit crapola
Crush your ASUS, Logitech, Panasonic, Honda Fit... burn them

Never eat Ketchup - it is chinese sauce, countereit in USA and EU.


What's so great about china, beside its corrupted politburo?


sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
That country is flooding the US with its counterfeit crapola
Crush your ASUS, Logitech, Panasonic, Honda Fit... burn them

Never eat Ketchup - it is chinese sauce, countereit in USA and EU.
legendary
Activity: 3500
Merit: 6981
Top Crypto Casino
Fuck China.  That country is flooding the US with its counterfeit crapola and has all our manufacturing jobs.  What else needs to be said?  There's no way any red blooded American is going to follow a code of conduct on the Internet established by China. Not going to fucking happen.
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
mainland chinese people visit google youtube fackbook twitter all using VPN otherwise it fails due to GFW,  russian bitch!!!

The true is, when someone use VPN with foreign IP, on ALEXA it will shown as non China Mainland traffic.
If You pay more attention - on ALEXA are present google.cn, google.com and google.com.tw
for each such domain is visible the IP of visitor

http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/google.cn
Put Your Eyes on "Audience Geography" and check there "Percent of Visitors" and "Rank in Country".
hero member
Activity: 770
Merit: 500
Google published a transparency report that showed traffic in China slowed dramatically beginning Sunday, with users of Google’s products in China reduced to little more than half of the country’s usual overall share of worldwide users.

Do You still pretend to say, that ALEXA.COM show fake traffic of China Mainland users on GOOGLE.CN ?

Anyone can take a chinese IP and enter to GOOGLE.CN or Yahoo.CN or Youtube.com


you go on kidding, i just visit google.cn but it redirected to google.com.hk,  as i told you before

i did not say fake traffic but mainland chinese people visit google youtube fackbook twitter all using VPN otherwise it fails due to GFW,  russian bitch!!!
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
Google published a transparency report that showed traffic in China slowed dramatically beginning Sunday, with users of Google’s products in China reduced to little more than half of the country’s usual overall share of worldwide users.

Do You still pretend to say, that ALEXA.COM show fake traffic of China Mainland users on GOOGLE.CN ?

Anyone can take a chinese IP and enter to GOOGLE.CN or Yahoo.CN or Youtube.com
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
minds.com/Wilikon



It is one thing to be very critical of military actions of the US, or the position of europe on many political subjects.

It is an insult to say china does not censor the internet. I have asked the same question over and over but some people prefer to play the role of a chinese propagandist tool...



Praying flags. Tibet.






 
legendary
Activity: 3248
Merit: 1179
hero member
Activity: 770
Merit: 500
if you have no VPN then you can not use gmail in mainland china

much more info you can easily get online

Try to use google.com trough mozilla with NoScrypt without logging on gmail.com, and then tell me how long they stay waiting for totally blocking search results in change of spy on you 24x7


spy on you 24x7 that is china and russia do,
hero member
Activity: 770
Merit: 500
google went out from mainland china in 2011 and ran business in Hongkong...

Business of Google - is to spy on your Email and sell search results.
Visitors by Country - China - Percent of Visitors  93.8% - Rank in Country - 30
http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/google.cn

If You will teach to me, that google.cn have no visitors from China (Mainland) and alexa.com data is a fake - put here please Your data.


http://time.com/2820452/china-censor-web/

Here Are 6 Huge Websites China is Censoring Right Now

The Chinese government is tightening its grip on the Internet ahead of the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre

It’s widely known that the Chinese government has long exerted tight control over Internet access on the mainland, deploying an extensive apparatus to regulate what its citizens can read and publish on the web. The Chinese authorities employed more than 2 million people in 2013 to monitor web activity on blogs and social media sites like the wildly popular social media site Weibo, and blocks access to topics it deems sensitive, like the Free Tibet movement, for instance, and democratic activism.

But ahead of the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre, Chinese authorities are cracking down even further on news outlets and search engines, blocking access to websites including Google and the Wall Street Journal. Wednesday marks 25 years since the Chinese army killed hundreds, perhaps thousands of students and protestors in Beijing, and the tightening of media control that followed. It’s part of the Chinese government’s concerted effort to limit information about the incipient pro-democratic movement that ended in bloodshed.

Here are 6 websites the Chinese government is currently blocking or restricting.

Google

The activist blog GreatFire.org, which tracks web censorship in China, published a post Monday saying that Chinese authorities had blocked a variety of Google services in China. As of Monday, Google’s Chrome start page would not load, nor would many other Google sites like the Picasa photo program, Maps service and Calendar application, according to the New York Times. The GreatFire said that the block is far-reaching, and that Google simply isn’t working.

The block is indiscriminate as all Google services in all countries, encrypted or not, are now blocked in China. This blockage includes Google search, images, translate, Gmail and almost all other products. In addition, the block covers Google Hong Kong (China’s version of Google), Google.com and all other country specific versions, e.g Google France…. It is the strictest censorship ever deployed.
Google published a transparency report that showed traffic in China slowed dramatically beginning Sunday, with users of Google’s products in China reduced to little more than half of the country’s usual overall share of worldwide users. Google told the Wall Street Journal that there were no technical problems with its website.

“We’ve checked extensively and there are no technical problems on our side,” a Google spokeswoman said.

Wikipedia

The Chinese government has long blocked Wikipedia pages it deems fishy, including “Dalai Lama,” and “Tibetan Independence Movement” as well as “List of Chinese Dissidents,” and “Chinese democracy movement.” Now is as good a time as any for the Chinese authorities to make sure no one searches “Tiananmen Mothers,” the democracy activist groups founded by the mother of a protestor killed 25 years ago.

The Wall Street Journal

The Journal, which has recently been ramping up its China coverage, is the latest news source to fall victim to the Chinese censors’ axe. Dow Jones, which publishes the Journal, said that the English language site had been blocked since Monday, and the Chinese language site had been blocked since Saturday.

RedTube.com

The government’s “stability maintenance” program has sucked pornographic websites into the mix as well, and RedTube.com is one of the websites that is inaccessible. According to GreatFire, the website is blocked 97% of the time its been tested in China. Pornography in every form has never been welcome in China, however, and the government has blocked magazines and video content for over sixty years.

LinkedIn

The professional networking site just experienced the imposition of local censorship requirements in China, according to the Journal, after setting up a localized version of LinkedIn in China earlier this year.

Facebook

Facebook has been blocked in China for years as it’s viewed suspiciously as a place to freely disseminate ideas. China earlier this year that it was blocking the wildly popular social media website for its “ability to spread rumors” and instead placates its social media-hungry masses with Weibo, a homegrown service it can more easily censor.
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
if you have no VPN then you can not use gmail in mainland china

much more info you can easily get online

Try to use google.com trough mozilla with NoScrypt without logging on gmail.com, and then tell me how long they stay waiting for totally blocking search results in change of spy on you 24x7
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