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Almost all stories about China's censorship are lies.

below_freezing

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China Blocks Access to LinkedIn Networking Site | Asia | English

China has stepped up its policing of Internet usage in the country, temporarily blocking access to LinkedIn, the largest networking site for professionals, as well as searches for the name of the U.S. ambassador.

The networking site went offline on Friday shortly after one user set up a forum discussing the idea of a Jasmine Revolution in China. The reference to the word jasmine is the name some have attached to widespread anti-government protests that have swept through Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and other countries in the Middle East.

Last week, Chinese authorities mobilized tens of thousands of security forces ahead of Internet calls for Jasmine Revolution protests. Rights groups said that at least 80 prominent activists and dissidents were detained or confined to their homes in advance of the demonstrations. The protests drew up to several hundred people in more than a dozen cities.

U.S. Ambassador Jon Huntsman was spotted at one of the protests in Beijing last Sunday, although the American Embassy said it was a coincidence he was there as he walked through a shopping district with his family. On Friday, searches for his name in Chinese on the popular Internet site Sina Weibo were met with a message saying it was not available because of "laws, regulations and policies."

The U.S.-based LinkedIn company says about one million of its 90 million users are in China. The company says the blockage of its site appears to be "part of a broader effort in China right now" and involved other, unnamed sites as well.
By later Friday, some said they could use the LinkedIn site again.

China routinely blocks access to web sites of foreign news organizations, including VOA, or television coverage of events it considers sensitive. Chinese Internet monitors also are able to selectively block keywords and searches on Internet topics it thinks might foster anti-government sentiment. Coverage of the political turmoil in the Middle East has been limited in China.

Western groups have regularly criticized the Chinese effort to limit outside information from reaching the world's most populous country. In a recent speech, President Hu Jintao emphasized the need to "build a socialist social management system."

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Here is what I got after I typed in the name 洪博培 (Huntsman's Chinese name) in Baidu.

洪博培的微博_腾讯微博

Here is what i got after I typed in Linkedin.com

Relationships Matter | LinkedIn

Shameless lying US propaganda machine :tdown:
 
A great post, below_freezing.

I am aware that many reports are false or misleading.
For example, bloggers in China have denied that the word "Egypt" was blocked in searches in China. There are many other incidents.

It's best to ask Chinese netizens about the true face of censorship in China. What do the US-based reporters know what goes on behind the so-called "Firewall" of China?
 
China Blocks Access to LinkedIn Networking Site | Asia | English

China has stepped up its policing of Internet usage in the country, temporarily blocking access to LinkedIn, the largest networking site for professionals, as well as searches for the name of the U.S. ambassador.

The networking site went offline on Friday shortly after one user set up a forum discussing the idea of a Jasmine Revolution in China. The reference to the word jasmine is the name some have attached to widespread anti-government protests that have swept through Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and other countries in the Middle East.

Last week, Chinese authorities mobilized tens of thousands of security forces ahead of Internet calls for Jasmine Revolution protests. Rights groups said that at least 80 prominent activists and dissidents were detained or confined to their homes in advance of the demonstrations. The protests drew up to several hundred people in more than a dozen cities.

U.S. Ambassador Jon Huntsman was spotted at one of the protests in Beijing last Sunday, although the American Embassy said it was a coincidence he was there as he walked through a shopping district with his family. On Friday, searches for his name in Chinese on the popular Internet site Sina Weibo were met with a message saying it was not available because of "laws, regulations and policies."

The U.S.-based LinkedIn company says about one million of its 90 million users are in China. The company says the blockage of its site appears to be "part of a broader effort in China right now" and involved other, unnamed sites as well.
By later Friday, some said they could use the LinkedIn site again.

China routinely blocks access to web sites of foreign news organizations, including VOA, or television coverage of events it considers sensitive. Chinese Internet monitors also are able to selectively block keywords and searches on Internet topics it thinks might foster anti-government sentiment. Coverage of the political turmoil in the Middle East has been limited in China.

Western groups have regularly criticized the Chinese effort to limit outside information from reaching the world's most populous country. In a recent speech, President Hu Jintao emphasized the need to "build a socialist social management system."

------------------------------------------------

Here is what I got after I typed in the name 洪博培 (Huntsman's Chinese name) in Baidu.

洪博培的微博_腾讯微博

Here is what i got after I typed in Linkedin.com

Relationships Matter | LinkedIn

Shameless lying US propaganda machine :tdown:

You missed this. http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/02/25/us-linkedin-idUSTRE71O5VY20110225 LinkedIn access was restored by the time you posted this. No way to tell when you accessed it though.

Posted 11 hours ago, or roughly 2-3 hours before you posted this. At least according to the time on this forum.

So no it wasn't (necessarily) lieing US (weird since this was posted by non-us papers) propaganda, you have likely jumped to conclusions.
 
You missed this. LinkedIn website working again in China | Reuters LinkedIn access was restored by the time you posted this. No way to tell when you accessed it though.

Posted 11 hours ago, or roughly 2-3 hours before you posted this. At least according to the time on this forum.

So no it wasn't (necessarily) lieing US (weird since this was posted by non-us papers) propaganda, you have likely jumped to conclusions.

speaking of linkedin, i love how CNN, when linkedin was blocked, had the story prominently in the asia section right after it was blocked however still cant find anything about it being unblocked even now
 
speaking of linkedin, i love how CNN, when linkedin was blocked, had the story prominently in the asia section right after it was blocked however still cant find anything about it being unblocked even now

In a way CNN is censoring good information in China
 
In a way CNN is censoring good information in China

The story they've been telling about China has been about "China bad", if they started running story about "China good", they would confuse their readership.
 
You missed this. LinkedIn website working again in China | Reuters LinkedIn access was restored by the time you posted this. No way to tell when you accessed it though.

Posted 11 hours ago, or roughly 2-3 hours before you posted this. At least according to the time on this forum.

So no it wasn't (necessarily) lieing US (weird since this was posted by non-us papers) propaganda, you have likely jumped to conclusions.

A website that is inaccessible for a few hours is hardly censorship. Censorship is about BANNING a book of a website. Since there was no banning, and since Chinese users have no trouble accessing the website, CNN is practicing misinformation and sloppy journalism. I've read countless account of this or that being "censored" in the Chinese media and it turns out all the information is accessible. No wonder Americans are so dumb--CNN makes them so.
 
A website that is inaccessible for a few hours is hardly censorship. Censorship is about BANNING a book of a website. Since there was no banning, and since Chinese users have no trouble accessing the website, CNN is practicing misinformation and sloppy journalism. I've read countless account of this or that being "censored" in the Chinese media and it turns out all the information is accessible. No wonder Americans are so dumb--CNN makes them so.

LinkedIn probably saw it as a good way to raise their profile. (I even saw it on BBC worldnews)
 
A website that is inaccessible for a few hours is hardly censorship. Censorship is about BANNING a book of a website. Since there was no banning, and since Chinese users have no trouble accessing the website, CNN is practicing misinformation and sloppy journalism. I've read countless account of this or that being "censored" in the Chinese media and it turns out all the information is accessible. No wonder Americans are so dumb--CNN makes them so.

CNN journalism is professional compared to Faux News.
 
What's with the Indian girl in the saree as an avatar.

Well, that's a Chinese girl who portrays the Indian princess in the 2011 version of Journey to the West by Zhang Jizhong.

I found that pic funny, so used it as an avatar.
 
Well, that's a Chinese girl who portrays the Indian princess in the 2011 version of Journey to the West by Zhang Jizhong.

I found that pic funny, so used it as an avatar.

Pretty convincing.

ndpgfk.jpg
 
A website that is inaccessible for a few hours is hardly censorship. Censorship is about BANNING a book of a website. Since there was no banning, and since Chinese users have no trouble accessing the website, CNN is practicing misinformation and sloppy journalism. I've read countless account of this or that being "censored" in the Chinese media and it turns out all the information is accessible. No wonder Americans are so dumb--CNN makes them so.

Not going to get into an argument about the definition of censorship.

Beyond Freezing posted that the VOA news was wrong (even more that it was a lie) that LinkedIn was down, I simply refuted that.
 
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