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China Unblocks Wikipedia

Posted by samzenpus on Wed Oct 11, 2006 08:28 PM
from the alright-go-ahead-and-read-it dept.
ZZeta writes "Even though the information on the site is still scarce, Editor & Publisher is already publishing the scoop: Apparently, Wikipedia has been unblocked in China. From the article: 'Wikipedia reported on its site that it had received word from multiple users in the country on Chinese-forums.com that the site had been restored.'"
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  • I'm off to edit the "gang of four" article with some "facts". Let's see how fast they can censor it again.
    • Re:Woohoo! (Score:5, Funny)

      by rlp (11898) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @08:33PM (#16402883)
      What do they have against design patterns? Oh ... never mind.
    • Re:Woohoo! (Score:5, Funny)

      by lawpoop (604919) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @09:37PM (#16403443) Homepage Journal
      Yeah, you versus 1.2 billion party loyalists. Good luck.
      • Re:Woohoo! (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Comatose51 (687974) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @10:22PM (#16403761) Homepage
        Actually IIRC, the Communist party in China only number in the few millions. The ranks have grown in recent years because of the boom and the advantages party membership gives you in business. Most Chinese are not Communists. In fact, I think most people around the world aren't very ideological and more pragmatic than their leaders. People just want to live and have a good life, whatever the official ideology might be.
      • Re:Woohoo! (Score:5, Insightful)

        by djupedal (584558) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @10:23PM (#16403773)
        Yep, I too can confirm the site is accessible from inside China.

        "Opening up their economy, moving towards capitalism are some of the bigger steps. Allowing wikipedia is a good step in the right direction."

        Those are two very interesting 'remarks'...not sure where to start, as you've taken some fairly significant liberties, speaking as you do, and not being one of 'them'.

        To begin, how do you know what is the 'right direction' for the Chinese? Are you sure that your definition would be widely embraced by the Chinese?

        Moving along, you casually comment about 'opening up'. Opening something depends on that something already existing. You speak as if it is already in place, and what is happening now is simply broad access in and out. China is a 'developing country'. I believe there is a major difference between 'opening up' and 'developing', especially in regards to something so unique as China's economy. Next, you flatly state 'moving towards capitalism' - I doubt anyone would be comfortable proposing that what is happening is that simple. Moving, yes...but China is in a position of moving 'away' from many things, rather than 'towards' your definition of anything. The Chinese themselves are not clear on what China is moving 'towards'... an outside, casual observer, such as yourself, is that much more incapable of making any type of valid claim. I would suggest that rather than serving up your distant opinions, that you come here and ask them in person.

        My point is that your comments speak more of what you don't know, as opposed to what you think you know. How can you claim to speak for them...? I don't get it, sorry.

        "I believe the more communication the better..."

        The better for whom? Again, I'm left wondering what makes you think you understand the situation. You talk about 'communication' as if all forms of it are good. I know you are trying to frame your points humanistically, however, without looking at what 'communication' means to the Chinese, as opposed to this or that other culture, ignores just one part of their uniqueness.

        I urge you to consider that you and many others will soon be judging what the internet is and does using China as the norm, not the exception. I am fairly sure your hubris is in for a shock when you learn that you don't define such things to the Chinese, when in fact they are even now defining it for you... Come on over, I'll be happy to help you find a front row seat to a very interesting time in human history.
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          [quote]"I believe the more communication the better..."

          The better for whom? Again, I'm left wondering what makes you think you understand the situation. You talk about 'communication' as if all forms of it are good. I know you are trying to frame your points humanistically, however, without looking at what 'communication' means to the Chinese, as opposed to this or that other culture, ignores just one part of their uniqueness.
          [/quote]

          Please elaborate?
          • Re:Woohoo! (Score:5, Interesting)

            by Elemenope (905108) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @10:51PM (#16403969)

            In other words, a very few rich aristocrats in 14th and 15th century Europe decided one day that a certain set of values like 'rule by the people', 'scientific inquiry and understanding', 'free press' and the like were great in theory and it would be kinda neat if someone tried them. A few hundred years later one rabblerousing asshat or two actually took them seriously and started revolutions on both sides of the pond. Since the crazy fuckers actually won a few times, we, a few hundred years after that, have come to reflexively believe that these ideological precepts are somehow universally good, since they worked out so well for us. They are embedded very deeply in our cultural vocabulary.

            GP's point, I imagine, had something to do with China having been around and doing A-OK in one form or another for the last three thousand years operating under entirely different assumptions, ideologies, and whatnot than the west. What make us so arrogant to think that because our stuff, like freedom of information, works so well for us, that it would for them or that they would even want it at all?

            • by figgypower (809463) on Thursday October 12 2006, @01:10AM (#16404675) Journal
              What makes right? Might?

              Consider that before the Renaissance (which you blow off as "very few rich aristocrats in 14th and 15th century Europe") Europe, and "white people," were pretty backwards. My ancestors were part of the the Gupta Empire, then the Ottoman Empire, and many others. In general, these empires were technologically and culuturally "superior" to European empires. That is to say, relatively speaking, we enjoyed a higher level of comfort, less starvation, less disease, and more free time to just think.

              After the Renaissance, Europe re-discovered art and science and began an explosion of ideas that, basically, let it conquer the world. These weren't rich aristocrats. These were geniuses. The likes of Michaelangelo and Galileo. You have to ask yourself, if those values were so stupid and so useless, how did they manage to lord over the world (and maybe, still do)?

              My conclusion is: their system works. Copy it. Of course, that's what I get out of it. Does this mean there isn't a better set of values and a better system? No -- there may very well be a set of ideals that are far better... i.e. leading to better quality of life. China would be wise to not ignore these values wholesale, and as a matter of fact, they're not. It's why they've privatized their markets. It has made them much, much wealthier. Can political freedoms be better for them, as well? History, if it's any guide, seems to indicate a definite yes.

              Lastly, you may think: well, it may have worked well for Europe but who's to say it will work a different culture? Because the Chinese are not aliens. They are human beings, where even cultural whims, are led by evolution and nature. I mean, are the Europeans so special that they would find a system that only works for them? Capitalism in moderation, rule by the people, scientific inquiry, and basic freedoms (press, religion, speech; naturally, with limitations) are the best tools we have and for all intents and purposes nothing has ever shown to work better.

              My own mother country is waking up and realizing that these are not "inventions" as much as they are discoveries, and they can be put to use now for a better livelihood while working on something "better".

            • "They are embedded very deeply in our cultural vocabulary" is correct. The entire rest of the post, as far as it is specific enough to be deemed correct or incorrect, is incorrect. In particular, the idea of where and when and how science, free press, and democracy took hold show a remarkable lack of knowledge, as does the idea that China had been doing "A-OK" for 3000 years. At least, having large parts of the population regularly starve is far from my personal definition of "A-OK".

              Eivind.

              • Re:Incorrect. (Score:4, Interesting)

                by djupedal (584558) on Thursday October 12 2006, @01:55AM (#16404903)
                >At least, having large parts of the population regularly starve is far from my personal definition of "A-OK".

                Are we talking about the same China? Do you mean to say that if we penciled out a simple timeline covering the last 3000 years, and then made a short list of major cultures that existed for at least that long, we would find China as a lone example of one where the shear statistical majority of the population suffered significantly as a direct and sustained result of starvation...?

                In contrast to your claim that the Chinese at-large served as a benchmark for lack of sustenance... on more than one occasion, while large populations in Europe were fading into history due to starvation alone, much larger populations were busy sustaining themselves in this part of Asia. It is a common myth that the Chinese are a nation of farmers - in truth, the Chinese are 'water people', having relied on rivers and the ocean for both mobility and food supply throughout their history, continuing even now.

                Do you know just how many cultures have come and gone over the last 3000 years, versus how many have remained?

                The Chinese relate to a time scale that they alone are comfortable with. China tends to open and close on 500 year cycles. How can any short-lived culture, such as modern America with less than 300 years to look back on, begin to even comprehend what it takes to stick around for 3000? What is a significant amount of time to an American, say 50 years, is not so much as a blink for the Chinese spirit. While Americans measure history in generations (1 = 37 years), the Chinese measure things in dynasties, as an example, with minor segments being ticked off every 150 years or so.

                It was very nearly 500 years ago when Chinese mariners mapped the globe, only to be wiped off the seating chart by the Mandarins, who decried science, and did everything they could to erase all they feared from the rise of practical science.

                Now, 500 years hence, we find China clearing her throat...she has led the world in technology many times before, and she wants that position back. Your claim of starvation getting in their way is a bit funny, seeing as they are still around, after all those years :)
                • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

                  What I am saying is that those 3000 years are not "A-OK", unless you count people starving to death as "A-OK". How you constructed this as comparative to other cultures in that timeframe I have no idea of - I wasn't comparing to those cultures, I was comparing to the capabilities we have NOW, due to a single occurence: The greek civilization inventing debate, leading (after a while) to science and democracy. This is a singular occurence.

                  The chinese did not have science. Your belief that they did shows

                  • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

                    >The chinese did not have science.

                    Right...this must be more of the old myth that the ancestry of modern science is exclusively European.

                    Sure, if you are willing to discount the sextant, the sundail, extant writing, cast bronze acupunture training dummies, gun-powder, movable type...you've chosen to use the already centuries stale F. Bacon [upenn.edu] method of narrowly defining science so as to give credit to cultures that followed on the heals of the Chinese by centuries.

                    A grand laugh then and a grand lau
                    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

                      Inventions != Science

                      In fact, many of man's greatest inventions are accidents. The Chinese were advanced technologically compared to their peers until at least the 1700's, but that doesn't mean that they (or their peers) used the scientific method. For instance, they have been curing a type of leukemia for years (centuries?) using folk medicine comprised of ground rock, toad poison, and some herbs. The cure rate was better than Western chemotherapy methods, which were ineffective against this form of leuke

                    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

                      All your direct examples are technology, while I am talking of the process of science. Crucial to this was the introduction of the debate, something that only occured once, in Greece. The tradition was carried along from there through the arabic countries and partially the East, and re-introduced to Europe during the end of the Renaissance.

                      This is completely ignored in the reference you came with. The way of thinking underlying science is completely ignored, instead focusing on certain surface-level ar

            • by caitsith01 (606117) on Thursday October 12 2006, @02:55AM (#16405165) Homepage Journal
              Your post is superficially insightful. Your underlying assumption appears to be that there is no absolute 'right' or 'wrong' way to organise a society, and therefore we cannot say that liberal democracy is 'better' than China's current approach (which I would describe as 'fascist' in the classical sense - a topic for another post, perhaps - and undoubtedly totalitarian).

              However, this type of relativism is not particularly helpful. For one thing, what do you say to Nazi Germany? Or Stalinist Russia? Or Pol Pot's Cambodia? Were these societies merely 'different' from liberal democracy, and therefore above criticism? Is it impossible to make a valid assessment of which is 'better'? Was the western world merely 'different' when we had the Spanish Inquisition and witch burnings?

              I put it to you that rather than our high opinion of liberal democracy being a process of coming to "reflexively believe that these ideological precepts are somehow universally good", the reason that those ideological precents are supported and upheld is because they ARE good in some sense, or at least, better than the alternatives. I put it to you that if you could take an individual, strip away ethnicity, nationalism, religion, and upbringing, and allow a rational choice between a liberal democratic system and a totalitarian system, the vast, vast majority of sane humans would choose the former. "Good" may mean many things - in this context, perhaps measures of happiness, prosperity, and freedom of action are appropriate; if you prefer a collective perspective, then perhaps measures of per-capita productivity, artistic or scientific achievements would be a better test for you to apply; finally, you might also apply a 'moral' or religious test if that is part of your belief system.

              Your theory also fails to explain why we have such a violently negative reaction to certain activities that we, as a society, undertake. If your principle that 'you love what you do' was right, why would there be such an uproar about Iraq, for instance? Or the modification of some of those "ideological precepts" in the 'war on terror'. These reactions also suggest that the basis for regarding liberal democracy as desirable and superior is more than mere historical rote learning.

              Conversely, your theory fails to explain the continuing development of liberal democracies throughout the 20th century. If it was merely the success of various revolutions several hundred years ago, why did the 20th century (and indeed the 19th and 18th) feature a continued liberalisation of our society? How do you explain the sexual, cultural and racial revolutions, for instance? These are the product of a living and developing social system, not the result of an outline traced in the sand 500 years ago.

              Relativism is an important tool in understanding the world. But if you let it get too out of control you will come to believe that black is white, and they are both grey. China's system of government is anti-humanist, corrupt, inefficient, brutal, militaristic, autocratic, and by almost any definition (other than the Chinese, which you seem to prefer) evil. It IS worse than our system on all but the most twisted 'better' to 'worse' scale, for the individual and for the society as a whole.
              • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                China's system of government is anti-humanist, corrupt, inefficient, brutal, militaristic, autocratic, and by almost any definition (other than the Chinese, which you seem to prefer) evil. It IS worse than our system on all but the most twisted 'better' to 'worse' scale, for the individual and for the society as a whole.

                You are stating pure opinion here. The American government can be considered anti-humanist (abortion, gay rights), corrupt (Halliburton, lobbyists, etc..), inefficient, militaristic (we spe

              • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                Relativism is an important tool in understanding the world. But if you let it get too out of control you will come to believe that black is white, and they are both grey. China's system of government is anti-humanist, corrupt, inefficient, brutal, militaristic, autocratic, and by almost any definition (other than the Chinese, which you seem to prefer) evil. It IS worse than our system on all but the most twisted 'better' to 'worse' scale, for the individual and for the society as a whole.

                I find this the fun
        • MOD PARENT UP (Score:5, Insightful)

          by enjahova (812395) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @11:21PM (#16404181) Homepage
          In reading your comment I realize why I didn't feel right about writing that post. I guess I let ideals get the best of me. Thanks for a refreshing dose of humility.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          China will be back to her dictatorial self once the Olympics is finished in 2008.

          Please don'tconflate China with the criminal regime that rules it. China is the country. The Red Dynasty is the dictatorship. (Although strictly speaking, it hasn't been a dictatorship for sometime. These days it's an oligarchy, consisting of a committee of thugs.)

          -jcr
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday October 11 2006, @08:31PM (#16402865)
    China's internet tube to Wikipedia was clogged up under North Korea. Their recent nuclear test loosened up the clog, and now people in China can use the tube again.
  • Probably last until people in China start reading how their central government was made a fool by North Korea. Can't have that.

  • by Sir Homer (549339) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @08:32PM (#16402879)
    Quick, before they block it again!
  • Interesting times (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday October 11 2006, @08:36PM (#16402913)
    But I wonder if people in China who choose to visit certain articles might get tagged and investigated (like people in the United States do under the Patriot Act for checking out certain books from the library).
    • by TheModelEskimo (968202) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @10:03PM (#16403627)
      might get tagged and investigated (like people in the United States do under the Patriot Act for checking out certain books from the library).
      Interesting, can you share your source for that? I've heard of the government requesting library cooperation in certain cases when they want to know about a specific person, but I've never heard anyone say there is general monitoring going on. I wonder how many libraries would cooperate with that, and given the completely heterogeneous ecosystem of library computer installations, I wonder if it would even be *possible*.
    • like people in the United States do under the Patriot Act for checking out certain books from the library

      Right. I'll worry about that right after my library figures out how to actually keep track of the books I have out.

      Do you have any idea of the amount of resources it would take to create an interconnected system capable of tracking what books people have out? It would be ridiculous. Given previous government efforts on things of that scale (a few of which I've worked on), I suspect it would probably cost
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        The GP mentioned users who *visted* the Wikipedia, not edited, but editing might be more incriminating as well as easier to track. Tracking down the IP address would be the easiest way to do such snooping automagically, but there are probably clues to be gleaned from the information the contributor adds to the 'pedia themselves...

        A thought occurs - the Wikipedia is a fairly well known site, like CNN, New York Times, etc. Unlike many blocked and well known news and politics sites, the content is created by t
      • Re:Interesting times (Score:5, Informative)

        by pimpimpim (811140) on Thursday October 12 2006, @02:28AM (#16405075)
        Well, good luck finding the facts, as under the Patriot Act you cannot disclose facts about your library records being checked, since [firstamendmentcenter.org]:

        Section 215 also provides: No person shall disclose to any other person (other than those persons necessary to produce the tangible things under this section) that the Federal Bureau of Investigation has sought or obtained tangible things under this section. This gag order would prevent a library, for example, from ever notifying its patrons that the government has requested information from it under Section 215.

        Hope you woke up from your sweet dreams. You may now remod GP 5 - Interesting.

  • Did they really? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by bhmit1 (2270) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @08:40PM (#16402937) Homepage
    Censorship works best when people don't realize they are being restricted. So how do we know they are viewing the real wikipedia and not a government controlled and filtered proxy? Considering all the sites and people out there pointing to wikipedia, it's only logical to put up something to keep people from asking questions and trying to see what they are missing.
    • Re:Did they really? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Kleinigkeit (903166) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @08:44PM (#16402981)
      Yup, especially as the majority of links are to en.wikipedia.org, zh.wikipedia.org is still blocked. I just had a friend in China hit the main page of both wikis and only en. was available. Now to get her to run a search on 'Tibet'...
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        i'm on both and i'm in shanghai, this is awsome news for us, i get alot of information from wikipedia via tor and we all know how slow tor can be, zh.wikipedia.org is also unblocked. the site is being filtered, but atleast i can still access other information.
    • by slashbob22 (918040) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @08:44PM (#16402985)
      Ahh.. Truthiness [wikipedia.org]. You rear your ugly head again.

      Did you know that the population of African Elephants has tripled in the past four months?
    • by Quadraginta (902985) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @08:49PM (#16403041)
      Censorship works best when people don't realize they are being restricted.

      A common trope. But actually censorship works best when people do it to themselves, for the most noble motives, because it furthers some grand and wonderful higher purpose.
        • nope (Score:3, Insightful)

          Not by me. As an ornery old freethinker, I don't give a flying f*ck what the majority thinks: what's good and bad are not defined by any majority vote in my ethics.

          Of course, the majority defines what's legal. This highlights the interesting difference between what's legal and what's right.
  • by Maxo-Texas (864189) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @08:58PM (#16403131)
    We have our kent state, lynchings, etc. in the US.

    Perhaps they can start talking about tienamen square maturely instead of pretending it didn't happen.

      • I haven't heavily studied T Square, but a lot of reporters say that it didn't happen anything like what western media likes to make out, perhaps you should go read up some more on it.

        Of course, one AC does not all of China make, but if a lot of people in China feel this way, broad examination of China's history isn't likely to happen any time soon. The gist of AC's message seems to be:

        • I haven't really researched the Tienamen Square massacre (because, well, inside China, I can't)
        • I do, however, believe what my country's official media tells me
        • Since I can't read up on this subject (because my government won't let me), maybe you should read some of my country's official propaganda on the subject and get yourself up to my high standard of awareness.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Well, reporters who aren'tin danger of being tossed into a cell with people suffering from tuberculosis have a different view. Keep in mind that here in the west, we have access not only to our own country's take on events, we can read the accounts from the Red Dynasty's propagandists as well. Guess which side I find convincing?

        Hell, most Chinese don't even know that Mao killed more Chinese than Tojo.

        -jcr

  • Pragmatism (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ghyd (981064) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @09:02PM (#16403177)
    Sounds like economic pragmatism. Without being perfect, wiki is a major knowledge (and therefore wealth) database.
  • Some quick testing.. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jarl1976 (1000672) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @09:23PM (#16403345)
    A quick test of certain articles indicates the government has moved to more fine grained blocking. The page of some events 17 years ago did not load, but trying to load it did not temporarily block the ip(which is what happens if it just stalls on banned words). So I guess they have decided that cencoring all of wikipedia is overkill..
  • by perfectlynormalbeast (221743) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @09:24PM (#16403351)
    From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tienamen_square [wikipedia.org]

    The protests of 1989 resulted in the killing of Chinese protestors in the streets to the west of the square and adjacent areas. Some sources (Graham Earnshaw and Columbia Journal Review) claim that none died on the square itself. However, Chinese expatriates who left the country after the killings said that the numbers ended up being in the thousands. This was a combination of the hundreds killed on the spot and the "miniature" purge that followed.

    But http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiananmen_Square_prot ests_of_1989 [wikipedia.org] is blocked

    Interesting... More than I expected to be avaliable...
  • by Junior J. Junior III (192702) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @09:26PM (#16403369) Homepage
    Did the Chinese government just realize they can hire a million-strong standing army of Wikipedia editors? Why censor when you can edit to taste?
  • by edwardpickman (965122) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @09:31PM (#16403405)
    Not sure about a few entries. Did Chairman Mao really start off as a showgirl in the Peking Opera and is Japan really twice the size of China?
  • What Language? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Jack Action (761544) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @09:31PM (#16403407)
    Do Chinese users have a Chinese language Wikipedia, or do they use the English one?
  • by Datamonstar (845886) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @09:33PM (#16403421)
    Obligatory... especially in Soviet China where Wikipedia unblocks you.
  • by Eye-of-Modok (991809) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @10:08PM (#16403657) Homepage Journal
    I've been in China for 3 and a half years now and this is good news indeed, but there is still a long way to go. Considering how many times Google has been blocked and unblocked since I've been here, I wouldn't be surprised to find Wikipedia blocked again soon. I still have to play the proxy server game to surf a lot of the sites I want to see, and they have gotten very good at outsmarting proxy servers for certain content they absolutely don't want people to see. Maybe someone can enlighten me how they would be able to block a site even if it's going through an anonymous proxy server in, say Korea. I'm sure they have the brightest of the brightest hard at work on it. Of course, no proxy server ever works for more than a few days before it gets added to the "list". In fact, I'm probably on more than a few lists, myself. Lists only matter if they need evidence for something, and as I'm not inciting anything, I'm not particularly worried. I count my blessings that I have as much freedom to do what I want here as I do. In fact, I feel far more free to express myself here than I did back in the States, with its citizen watchdogs doing their best at every turn to censor me.
  • by fuzheado (733418) on Wednesday October 11 2006, @10:50PM (#16403953) Homepage
    Since I'm writing a book about Wikipedia and live in China, here's what I posted to my blog [andrewlih.com]

    The good news: The Wikipedia block in China is partially lifted

    The bad news: The Chinese version is still not generally accessible, and the Western media reporting has been poor

    Editor & Publisher magazine put out an article October 11 saying:

    "The online interactive reference site Wikipedia announced Tuesday that the site had apparently been made accessible in China, after being blocked for just over a year by the country's government. "
    Well not quite correct. Reports started coming in on October 10 from different parts of the PRC, saying that the English Wikipedia was now accessible. A friend using an open Wifi in Beijing emailed me saying he could suddenly start using Wikipedia again. Some folks in Hubei said it was still blocked. Shanghai and Guangdong users said parts were accessible.

    From a Beijing China Netcom's residential DSL connection, the English language and other foreign language versions are now accessible, but the Chinese version is still blocked (zh.wikipedia.org).

    There is no monolithically run Great Firewall of China, even though it is a cute and useful moniker.

    The "GFW system" depends on a distributed system of checks and filters that depends on the particular ISP, the type of connection being used, and the geographic locale. A commercial connection in Hubei is different than a residential DSL in Guangdong is different than an academic network in Shantou. Something blocked in one area of the country may be totally fine in another. A keyword that is filtered in one place could be allowed in another.

    So for folks in China's tech circles, it's pretty frustrating seeing blanket "China blocks" or "China unblocks" declaration without specifics or accurate reports.

    Filtering also happens on different levels between the domestic network and the greater Internet, so even though Wikipedia is generally accessible in English, it's still subject to:

    • URL-level filtering - host header or keyword in URL rejected
    • Text-stream level filtering - offending keyword in Web page
    More info as it arrives, and the "unblock" may still be making its way around the country. But let's not forget that for now the most important part of Wikipedia for PRC users - the Chinese version - is still not generally accessible.