China Forces Websites To Register 587
Rodrigo Strauss writes "The Inquirer has the story that individual owners of websites and blogs must register with the government or face a shut-down. Apparently they will begin monitoring of all sites, both commercial and personal, beginning this month. Site owners have until the end of the month to register. The BBC has the story as well." From the BBC article: "'The internet has profited many people but it also has brought many problems, such as sex, violence and feudal superstitions and other harmful information that has seriously poisoned people's spirits,' said a statement on the MII website, explaining why the new rules were necessary."
From inside the great firewall (Score:5, Funny)
Re:From inside the great firewall (Score:5, Funny)
i am always amazed aT that.
The Chinese Internet (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:The Chinese Internet (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The Chinese Internet (Score:2)
If they mandate that at all the ISPs, then they are effectively cut off.
But hey, internet isnt a 'human right'. So they can make any rules they like.
Re:The Chinese Internet soon running IPv9 (Score:2)
Re:Ok, how many patents do YOU own? (Score:5, Interesting)
First off, its not my damn fault your broke, and feel slighted in some way because no one will give you anything. Its not my responsibility to give you anything, ever.
I started out I am sure exacly like you are now. my parents never had any money, I lived in a little shotgun house for quite a while, then a house that was right on the river that flooded about every 3rd year the rest of my childhood. But did i slop around in the same squallar I had grown up in, to work a deadend meaningless job until I died, raising my own kids in the same squallar? Nope. I joined the army, put every dime possible into my GI bill (5-1 match at the time) and when I did my time I went to college. I got myself an edumacation, and then started working my ass off to get ahead. (no one ever gets ahead sitting on their behind) I still work for "the man" in a good paying job, and have a side business of my own. (no patents through that business) I make a lot more from my own business, and am probably going to be quitting this job soon. This year I will earn around 250,000. I earn more in a month that my father did at retirement. My kids go to good schools, they have college funds, and I don't feel the slightest bit bad about having "made it". I worked for and earned EVERYTHING I have. NOTHING was given to me ever. Its been a fight, I had to shed a wife who was holding me back with the "we can't do it" attitude, (I was making 60k at that time, had the ideas that are now making me a quarter of a mil a year and could not get her to buy into it)
I do hold one patent, that I am still not doing anything with. (I think it cost me total of like $300 including the patent search) I have several copyrighted things (I mentioned copyright because YOU did.)
My advice to you, quit with the "everyone hates me I have no rights and the world is out to get me" crap and fucking do something. If not, then don't fucking cry about how its unfair I have something and you don't. I busted my fucking ass and missed out on a lot of drugs I'm sure your taking to get where I am. so fuck you for thinking it was given to me.
Re:Ok, how many patents do YOU own? (Score:3, Interesting)
This year I will earn around 250,000. [...] (I was making 60k at that time, had the ideas that are now making me a quarter of a mil a year and could not get her to buy into it)
Do you find that 250K/year is now enough income?
Since you mention that you grew financially out of a poverty situation, have you determined that you are now OK, money-wise?
Just asking, since the pursuit of money can be an end in itself so they say.
Having earned it is much better than having been given it.
Re:The Chinese Internet (Score:2)
Gerv
Re:The Chinese Internet (Score:2)
Yes, but they can make it so that you need a "special license" to access the Internet. Said license would be limited to those approved by the goverment, or those that can prove that they need it for work/research purposes.
These connection could be monitored and any encryption would need a backdoor access for the goverment.
Any other connection to the internet would be deemed illegal.
There would still be a "National Net" for everyone else,
Re:The Chinese Internet (Score:4, Interesting)
yup.
I forget where I heard this argument, but its actualy rather interesting:
Re:The Chinese Internet (Score:2)
Re:Crime has nothing to do with guns. (Score:3, Funny)
Dude, pass the soma.
Re:The Chinese Internet (Score:3, Funny)
Sorry, you might be disappointed.
Re:Who cares? (Score:2)
Tell me about it. Bush is as bad an outsourcer as Hitler.
Re:The Chinese Internet (Score:2)
Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:5, Insightful)
You are correct. The censorship is an afterthought that was developed to keep "communism" going when it was discovered that almost nobody would willingly stay committed to it. It goes hand-in-hand with the small elite class continuing to run the government (which is also not part of true communism).
Re:Capitallism and communism are just systems. (Score:2)
Re:Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:2)
Would one of you commie appologists please tell the rest of us which communist country DOES follow the "spirit of Marx". Because every single time one of these communist nations turns into an oppressive hellhole we're told they aren't really doing it right, not really communist... etc.
The truth of it is that this is the end result of any nation that treads the path of communisim. Once you give the government that much power, once it
Re:Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:2)
Sadly, this is the result of any government whose citizens allow it too much power... and the nature of government is that it will always seek to increase its power
Communism works, damnit! (Score:2)
The REAL issues are:
1) No one's done it right yet.
2) There's always one bad apple...
3) For some reason people still horde currency and gold.
4) The general populace are uneducated and therefore unable to decide this for themselves.
5) 'The MAN' won't let it just happen, man...
6) Beating people into submission doesn't seem to make them want to share more (funny thing, that).
7) Marx wasn't a big fan of privacy ri
Re:Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:2)
" I think you'll find that true communism in the spirit of Marx doesn't have anything to do with censorship."
No, not communism, but Marx's socialism does. And as he says that communism is only possible once all countries change to socialism, this one is a very Marxist move.
Disclamer: Note that I said Marx's socialism, not genral socialism. There are plenty of interpretation of the words "communism" and "socialism". I'm using the ones created by Marx.
Re:Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:2)
Re:Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:2)
May you be communist, capitalist, socialist, christian, Jewish, Muslim or whatever else you want to be, please stop telling people what to do!
Very true. (Score:3, Insightful)
In general, philosophies are rarely corrupt - if there is corruption, it is usually with an interpretation, an individual or (most often of all) both. The underlying ideas are usually not that bad, though there are always exceptions.
Americans, especially, are bad about seeing the defects in others and
Re:Very true. (Score:2)
I think you'll also find that censorship occurs in all countries, and that much of it is ludicrous. (Look at the list of books banned in various parts of the US - "The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe"???)
Banned where?
Re:Very true. (Score:3, Interesting)
Do you really fail to see the difference in a school or city banning a book, and a state or federal government banning a book.
How many books has the federal government of the US banned?
Zero.
Americans, especially, are bad about seeing the defects in others and ignoring their own.
"Especially"? No, no
Re:Very true. (Score:3, Informative)
Er. What are you talking about? The US has very strong anti-censorship laws. The only grounds under US law under which you may be censored are the dissemination of technology which poses a serious hazard to national security (nuclear weapon designs are the canonical example.)
Maybe you're confusing sc
Re:Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:5, Insightful)
China has a largely capitalist economy with significant private ownership of capital but has an authoritarian system of government. The censorship, repression, imprisonment, and torture of citizens for expressing sentiments contrary to the official position has very little to do with the private or public ownership of capital and everything to do with the authoritarian aspects of their government.
I'll refrain from pointing out trends in the US government towards a more authoritarian model. The reality of that transistion is that the US merchants who exert so much control over our government would only allow such a thing to happen if 1) they believed it would improve their profits and 2) they could retain control of the new system.
Regards,
Ross
Re:Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:3, Insightful)
Marx's Communism has everything to do with imposing it's moral view on people. It naively believes in some ultimately authoritative truth that would be revealed to people if the circumstances were correct. That's why all Communist States have legal systems that are structured around the State as a parent, a teacher of morals. It's to fashion the perfect people in order to bring about the "True Communi
Re:Proving the Red Bloc still exists (Score:2)
Something else true communism doesn't have.... (Score:2)
No individual knows reality. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:And I think you'll find... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:And I think you'll find... (Score:2)
Hey - that's sounds like Stalin! He had PLENTY of 'voluntary' communes. Humans need organization to be productive, organization needs organizers - and that's when it all falls down.
Well, that and the fact that we all have that 'universal will to become', to quote Vonnegut.
Re:It exists in families. (Score:2)
It's the balance between socialism and free enterprise that counts. Virtually every industrialized country on the planet attempts to balance the two, and while the mixtures may be different depending on where you go, whether you're talking about the US, Japan or England, socialism and capitalism are found in some measure.
The more socialistic as
Re:Capitalism causes more censorship. (Score:2)
Uh huh... Name me ONE communist nation that currently does this.
Every communist regime I've seen censors the shit out of EVERYTHING and closes their borders so no one can escape the HELL their country has become.
Re:Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:2)
Quite right... unfortunately, the reverse doesn't seem to be true. I've yet to see an example of a communist government that wasn't totalitarian.
It can happen here. (Score:2)
Re:Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:2)
China hasn't been communist for decades (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Proving the Red Block still exists (Score:2)
You're welcome.
Sex? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Sex? (Score:2)
Does this include China-based spammer sites? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Does this include China-based spammer sites? (Score:2)
Some of them are on professional spam hosting services (see ROKSO) but there are also many running on compromised machines, even spam zombies. Does this mean that if we report such sites to the Chinese government, that they will imprison some kid who had a virus infected computer that's aiding in hosting a
Re:Does this include China-based spammer sites? (Score:2)
Send 'em ads for things like "Insurrection for Dummies" and "The Subversionist's Handbook"
Jw
Re: Does this include China-based spammer sites? (Score:2)
No, of course not (Score:2)
China has tightened up in the past few weeks (Score:5, Informative)
Re:China has tightened up in the past few weeks (Score:2)
Failure to connect at all for periods > 24 hrs
...whatever. (Score:2)
Re:...whatever. (Score:2)
To put it bluntly: yes. And if your ideas are controversial and you refuse, the sanctions will probably be severe. Don't forget that you're talking about China, where human rights is still an almost mythological term, and when dissidents are shot the invoice for the bullet goes to their family.
Re:...whatever. (Score:2)
Not to troll, but why? Are you running a website in China that might be restricted by this? If your website is somewhere like, Ohio, then this has nothing to do with you. So, why does it annoy you? Perhaps your favorite website is a Chinese website that might get shut down? If so, can't you work with the owners to move it to an American server?
It just seems to me that the
WTF (Score:2)
Harmful Information (Score:2)
In the US we just call these Web sites that suck.
How about the Chinese government assign a site rating at the time of registration? Maybe it would clean some of the rabble out.
Re:Harmful Information (Score:2)
***** - You get kickbacks from the govt
**** - You are tolerated
*** - You receive a random beating once a month
** - You receive daily beatings
* - Your family receives a bill for the bullet that was put in the back of your head.
superstitious (Score:3, Insightful)
I like how feudal superstitions rank amongst the top threats to a Communist government.
"In order for our government to work, you're not allowed to think like that, nor be presented with such ideas."
Such a government seems like it would have to rely upon barriers that prevent intercommunication of popular ideas amongst its citizens, especially with such a large population. Wouldn't it be interesting if 1984 became true in China?
I chide the story submitter for not ending his submission with a question. Allow me to suggest on:
"Could the Internet be the end of China as we know it?"
Become? (Score:2)
Dude, it already is. It's one of the countries 1984 was BASED on.
Re:superstitious (Score:3, Interesting)
1984 was Orwell's take on what Stalinism would look like in, well, the west.
Last I checked, China is run by a Communist party (who has outlawed any opposition parties) and behaves much like (not exactly like) ex-Soviet communist states: secret police, limiting movement of citizens, tight control of media, deliberate misinformation to control citizens, imprisonment of large numbers of political prisoners, carefully limiting foreign visitors and tracking their movements in the country.
Freed
Re:superstitious (Score:2)
If I recall correctly? How old are you?
Anyways, the full context of 1984 can only be realized in a populous society in which the only barriers are government-induced. In the 1940's, there were plenty of other barriers that have since disappeared (like the lack of cheap and plentiful transportation.)
Whois, and responsible in the eyes of the law (Score:2)
I realise that Whois isn't very reliable, but in principle it should be correct for most domains.
So this means that China isn't interested in sort of kind of knowing who is responsible for a web site. They want someone that will be responsible in the eyes of the law.
This is likely a very clever way to force self censorship. If your name is registered, you'll make sure that there's no contra band on your web site.
They'll p
Economic issues... (Score:2)
Re:Economic issues... (Score:2, Informative)
No, they can't. They have to sign an agreement saying they promise not to view websites that have such material on them currently.
Re:Economic issues... (Score:2)
I don't have a source in front of me but I think that's illegal in China.
Patriot Act? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Patriot Act? (Score:2)
Respect for individual liberties and freedom of expression is not a team sport. This action performed by China is oppressive and if it happened here in the USA, then that would be oppressive as well.
Why don't we argue about global moral absolut
Re:Patriot Act? (Score:2)
Re:Patriot Act? (Score:2)
Re:Patriot Act? (Score:2)
Likewise, I always heard that we can never allow the government to spy on its citizens at any time and that we would never allow our government to do things hidden from the citizens.
Where are we now?
20 years later ... (Score:2, Insightful)
"Show me your papers, Yuri!"
Re:20 years later ... (Score:2)
Yeah, I don't know if it will be 20 years, or 10.
I think the really radical prediction is that about the time the US is imposing this level of control, China will be busy *disassembling* it.
China's in a weird state right now, embracing capitalism on one hand, but still trying to stifle free-expression.
The US is clearly working against capitalism and free expression-- but has a lot further to go.
When china decides that its capitalist economy requires free expression, it will have another "cultural revolu
Mob Family Feud (Score:2)
About that "other harmful information" part... (Score:2)
Not unlike the rest of the world..? (Score:3, Interesting)
Who's doing the watching? (Score:2)
Not that big of a deal (Score:4, Interesting)
- You register and get a Domain name..
- You use your ISP's service..
- "free hosting", still can track your IP..
Guess its time for them to start using FreeNet. This is exactally the type of reason it was created.
Re: I already tried Freenet (Score:2)
Middle east (Score:3, Interesting)
Some of the goverments there have even more to lose by their citizens seeing information from the outside world.
Maybe it is because the general public in those countries not normally having Internet yet?
Re:Middle east (Score:3, Informative)
Bullshit.
Tell that to the Iranian bloggers who have been arrested merely for publishing their political views.
That's the textbook definition of censorship.
And Iran actually purports to be a democracy. Countries like Saudi Arabia don't even pretend to have democratic scruples.
The companies that make it possible (Score:3, Informative)
Keep this in mind (Score:3, Insightful)
Yep, our nation has some serious problems right now, but we haven't (yet?) even come close to this kind of garbage. So for the next guy who says, "I can't wait for China to replace the US as the global superpower" all I can say is "be careful what you wish for.
Feudal superstitions, eh? (Score:2)
Keep in mind that christianity is still seen as superstition in China.
"Religion is the opium of the people".
Mao Tse-Tung.
No wonder they put superstitions (religions?) and poison in the same sentence.
Is this much different from the U.S.? (Score:2)
How to Help? (Score:5, Interesting)
For example, I would gladly cooperate in a massive DOS attack on the great firewall servers... but it wouldn't work (firstly because they'd just block it, and secondly because taking them down would only isolate China, it wouldn't let info in and out).
I would run a freenet server, except that (please correct me if I'm wrong here) my understanding is that with today's design the authorities can tell that freenet is being used... which is enough to silence people even if the authorities can't tell WHAT it was used for. My understanding is that freenet is being altered to meet this challenge, but that it's not there yet.
So is there anyone out there in China.... no, make that anyone with a FRIEND in China who has suggestions of how I can help?
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
everyone should register (Score:2)
The Shanghai police may believe this, or they might be just trying to avoid the burden of accepting registrations. Even if it is true, if every person who lives in China tries to register his web site, the authorities will be so overwhelmed with paperwork that they won't be able to tell which registrations ar
The source of China's inspiration (Score:3)
The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political,
economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State
to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by
extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State."
- Joseph Goebbels
Re:Must be said... (Score:2)
Sadly, that's probably a little too close to the truth to be funny.
Re:chinese government is fascist (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:chinese government is fascist (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:chinese government is fascist (Score:3, Insightful)
For a short period of time only, not indefinitely.
Runs a prison for "enemy combatants" (not civilians, but not military either) that has been accused by just about every neutral observer of being a gulag.
Uh huh... yeah, show me these neutral observers. Amnesty International? Democrats R Us? People related to former inmates? There are no neutral observers on this planet.
Invaded a country on made-up false pretenses.
Finding out so
Re:Are you kidding? Bush is taking notes... (Score:2)
Re:If sex is a problem... (Score:2)
Maybe the so-called leaders of mainland China aren't getting it enough so that those who do pose a threat to them.
How much do you want to bet that these restrictions won't be honored by those in power?
Re:Well... (Score:2)
Still think it's worth the Profit?
Re:Keep it Up (Score:2)