Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Censorship Your Rights Online

(Economic) Costs of the Great Firewall of China 14

sdmartin101 writes "The BBC is carrying a story on the economic costs (to the obvious candidates like Internet cafes, and others) of the Chinese government's vigorous Internet filtering program. The story also includes a brief interview with the head of Safeweb, an organization which helps users circumvent governmental censorship on the Web."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

(Economic) Costs of the Great Firewall of China

Comments Filter:
  • Do any underground cafes exist? Why not disguise a satellite under some bamboo or something, then creat a small 802.11x network. I know it would cost a lot, but it would get the human rights and media connected.
    • Why sure they exist. Do you really think that millions of Chinese teenaged boys are going to be stopped effectively in accessing porn sites? That they're not going to find ways to circumvent the blockage, or that some savvy entrepreneur isn't going to develop homegrown content inside the firewalls? The history of pornography shows that the human spirit (Translation here- men jerking off) is not something that is harnessed by bans, edicts or silly laws.

      The Commie bastards that censor China are creating the demand for underground cafes, which in turn does reduce their strangle hold of the Chinese. I say fuck the Luddites and control freaks and fuck the horse they rode in on. In this case the "horse" in many cases are the Western companies that have supplied the technology to censor the Chinese. As an example take a look at Nortel development of the "Golden Shield.

      Regards, Matt-

      freematt@go.com
      freematt@coil.com
  • nonsense (Score:2, Insightful)

    by tps12 ( 105590 )
    This is an absurd abuse of the concept of "economic costs." When economists speak of economic costs, they generally do so regarding costs to the whole of society, not to individual firms. For example, banning automobiles would be very costly to society, as it would drive up (no pun intended) the costs of shipping, and hence almost all commerce. It would also effectively put an end to the auto industry, but this is beside the point.

    In this case, it is not newsworthy that banning certain Internet sites will drive Internet-based companies out of business. The macroscopic effect on the entire society is the only thing that concerns the economist, while the politician has still other concerns (for example, a small hit to the GDP might be worthwhile if it decreases hate crimes significantly; this is the reasoning behind European anti-Nazi propoganda laws).

    As a final thought, consider that one of the primary purposes of the DMCA was to protect the record industry from the effects of a dynamic free market. Slashdotters have been uncharacteristically perceptive in recognizing that the profitibility of a single industry or firm should not dictate legislation, and we should be similarly open-minded regarding China's operations. By cutting down on the amount of data flowing in to the nation, they maximize the bandwidth available to the users of legitimate Internet sites, so the effects could turn out positive in the end. Recall also that they are contributing to Linux as well, and don't be dissuaded by impressive-sounding economics lingo.
    • In this case, it is not newsworthy that banning certain Internet sites will drive Internet-based companies out of business. The macroscopic effect on the entire society is the only thing that concerns the economist

      Really? Last I heard, macroeconomics was merely one branch of economics. I would imagine that the effects on individual business would be of interest to microeconomists, not to mention the business owners, the employees, their dependent children (we must not forget the children!! ), etc.
  • Perverted Ideals (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Flamerule ( 467257 ) on Monday September 23, 2002 @06:50PM (#4315450)
    Ironically, Professor Hsu admits Safeweb itself accepted controls on its censorship-busting software in order to gain access to US public funds to trial its software last year in tandem with broadcaster Voice of America.

    [...]

    Safeweb "agreed with VoA to put a filter on the server side" to screen out pornography, said Professor Hsu, acknowledging that homosexual rights sites would be blanked too.

    So the program that's supposed to free the citizens of China, Saudi Arabia, etc., from their respective firewalls is itself blocking access to some content? What's the message there, "Censoring is bad, unless applied to naughty porn sites?" Disturbing.

    Additionally, as the history of commercial content filtering programs (Surfwatch, etc.) shows, blocking "bad" sites (porn, racism, terrorist handbook, libertarian blogs (!?!)) inevitably cuts off access to legitimate pages as well.

    • by zenyu ( 248067 )
      "Censoring is bad, unless applied to naughty porn sites?"

      Didn't you know Amerika is the arbiter of what is Republican and what is Evil? Our lord and president George Eliza Bush said so himself.

"Protozoa are small, and bacteria are small, but viruses are smaller than the both put together."

Working...