Vietnam Requires Gov't Vetting of Business Websites 32
bhsurfer writes "Vietnam is now requiring government permission for businesses to set up websites. This article on yahoo give a brief rundown. The Ministry of Culture and Information came up with the rules, but hasn't given any info about the penalties for breaking them." The rules are apparently designed to combat the "increasing numbers of Vietnamese with access to news from outside sources." Update: 10/14 19:40 GMT by T :Sorry, that's 'Vietnam'.'
Vietname... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Vietname... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Vietname... (Score:1)
Someone please mod the parent up.
Oh, and fix the title's typo already.
Re:Excuse me .... (Score:1)
The word which sounds exactly like "nam" (as in vietnam) means name in Hindi and Sanskrit. So "whats your nam?" could mean "whats your name?"
Yes, because (Score:1)
Sure it will (Score:2)
Vietnam (Score:1)
Re:Vietnam (Score:1)
Wow... my education is lacking (Score:1)
Bastards
Re:Wow... my education is lacking (Score:1, Redundant)
Vetting? (Score:1)
Re:Vetting? (Score:2)
Lazy ass programmers
Re:Vetting? (Score:2, Informative)
Well, though I don't have a real dictionary on hand at the moment, going over to dictionary.com does give me a little better information, a la:
I assume it's being used in case #2 here. :) I suppose that clears that up, then.
Communist Country? (Score:2)
Re:Communist Country? (Score:1)
Oh please please please don't say the U.S.
Live in the United States of Zen. ..You could always live in Zen, then
The penalty for -anything- in Vietnam (Score:1)
Not just Commiez... SPAIN too! (Score:5, Informative)
ISPs and sites are being held accountable for "illicit" content.
Stop your red-baiting on the thread, you trolls! It's happening in "western, liberal-democracies", too!
U.S. is mere motions away from this. If recent precedent carries over to Net space, "Justice" Department will exercise this authority without consultation from the legislature.
Re:Not just Commiez... SPAIN too! (Score:3, Insightful)
U.S. is mere motions away from this. If recent precedent carries over to Net space, "Justice" Department will exercise this authority without consultation from the legislature.
Care to back this claim up? Care to show us anything resembling this being proposed in the US?
And, for the record, I wouldn't call a nation doing something like this a `liberal democracy', no matter what continent it's on. Would you?
Re:Not just Commiez... SPAIN too! (Score:3, Interesting)
It's all about the children
More astonishing precedent is set by the confiscation [cmu.edu] of web servers at raisethefist.com [indymedia.org].
If I am to accept what I beleive to be your criteria, then it's pretty clear in the light of recent developments, that the U.S. is not a liberal democracy, and is quickly moving away from any reasonable description of a Republic.
Re:Not just Commiez... SPAIN too! (Score:2)
Interesting -- so in your view prosecution of server admins after the fact for publishing content (child pornography) which is already illegal is the same as prior restraint of web publishing or punishment of unpopular views?
Really?
That's even stranger than your original claims...
Re:Not just Commiez... SPAIN too! (Score:1)
Re:Not just Commiez... SPAIN too! (Score:2)
Well, for starters, I think that should read ``a publicity-crazed state attorney general is trying to raise the spectre of carrier liability in order to draw attention to his re-election campaign'', but yes, people do try stunts like this from time to time. That the system has done a very good job of smacking such attempts down (and that the only example you come up with is from local state politics, not federal at all) is one more example of how well our system has done at the job of preserving individual rights in the over two-hundred years that it has existed.
Re:Orwell's vision (Score:1)