Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Censorship The Internet Your Rights Online

Forget MTV, I Want My Internet! 386

shystershep writes "Teenagers in China are apparently pretty serious about getting internet access. This article on the English version of the online newspaper Xinhuanet details gang-type activity to get around China's ban on persons under 18 entering internet cafes. I may get a little cranky if I don't get my daily net fix, but I've never beat anyone with a fire extinguisher because of it (not that I remember, anyway)."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Forget MTV, I Want My Internet!

Comments Filter:
  • Feedback loop (Score:5, Insightful)

    by MrLint ( 519792 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @03:33AM (#9124722) Journal
    I really have to wonder to myself if the chinese govt has yet come to the realization that their constant drive to block/censor anti-govt internet content only leads to more anti-govt feelings of the people.
    • Re:Feedback loop (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ValourX ( 677178 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @03:35AM (#9124730) Homepage

      Those kids should have been beating up the government officials that made the law, not the cafe workers who are forced to enforce it.

      Of course if they're caught they'll probably be shot one way or the other.

      -Jem
      • Re:Feedback loop (Score:5, Insightful)

        by velo_mike ( 666386 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @04:27AM (#9124878)
        Those kids should have been beating up the government officials that made the law, not the cafe workers who are forced to enforce it.

        Very true, but beating up government officials is always hazardous to one's health, especially in a disarmed society. It may be possible to take out cafe workers with impunity and still make a statement.

      • Re:Feedback loop (Score:5, Informative)

        by Stargoat ( 658863 ) <stargoat@gmail.com> on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @04:40AM (#9124918) Journal
        Yes, they would be shot, and their families would be economically ruined. Did you think that 1989 was the only event of Chinese protest? [wikipedia.org] They peaceful protested in 1976 [wikipedia.org]. Sixty Chinese were decapitated, in a manner similar to what the Japanese did to the Chinese at Nanjing.

        What do the Chinese Communist and the Imperial Japanese Army have in common? They like to kill Chinese peasants.

    • Re:Feedback loop (Score:5, Interesting)

      by MoonFog ( 586818 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @03:35AM (#9124733)
      It doesn't look like they're getting it yet. From the article:
      China has shut down more than 8,600 unlicensed Internet cafes for admitting juveniles since February. To bar minors from Internet cafes, local governments across China have been ordered not to approve any Internet cafe operations in residential areas or within 200 meters of primary and high schools.

      They have high ambitions if they want to prevent any teenager from using the internet. Communism vs. Free speech?
      • by MooCows ( 718367 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @03:42AM (#9124761)
        They have high ambitions if they want to prevent any teenager from using the internet. Communism vs. Free speech?

        More like Communism vs. Kids with fire extinguishers.
      • Re:Feedback loop (Score:5, Insightful)

        by velo_mike ( 666386 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @04:00AM (#9124816)
        Communism vs. Free speech?

        Authoritarianism [f2s.com] vs. Free Speach is more accurate. Communist societies are not necessarily authoritarian, nor vice-versa but they frequently lean that way. On the other hand, capitalist societies aren't always free but again, they often lean in that direction.

        • Re:Feedback loop (Score:5, Insightful)

          by SkArcher ( 676201 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @06:08AM (#9125160) Journal
          This is almost certain to get me modded troll, but what the hell, i'm not posting AC just because people don't like the truth.

          Current Capitalist societies lean no more prevalently to Freedom than do communist ones. The much vaunted freedom of the western world is an illusion. Internally to the United States this can be seen with the careful "arrangements" between the Democrat and Republican parties for electoral boundaries that effectively ensures that neither party can become overshadowed by any other political force.

          External to the US the same holds true due to factors of economic and military dominance.

          Most of the reason that large parts of the rest of the World are inimical to the United States is due to the entirely correct perception that the US is a dominant force in the arena of capitalism and has no moral qualms about using that dominance to subdue any alternate memes.

          The United States Government (and other "Capitalist" Governments) are authorities - and with that status goes Authoritarianism. A choice between A & B is not a choice at all when A & B have the same opinion of subject X, and I disagree and want to vote for C, who represents my opinion.

          The citizens of the United States really need to get over this "Land of the Free" bullshit and realise that their government is just as tyranical, expansionistic and controlling as any other.

          You may now proceed to Mod me Troll.

          • Re:Feedback loop (Score:5, Insightful)

            by tarunthegreat2 ( 761545 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @06:44AM (#9125243)
            Sir I salute your honest post, and will willing take the fall for you, as I'm sure I will be marked troll/flamebait for agreeing with you

            After 9/11 there was a section of America wondering "Why do they hate us so much?" (The rest were busy hoping anybody who hated u so much was being sentenced to permanent time in Abu Ghraib..). Anyway I'd like to propose a reason why "they hate you so much" - it's simply hypocrisy. America - to the outside world keep preaching equality , justice, huma rights, democracy e.t.c. But you drop all that bullshit in an instant if the dictator come around to your side and starst kissing your ass. This foreign policy causes a LOT of resentment. If you really stood for Democracy and the rule of law why would u support Pakistan(Dictatorship) over India(Democracy), Saudi Arabia(Theocracy), and let human rights abuses in China go by in a flash, but highlight them in the rest of the world. Be consistent. A dictatorship is a dictatorship, whether it kisses American butt or not. Plus Dictatorships have the nasty tendency to turn against you when they get bored - i.e. The Taliban (who are/were a CIA creation, designed to kick Soviet Russian ass) and Iraq as well (in the Iran/Iraq war). So as an appeal to Americans, please vote out this monkey of a president, and make sure you pressure the other guy and make sure he's more bothered about local jobs than foreign leaders.
            • Re:Feedback loop (Score:4, Insightful)

              by NanoGator ( 522640 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @11:00AM (#9127478) Homepage Journal
              "Anyway I'd like to propose a reason why "they hate you so much" - it's simply hypocrisy. America - to the outside world keep preaching equality , justice, huma rights, democracy e.t.c. But you drop all that bullshit in an instant if the dictator come around to your side and starst kissing your ass. This foreign policy causes a LOT of resentment."

              Seems like they should hate our gov't instead of us in particular. It bugs me that 9-11 resulted in so many civilian deaths even though they have little to no influence on what the gov't decides is right foreign policy-wise.

              "So as an appeal to Americans, please vote out this monkey of a president, and make sure you pressure the other guy..."

              I wish I was as optimistic as you that a new president will fix this problem. I really don't think people generally understand our problems don't necessarily stem from having the 'wrong' president so many times in a row.
          • 1. Use reverse psychology on moderators 2. Gain karma 3. ??? 4. Profit!
          • by Dirk Pitt ( 90561 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @08:19AM (#9125755) Homepage
            You haven't read /. very much if you think anti-American sentiment will get you a troll mod. I'll more likely get it for trying to offer an honest rebuttle.

            I think the problem with much of the USA-related rhetoric that's thrown around is it's mostly hyperbole -- too severe.

            The States absolutely have a huge problem with its foreign policy. Too much mucking with foreign government's leading to terrorism, leading to yet again more mucking with foreign goverments.

            The size of the domestic government has grown too much. The pendulum has swung too far with the advent of legislation like Patriot and DMCA. There sits a severely mentally impaired justice secretary. The President has the leadership qualities of a piece of cardboard.

            But to say the US is Authoritarian is just too severe. You cannot compare the Chinese government and the US. By comparison to communist China, the USA is certainly the Land of the Free.

            Do they block internet content? Have pro-choice folks been shot protesting in front of the white house and Supreme Court? Do you register with the government before going on vacation? Will the secret police come to get you in the night because your neighbor told the authorities about your anti-Bush discussion at the block party?

            Authority certainly *does not* equal Authoritarianism. Nowhere in the West do we see the kind of tyranny that exists in Korea.

            And yes, the voting/party system is screwed up and manipulative in America. But again -- that makes freedom an illusion? If the people of the USA got their collective heads out of their asses and elected a qualified, effective, third party to a major office, would the incumbant demo-plican stage a military uprising to stop the election results? Have the police ever visited your home for voting for another party, including the socialist party? I don't think Mary Cal Hollis has ever been imprisoned for what she believed.

            I think all pleads/"Wake up America!" arguments I hear fall on deaf ears because of their extremity. You will not convince people to change their government by saying that it's just as bad as al-Qaeda. You will not convince people to change their government if you try to say that they're liberties are as restricted as the Chinese. It's not an apt comparison, and it turns most people off. Identify the problems for what they are, don't label them with such exaggerated terms.

            In my humble opinion, the Chinese are prisoners of their government -- the Americans are prisoners of their own c complacency. But that does not disqualify them as free people, and it does not make their government Authoritarian.

      • Another parallel to the drug war. How DO you prevent the inevitable?
      • by sesaetaen ( 637921 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @04:22AM (#9124867)
        I'm not trying to defend communism here, but the ideology behind communism [reference.com] does not imply totalitarian [princeton.edu] governing methods.
        The fact that most communistic governments has resolved to said measures is a sad fact that just proves that communism doesn't work [libertyhaven.com]

        The only places communism truly works, are in anthills and termite nests. ;)
        • You are wrong. Communism does imply totalitarian governing methods. If you read it closely, you'll discover that Marx was advocating the creation of a dictatorship, to supposedly aid humanity through the hard period until it could adopt a "true Communist" government.

          Marx himself thought that he would be the one leading the people. Communism is fundamentally flawed because its creator was fundamentally flawed. Marx wanted to benefit from the world wide revolution, so he created a system that was design

          • sorry, no (Score:5, Insightful)

            by karzan ( 132637 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @04:55AM (#9124969)
            What Marxist theory advocates is a 'dictatorship of the proletariat'. This does not mean a 'dictatorship' in the sense of a small group of people telling everyone what to do; it comes from Marxist theory of the state, and is counterposed to the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie, and before that the dictatorship of the aristocracy (in feudalism) and before that the dictatorship of the slave-owners (in ancient society).

            The point is that in Marxist theory the state itself is by its very nature a class dictatorship; it is the instrument of one class against another, or several others. In a theoretical dictatorship of the proletariat, because the vast majority of the population will have become proletarians as a result of capitalism (peasants gradually becoming rural proletariat as well), the dictatorship of the proletariat represents almost the entire population, i.e. like the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie, it is democratic *within* *itself*, representing the interests of those who run it. So a dictatorship of the proletariat would be a democracy representing everyone except the leftovers--the bourgeoisie, and possibly the peasantry, although in practice, an alliance with the peasantry was made out of necessity if nothing else.

            This then leads to the withering away of the state as such; if we see the state as being a representative of class interests, and the state now represents the only class, and is a weapon of repression against the tiny minority (Rupert Murdoch, Bill Gates, etc.) who would like to restore the old system, then once the new society is consolidated the state as a class dictatorship is no longer necessary, and withers away. This doesn't mean government withers away, just class dictatorship.

            Don't criticise something you don't know anything about.
            • Re:sorry, no (Score:2, Insightful)

              by Stargoat ( 658863 )
              You are wrong. Marx specifically refers to a period when the proletariat is unable to govern itself. This would be the period immediately following the revolution. That period, according to Marx, would require a benevolent dictatorship, until the proletariat could govern itself.. Except that as history has taught us that dictatorships do not give up power so easily. Ask the Chinese what they thought of Mao, or the Russians Stalin, or the Cambodians Pol Pot.
              • Re:sorry, no (Score:5, Insightful)

                by karzan ( 132637 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @05:23AM (#9125032)
                Do you know where he refers to this? I would be very surprised, unless you're just misinterpreting something. Because the whole point of the development of class consciousness, the consolidation of what Marx calls 'proletarian political economy' within the capitalist mode of production, the increasing organisation of the proletariat in trade unions and co-operatives, is that it is creating a proletariat that is ever more aware and able to govern itself. Of course there is also the group of intellectuals, like Marx, who come from other classes to join the proletariat and aid them. But as far as I am aware, Marx does not refer to any 'benevolent dictatorship'--after all, specifically who would constitute this dictatorship? This is not the role of the intellectuals according to Marx, and not the role of anyone outside the proletariat--so who is it? I would be surprised if this reference actually exists.

                Furthermore, Marxist theory, which is much bigger and more important than just Karl Marx, and has come a long way since he died, has (among many others) 2 strands within it: the proletariat must govern for itself and leadership must arise spontaneously, and the proletariat must govern for itself but leadership must come from a vanguard, an 'advance detachment' of the proletariat. The second one is Leninism. Neither one however denies the necessity of proletarian democracy; the difference is that Leninism involves a Party that tries to lead the people and in practice, has ended up governing the people as they defer to it and it takes on too much responsibility. Not in every case however. But in any case, this is Leninism, only one specific branch of Marxist theory; and while it is influenced by older strains, for example Babouvinism from the period of the French Revolution, it is quite novel and must be distinguished from previous revolutionary theory.

                So, I would be surprised if you could find that 'reference', but even if so, Marxist theory does not rest on Karl Marx alone, by a long shot. So it's pretty unimportant.
            • On the spot. (Score:5, Insightful)

              by HiramvdG ( 667818 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @05:26AM (#9125047) Homepage
              Karzan's explanation is on-the-spot. If only those criticising Marx would read Marx every once in a while, such explanations would be superfluous, but unfortunately, even the /. audience seems to consist of people who are happy to parrot their high school history teachers, their parents or other 'authorities' when it comes to politics.

              In China, a socialist revolution never took place. Mao's army, upon seizing a city, proceeded to ban unions and strikes, and left the police force that defended the old regime firmly in place. To call China a communist country is to show a complete lack of understanding of socialist politics.

              Study Trotsky's work if you want to fine-tune your understanding of the travesties of socialism that were found in the Soviet Union, and elsewhere, after, say, 1925.
          • by sesaetaen ( 637921 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @05:02AM (#9124986)
            The dictatorship was supposed to be carried out by the working class , not by the state.

            go read for yourself [wikipedia.org]

            did you get Marx confused with Lenin?
        • well show me the first real communist society, and i'll buy your argument that communism doesn't work. it was never applied anywhere in this world, so how do you know it doesn't work?

          arguments over non-existant political systems are futile IMO
          • I should perhaps have used the word totalitarian, but you are quite correct, there are very few (if any) communist countries that aren't totalitarian. It may be that the theory has nothing to do with it, but we've seen this happen in practice many many times.
          • Trying to implement a political system that explicitly proposes the use of force in order to get it applied will typically result in a system ruled by the ones able to exert the most force.

            Seems to be a design flaw if you actually want a system not based on force but on freedom and all the other nice stuff. Of course it's a design feature if you're the happy dictator sitting on top of it all.
          • well show me the first real communist society, and i'll buy your argument that communism doesn't work. it was never applied anywhere in this world, so how do you know it doesn't work?

            Trying to counter that argument is like trying to counter the statement "I know everything that's worth knowing". I can ask you questions and, if you don't know the answer, you can declare the subject "not worth knowing". "Real" communism is as practical as the old Theory of Relativity example of turning on a flashlight in an

    • Re:Feedback loop (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @03:37AM (#9124742)
      I really have to wonder to myself if the US govt has yet come to the realization that their constant drive to block/censor percieved anti-US content (in the middle east) only leads to more anti-US feelings of the people.
    • Re:Feedback loop (Score:3, Insightful)

      one thing that I've learned (and I was there once many moons ago) is that a motivated geeky teenager will ALWAYS find a way to get online. I don't care if their govt is going to try to restrict their access in any way - these kids WILL get online, and they WILL access the info that they want...
    • Re:Feedback loop (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Stargoat ( 658863 )
      Xinhuanet is state run media. This control of the media is leading (fooling) people in China into believing that things are better off than they really are. Most Chinese are not as savy as the average Slashdot reader. When they read Xinhuanet, they believe that it is the truth.

      The upshot for the Communists is that by maintaining a relatively unsophisticated population, they can publish this crap. But I would suggest that most people here are not reading this correctly.

      Substitute the word library for

      • Re:Feedback loop (Score:5, Insightful)

        by koekepeer ( 197127 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @05:33AM (#9125062)
        "Most Chinese are not as savy as the average Slashdot reader."

        how many Chinese people do you actually know? it amazes me someone can say something like this with a straight face. i have yet to encounter a site with so many political fuckwits (excusez-le mot) than slashdot. tech-savy? perhaps. being able to copy-paste links from sites that are heavily biased by media and propaganda? for sure.

        we Westerners have too much of a superiority complex. China is struggling like hell to transform from yet another failing 'Communistic' dictature (notice the quotation marks!) to a free market economy.

        the other day i saw a documentary where a guy was talking who studied transitions from dictatorial regimes to democracies. the paradoxical conclusion he gave was that the few countries who succesfully changed into democratical society were the ones where a dictator stayed in place, forcing things to evolve slowly, and then letting go when the infrastructure to support democarcy was sort-of in place. the countries where revolutions took place where the ones where one dictatorship was just replaced by another.

        i found this highly insightful, and completely logic. revolutionaries are not the ones suitable to build democracy in the chaos after a revolution. the process of installing a democracy might be better off with gradual, *enforced* change. which is exactly what they are doing with China at the moment.

        wait and see. within the next few decades, China will be a force to reckon with. and, with time, democracy will be the norm there.

        (and yes, i am appaled by the images of students run over by tanks as much as any other person)
        • Re:Feedback loop (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Tony-A ( 29931 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @06:11AM (#9125169)
          There was a joke ruuning in China a few years back.
          Something like: Russian leader, US leader, and Chinese leader driving down a road leading to a T-intersection.
          Russian leader: Signals left. Turns left.
          US leader: Signals right. Turns right.
          Chinese leader: Signals left. Turns right.

          "the chaos after a revolution" can't be good for growing anything worthwhile.
          the paradoxical conclusion he gave was that the few countries who succesfully changed into democratical society were the ones where a dictator stayed in place, forcing things to evolve slowly
          You need a dictator who is working himself out of a job.
          The US got something of that effect with Washington who refused a third term. After the war, he could easily have made himself King George I of the United States of America.

    • by bromba ( 538300 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @04:58AM (#9124977)

      It's about a band of teenage criminals who'll pound the shit out of anyone not bowing down to their requests, whatever it would be.

      Internet access is just a coincidal background of this story.

    • How do you know this? Do you have empirical data? because without empirical data, you are just talking out of your ass.

      Take the case of north korea: there is, to say the least, a constant drive by the government to keep its citizens in the dark and, while I would not be so bold as to say that the average NK citizen loves its government, that this has led to more anti-government feelings is not at all clear--if anything, a prima facie it would not be unreasonable to suggest that their tight control of inf

    • I really have to wonder to myself if the chinese govt has yet come to the realization that their constant drive to block/censor anti-govt internet content only leads to more anti-govt feelings of the people.

      I feel the exact same way about file-sharing(in America).
  • by jlanthripp ( 244362 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @03:35AM (#9124735) Journal
    XI'AN, May 10 (Xinhuanet) -- Staff members of an Internet service chain in Xi'an, capital of Shaanxi Province in northwest China, resigned Saturday over retaliatory assaults they had suffered for barring minors.

    Local police said Sunday they have stepped in to investigate an assault that happened Friday night at the Sanfuwan Outlet of the Hongshulin Internet Cafe Chain, which staff said was among a series of attacks by young people at the cafe.

    One of the staff, surnamed Chen, said he stopped seven or eightteenagers about to enter on the morning of May 6 because some of them looked very young. Chen asked to see their identity cards to verify their age. The teenagers refused and threatened to beat anyone who "dared to check identity cards." They tried to force their way into the cafe but were stopped.

    Amid recent campaigns to crack down on illegal Internet cafes and to ban people under 18 from entering, Internet cafes in China have been ordered to check identity cards of guests before they are allowed in. Otherwise Internet cafes themselves will face harsh punishment varying from a fine to closure.

    According to Chen, a group of some 16 young people broke into the cafe on the night of May 7, two guarding the door and two taking over the reception desk and telephones to prevent reportingto the police. The rest began to beat and punch Chen, some striking him with aluminum rubbish bins and fire extinguishers. Security guards of the cafe were also beaten.

    In an interview with a local newspaper, Chen showed the injuries to his back, head and face. His nose bridge bone was almost broken.

    According to Chen's colleagues, it was not the first such retaliation assault at the outlet. In their resignation letter, they listed many beating cases because of stopping young people. Their bicycle tires were deliberately damaged many times. Some even launched an online assault to the cafe's server, cut the broadband line, input junk programs into computers and poured mineral water into displays.

    To tighten security at the cafe, the local police station helped the cafe employ four security guards in April, but it proved not enough to prevent such assaults.

    The police have started investigation into the case and vowed to track down those responsible, said Tian Yuming, a senior policeofficer.

    China has shut down more than 8,600 unlicensed Internet cafes for admitting juveniles since February. To bar minors from Internet cafes, local governments across China have been ordered not to approve any Internet cafe operations in residential areas or within 200 meters of primary and high schools.

    The Chinese government has launched a nationwide check on all Internet cafes from February to August to halt the entry of minorsand to prevent access to detrimental information through the Internet. Enditem
  • Most people i know don't bother with TV too much anymore, they sit on the net at home, chatting on MSN and IRC, etc. Most things that people want thesedays for entertainment (Movies, Games, Music, Literature etc) can all be found online.
  • Good. (Score:5, Funny)

    by benjamindees ( 441808 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @03:40AM (#9124749) Homepage
    Arbitrary age restrictions like these, especially over something as innocuous as information, are plainly bullshit.

    How would you old farts like it if we put an age cap on viagra?

    Don't think we couldn't do it ;)
    • Re:Good. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by nacturation ( 646836 ) <nacturation&gmail,com> on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @03:56AM (#9124804) Journal
      Arbitrary age restrictions like these, especially over something as innocuous as information, are plainly bullshit.

      You mean like barring something innocuous like a woman's breast on TV and imposing huge fines on the network which showed it? Or preventing children from seeing a movie with innocuous nudity in it? It's not just China where censorship happens over "innocuous information".
      • Re:Good. (Score:4, Informative)

        by Galvatron ( 115029 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @04:03AM (#9124822)
        Movie age restrictions are voluntary. There are some theatres now that are allowing parents to get a pass for their children that allow them to see R rated movies on their own.

        For TV, govt. restrictions exist only for broadcast TV, cable censoring is purely voluntary.
        • Re:Good. (Score:2, Insightful)

          by HyperCash ( 768512 )
          " Movie age restrictions are voluntary."

          They aren't voluntary to the individuals forced to abide by them. Besides which, the only reason they exist is to keep the government from legislating involuntary restrictions. So the threat of force is still exists even if it isn't as direct as if the legislation was already enacted.

          --HC
    • This restriction is not to limit free speech and free information. No, they restricted the internet to keep all the immature kids off the internet to make China look much better. How many times haven't you wanted to punch someone through the screen? I haven't ever, but I've heard stories.

      And of course this won't stop everything, just being 18 won't stop anyone from trollwarring on the internet or in whatever games the chinese play.
  • Xinhua (Score:5, Interesting)

    by BenBenBen ( 249969 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @03:44AM (#9124768)
    Please remember the source when discussing this; Xinhua is the state news agency, and will print whatever they are told. The last "cafes are evil" story they ran was about a couple of kids who used the internet for 48 hours straight, and then sat on railway tracks to recover. El Reg has a decent write-up on the subject [theregister.co.uk]. You don't close 8600 internet cafes for "safety reasons", you close them because the population is suddenly aware of their alternatives.
  • by The Arbit Council ( 771776 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @03:47AM (#9124776)
    From the Headline: Net cafe staff quit over retaliation from barring miners

    Those miners probably would've dirtied the keyboards anyways...

  • by Stick_Fig ( 740331 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @03:48AM (#9124779) Homepage
    Just think, if these stupid kids started beating the shit out of someone with actual power and authority, China might eventually have democracy. This is how revolutions are started, people. One small seed, one small desire to look at something that you can't look at, and eventually the opressors start feeling the heat.
    • Street gangs beating up individuals to force them to do what they want? That is not revolution. Revolution is getting the population in with you in, sometimes violent, protest against the goverment and by nature those who defend them, the police and military. But ultimatly all revolutions are successfull only when the police and especially the military join the uprising. This is what happened in france, russia (several times) and of course china itself.

      These kids are more closely related to the looters and

  • They have the tools. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by mikeophile ( 647318 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @03:49AM (#9124781)
    I think when the students start to put together their Dragon processors [slashdot.org], wi-fi, and mesh networking [slashdot.org], internet access may cease to be a problem.

    Execution for doing so may persist for a while though.

    • I just checked out the home page of the "Dragon" processor here [culturecom.com.hk]. Had a good laugh on this one :

      Midori Linux - the world class general purpose embedded OS core (developed by Mr. Linux, the father of Linux)

      Oh well. At least they attempted somehow to credit the developer...

    • Execution for doing so may persist for a while though.

      As juveniles they might actaully be safer in China. From Amnesty International, April 03:

      The US executed more prisoners in 2002 than in the previous year, after executions spiked in 1999 totaling a more than 20-year record high of 98 executions. In addition, the US was the only known country in the world to execute juvenile offenders last year when three child offenders were executed in Texas. The execution of Scott Hain in Oklahoma on April 3, 2003, m

      • The US executed more prisoners in 2002 than in the previous year, after executions spiked in 1999 totaling a more than 20-year record high of 98 executions. In addition, the US was the only known country in the world to execute juvenile offenders last year when three child offenders were executed in Texas. The execution of Scott Hain in Oklahoma on April 3, 2003, marked the first known juvenile offender execution worldwide this year.

        Praticing capital punishment is one of the things China and the USA have

  • I want my ID number (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Moderation abuser ( 184013 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @03:52AM (#9124790)
    No internet for you unless you put in your ID number.

    http://www.interfax.com/com?item=Chin&pg=0&id=57 18 496&req=

    What was it you said about having nothing to hide?

  • by tronicum ( 617382 ) * on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @03:55AM (#9124802)
    The teenagers refused and threatened to beat anyone who "dared to check identity cards." They tried to force their way into the cafe but were stopped.

    So now the have gangs walking around trying to get their internet and assault security staff from checking their ID.
    Probably not very intelligent to mess with the staff of an internet cafe.

    I wonder how hard it is to get internet access by just dialing up or using wardriving/company internet access in China...

    • I suppose you could try and dial an international call to an ISP in Japan, S.Korea or Russia? Russians used to do that to access bulletin boards in the US back in the cold war, allegedly.
    • by zz99 ( 742545 )
      I wonder how hard it is to get internet access by just dialing up

      As I understand (by visiting/talking to people living in PRC), dial-up connections to the internet are easy to get and cheap.

      The problem is that computers are too expensive for many people. Specially young people.

      And there is not much sense in buying an expensive computer, when you can use an internet cafe to a rather low rate. When travelling in China, most of the cyber cafes I used had rates in the range of $0.5-$1 per hour. Mostly wit

      • > >I wonder how hard it is to get internet access by just dialing up

        > As I understand (by visiting/talking to people living in PRC), dial-up connections to the internet are easy to get and cheap

        To clearify what I meant (a.k.a. "I should have used the Preview button"):
        Dial-up accesss seems inexpencive and easy to get

        • if you have a fixed phone line
        • if you have a computer

        However just like in Finland, the cell phones are starting to replace fixed lines in China among young people due to lowe

  • Xinhua reliability (Score:3, Interesting)

    by grainofsand ( 548591 ) <grainofsand.gmail@com> on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @04:00AM (#9124815)
    Xinhua (New China News Agency) is not necessarily a reliable source of independent reporting or information.

    Since the tragic Internet cafe fire in Beijing in 2001, the central Government has been increasingly active in demonising the internet. This is just an extension of that on-going propaganda war.

  • by zz99 ( 742545 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @04:01AM (#9124818)
    One obeservation I have made during my journeys through China, is that they have loads and loads of laws and rules. And being a communist country, people ignore most of the laws.

    The fear of punishment keeps people from breaking some of the laws. But since the athorities don't have the resources to check up on everything, they have to let a lot slide.

    When the central government makes a drice at some kind of crime all the regions have to show some results. However I don't always think that the local athorities put so much effort into it...

    On example is the search for pirated DVD movies. Every year China have a big drive to shut down the pirates. They raid shops and warehouses and confiscate tons of pirated DVD's. The week after the same people are back in the same stores selling pirated DVDs again. And the police have nice numbers of how many pirate shops they have shut down. Making the government very pleased.

    So sometimes the numbers of how many operations they have shut down, might not mean so much, since it's hart to tell if they mean permanently or just temporarely.

    The spread of news seems to be a very sensetive area for the Chineese government though, so perhaps they do have as strict enforcement of the law as reported

  • by UltimaGuy ( 745333 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @04:08AM (#9124838) Homepage
    In India too, the government banned minors from entering Cyber Cafes, and asked owners to verify the users identities. Worse, people using cyber cafes had to give their address so that they can be verified in case of any problem.

    But like many other laws, people realised it was rubbish and thus no one took care to implement it :-) So, that law resides in the book only and I think it was made in the first place to appease certain left elements.
    • Where the hell did you pick that up? You're right about the address verification part, but minors weren't a part of that story at all. And the 'elements' it was meant to appease was the general public. Like all publicly available services these were suspected to be frequently used by terrorists (or Freedom Fighters if your a Paki). Of course, it's a fscking stupid idea, so yea, it was never implemented. But terrorism was the same reason they shutdown the mobile network in Kashmir too for a time.... Anyway,
  • by superhoe ( 736800 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @04:17AM (#9124854) Homepage
    Well, control is everywhere. You should see it by now.

    In other countries the control and censorship is done by direct action and by preventing people to access the information that might be potentially harmful. I think that this is an culture issue, it's just without any extra twists out there. They just ban it, so they don't have to really manipulate or regulate it.

    And other countries have governments that allow people to access all the information, but instead put their efforts on manipulating the media indirectly to counter/soften the effects of unpleasant information or to draw attention from real problems to other things. This includes everything from feeding falsified information to advertisement-like careful timing, repeating, double meanings and so on.

    Same shit, different implementation. Close your TV and your Internet, there's nothing to see here.

  • Freedom of speech (Score:4, Insightful)

    by carvalhao ( 774969 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @04:19AM (#9124863) Journal

    This is proof that the Internet is, nowadays, the most powerfull media to allow for Freedom of Speech. If it wasn't so, why would the Chinese government be so worried about the Internet's influence on their citizens. I recall that this issue does not only affect minors, as there is a nationwide content barring scheme in China.

    But if there's on thing that History teaches us is that no matter how harsh laws and enforcement are, there's no stopping for Man's will to be free.

    • Are these kids really using the internet to find out the truth (whatever that maybe)? China must have superkids then. The rest of the world just uses the internet for porn and games.

      Try freenet for a while. The anonymous P2P network. Very much a tool for freespeech. Allows anyone to post material without fear of being found out. Now try looking at what is actually there. Child porn and copyright infringement and frankly a whole lot of perfectly legal stuff.

      Not exactly the kind of stuff Amnesty Internation

  • by ToadMan8 ( 521480 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @04:28AM (#9124880)
    I'm an American in China ATM (college student, school trip) and they offer i-net access in the hotel. I'm posting here (and am surprised) and can check my mail on AOL but I can't get to my university's website (www.muohio.edu) or contact that mail server at all. (or get on my VPN at the universtiy) Why would that be blocked? Bah. So my point is that they're fighting this hard and they're still not going to get the Internet proper - they're stuck behing the great firewall of China.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Your school was blocked because somewhere in the site is an article about Taiwan, Fa Lun Gong, Tibet, Hong Kong, or a high ranking government official. Standard procedure to block the school's whole network. If you really want to get to your uni's website you can use a proxy. I always get my proxy lists here [samair.ru] and check to see if it's useable here [netwu.com].

      Just as the Mongols found a way to get inside the original Great Wall, you too can find your way outside the Great Firewall of modern times. :)
  • by Xenna ( 37238 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @04:46AM (#9124940)
    In my travels through China I've used a lot of Internet Cafes. Often it was hard to find a seat because, they're so popular.

    When I did, I often found that I was the only one 'using' the Internet. Everyone else was immersed in on line games (ok, they probably played over the Internet as well). Apart from the occasional chatter I was the only one using a browser.

    Regards,
    X.
  • I think Sony entertainment China should change their tagline to: "EverQuest, so good you'll maim and kill in order to maim & kill online!". Seriously though, isn't it time the chinese people did something about their draconian government enforcing such strange laws? I can understand some laws they have enforced (such as the laws preventing overpopulation (whether these laws work i don't know) this is nothing more than trying to keep the population dumb and uninformed. What the chinese youth should do i
  • well duh (Score:2, Funny)

    by Bin_jammin ( 684517 )
    Do people honestly think revolution anywhere is going to come without violence? I mean yeah an internet cafe' is not exactly the type of place to inspire rage, at least not in me, but anything can become symbolic to the oppressed.
  • Violent Chinese (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Talisman ( 39902 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @05:08AM (#9125004) Homepage
    I've spent the last 4 months traveling throughout Asia and am currently in Shanghai, China.

    China is the only place I've ever been, which inludes about 100 countries and 6 continents, where I've actually been physically assaulted by a street vagrant. The kid was about 14 and begging for money. He saw that I gave his much younger brother some Yuan coins and approached me.

    He stuck his hand out, and I pointed to his little brother as if to say, "I already gave your little brother some money." He then starts punching me in the stomach. Not hard enough to hurt, but not soft enough to not be annoying, either. He kept this up for 3 minutes while I was waiting to cross the street, then he followed me across the street, punching me the entire time.

    A fast, well-placed elbow to his temple made him stop, but the Chinese in general are quite aggressive.

    Now, people who have never been to China and have no idea what it's really like but who don't like what I just said, this is when you mod me down. Wouldn't want you to miss an opportunity to flout your ignorant righteousness.
  • by LibrePensador ( 668335 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @05:08AM (#9125006) Journal
    I think there is lots of things that these teenagers could do to gain wider access to the information they desire without attacking the poor souls who work at these cafes.

    "Nonviolence is the greatest force at the disposal of mankind. It is mightier than the mightiest weapon of destruction devised by the ingenuity of man."

    Mohandas K. Gandhi on nonviolence
  • by Leto-II ( 1509 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @05:27AM (#9125048)
    Whenever there's an article about China on Slashdot I always see so much clueless information being tossed about...

    Here's some information from someone (a Westerner) who's lived here for around 3 years.

    First of all, I guarantee you the children that did this did it because they're fucked up little shits. They certainly weren't doing it because of some freedom of information ideals. They were probably just pissed off cause they couldn't get on to play their MMORPGs and chat online. No matter if China's internet regulations are right or wrong, beating a guy over the head who's just trying to keep the store in business is not the way to change government policy. If anything, it just reinforces the opinion of the public that internet cafes are a bad influence on the young. Even my father-in-law, who is quite educated and a well respected school principal, thinks net cafes are evil places. Once when I told him I wanted to go check my email, he took my wife and I walking around town until we came upon a net cafe that didn't look too evil. It's a good thing I never told him I used to stay up all night in net cafes playing Starcraft with my friends while studying in Beijing!

    Another thing people are forgetting is that this stuff is all dealing with internet cafes. It has nothing to do with what people do in their homes. Families are still free to have high speed internet in their homes no matter what age their children are. And anyone who is going to risk looking at censored information is probably going to do it from their own home. Almost all of the internet cafes are locked down to prevent users from messing with any internet settings, so it's not likely they'll be able to use proxies in the cafes anyway. In your home it's quite simple to go through a proxy. The people who really want outside information can get it easily enough. It's just the masses, who don't really care anyway, who can't get censored information.

    Another thing, I always see people talking about how China's got so many laws against things such as pirated software, movies, music, and brand names but doesn't do anything about it. There's fake brand names everywhere, even in official franchise stores. And I can only recall one time that I saw official copies of movies and music for sale. Official software is easy enough to find, but nobody actually buys it. Anyway, my brother-in-law is the Secretary (not secretary) of the Consumer Affairs division of the Public Security Bureau in a large city, and I've asked him about this. They all know they could walk into any store and confiscate at least 95% of their goods, but they don't. If they did, stores would be going bankrupt all the time. If they tried selling official products most of them would go bankrupt too since nobody can afford to buy their products. So, should China protect the income of rich foreigners and bankrupt it's citizens, or should they protect their own and look the other way? It's a pretty easy decision, and most people forget the US did the same thing to England regarding copyrights not too long ago.

    Sure, every once in a while there will be big crackdowns, and their real purpose is just to show investors. "Hey look, we're protecting copyrights! Come do business here!" More business investments in the country helps the economy, obviously. But everyone here knows the busts are for show. And most stores will be warned ahead of time so they can hide their products.

    Bah I already wrote more than I thought I would...

    If anyone actually read that whole message, congrats.
  • by News for nerds ( 448130 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @05:30AM (#9125053) Homepage
    [Slashdot detected you are from non-free country. To read this comment please lobby your government into GNU/Linux and don't forget GNU before Linux. Thank you.]
  • Some even launched an online assault to the cafe's server, cut the broadband line, input junk programs into computers and
    poured mineral water into displays.

    Clearly these aren't just any old thugs, these are upwardly mobile thugs armed with evian water!

  • by AtomicBomb ( 173897 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @05:37AM (#9125074) Homepage
    Xiahua may not be the most reliable info source... On the other hand, I want to point out some interesting cultural difference to fellow ./ers.

    First, the teenagers are not necessary "seeking information" in internet cafe. They are not likely to be the politcal dissent kind that most are thinking about. Or else, they will try to be as low key as possible. The "illegal" info can also be porn, mp3 etc. The most usual activity is PC gaming.

    Second, video arcade (internet cafe nowadays) can be a real trouble spot for the teens who don't want to go home at midnight. Car is not that accessible in most Asian countries. Flats are small. Teens need to find a place to have their first cigarette, need to have a place to get together with their in-group...

    Quite naturally, fist fights and gangster problems are quite common in this sort of environment... The nature is a bit similar to a bar without alcohol. Even Hongkong under the UK colonial control (before 1997) need to impose similar rule for the video arcade, ie no children under 16 are allowed to enter standard video arcade. Quite a few secondary friends had got beaten up/ money taken by the gangsters in the video arcades when they were young (sneaked into of course)...

    Curb the free internet access is of course one of the communist party's agenda. But, the very real teenage problem should not be overlooked either.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @06:15AM (#9125183)
    Most of you Westerners just don't get what it is like to be Chinese. I am one. I may not exactly live in China, or speak Chinese well enough, but I guess it's always an inescapable part of Chinese culture.

    Chinese culture emphasises filial piety, almost blind faith of authority, etc. I don't know if Confucianism came because of the influence by the Warring periods (where, due to pure greed, Chinese armies attempted to seize control of all the states and unify them); or something else.

    Don't ever forget that Chinese culture, as NatGeo once put it, looks to the future with one foot firmly in the past. It's something that we are sort of proud of. (I also remember the various Dynasties variably as periods of plunder, unrest, and corruption.)

    Why does China insist on the one-China policy with the Republic of China? It's not because, I believe, of evil people; it's an almost blind faith to the belief that all Chinese belong in one nation. In Mandarin, Chinese is called Zhongguo - Zhong being "central" or "most significant", or something along those lines. Is there a United States of Besterica? They'd probably be trying to take Singapore - where I live - too, if there weren't such a large proportion of other races.

    They were so eager to claim HK from the British, and have been generally not-so-militant about it (there is still incredible press freedom in HK). Why? Because authoritarianism isn't as important as housing all Chinese into one China.

    My Chinese teacher once said - these types of people are a rarity in Singapore - that if you're Chinese and have nowhere to go, guess which country will welcome you with open arms.

    What am I trying to say? That authoritarian control that you Americans resist, yes, that is not a good thing, but it has come about due to the influence of Chinese culture, not because of evil people. You people do not exactly understand *why* authoritarianism exists, choosing to see it in only a romantic, black-and-white, good-and-evil thing.

    George Bush junior - not the best example of a good man, I guess - once said "there ought to be limits to freedom"; indeed, that's one of the most insightful things a man can say.
    • Well said.

      Indeed, Eastern sensibilities are so profoundly different from those of the West that very few Westerners can even appreciate the mindset. The feeling of community and an individual's role simply diverge too radically between Asian and Eurocentric ( this includes US ) cultures.

      Historically, Chinese have always looked to the past for an ideal society. The Golden Past, with the Golden Emperor and the time of perfect order. The underlying message is that the idealized perfection that once was ca
  • Come on, people! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Guppy06 ( 410832 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @06:42AM (#9125239)
    "This article on the English version of the online newspaper Xinhuanet (...) but I've never beat anyone with a fire extinguisher because of it (not that I remember, anyway)."

    What we have here is a state-run newspaper talking about kids trying to do what the state doesn't want them to do. Do you think the state will paint a rosy picture of them?

    You'd have better luck getting the RIAA to admit that P2P really isn't all that bad.
  • Animal Farm (Score:3, Insightful)

    by lxt ( 724570 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @06:59AM (#9125296) Journal
    In Orwell's Animal Farm the pigs at publically denounce alchohol, before they themselves become corrupted by it - but they still forbid other animals to drink. Perhaps the same is true of China - at first denouncing the internet, clearly the government must use it for administration / communication between departments - but they still control access to their citizens. Just a thought.
  • by Eisenfaust ( 231128 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2004 @07:53AM (#9125590) Homepage
    In the future if broadband could be provided at low cost from Low Earth Orbiting Satalites it would be nearly impossible for governments to control their citizens use of the Internet (unless they controlled the satalites). If the chineese teenagers were capable of acquiring the correct hardware it would be very difficult to restrict or censor their Internet usage in anyway.

    It could even be possible for such a teenage to make money on the Internet and pay for his Internet service (with a service like PayPal) without the government ever having any knowledge of the financial transactions.

Single tasking: Just Say No.

Working...