China Tightens Rules For Educational BBSs 304
An anonymous reader writes "China is tightening control over online BBS run by colleges and universities. Educational institutions in China have received direct orders from the Chinese Ministry of Education requiring their BBSs to take actions including access limitation and registering users by their real identities, as well as strict content censorship. The admin team of the BBS of Nanjing University has refused to obey the order and has been dismissed."
This just in: (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This just in: (Score:5, Insightful)
But the thing that gets me, when I talk to some people from the PRC, is how strongly many believe it isn't oppressive, it's good for the whole of the country and then they have the temerity to point out all the crap the Bush family, the CIA and the State Dept have done over the years.
Each side of the argument is so familiar with the transgressions of the other and willing to turn a blind eye to their own.
Whatchagonnado?
Re:This just in: (Score:2, Insightful)
What will life be like with China as a superpower? Or how about a hyperpower? The Anglo axis of US/UK/Australia is certainly not perfect, but when weighed against China....seems to be pretty good.
Re:This just in: (Score:2, Insightful)
War outside, blind eye inside
Re:This just in: (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally, I'm just glad I don't live in either country.
Re:This just in: (Score:3, Insightful)
True... but seriously, the US and China aren't anywhere near being in the same league oppression wise. That some citizens of an undeniably oppressive state (cultural revolution anyone?) believe otherwise isn't exactly convincing.
Of course, if you want real answers you should ask recent immigrants and their kids from China about it. I'd say the same abou
Re:This just in: (Score:4, Insightful)
Undeniably true. However, taking China as a cautionary tale and tracking the direction "oppresiveness" in the USA is taking, no one can seriously claim that the USA is getting better. Except, of course, the radical right.
Re:This just in: (Score:4, Insightful)
Just like we asked Iraqi expats about WMDs? Just like we asked Cuban immigrants how strongly Cuba would resist if we invaded (Bay of Pigs)? Etc? Depending on the reasons for them leaving their parent country, expats can be among the most biased parties in anywhere.
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
Granted some who came here were probably trying to escape the chinese gov't in the first place and would therefore be biased, but most Chinese immigrants I've met are either here for an education or
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
Brilliant! Except the Iraq prisoners there weren't America's own people.
Idiots like you keep Rush and his Cohorts in business.
Re:This just in: (Score:4, Insightful)
Brilliant! Except the Iraq prisoners there weren't America's own people.
Isn't that exactly what the first guy said: NOT their own people?
Re:This just in: (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This just in: (Score:4, Insightful)
ALL men. (and women, too, we've grown up a bit.) Not people who happen to have been born within the borders of the United States. ALL people.
What part of "all" do we fail to grasp, I wonder?
Re:This just in: (Score:3, Insightful)
The lack of freedoms experienced by over a billion people compared to the few hundreds of detainees. Oh yeah, that's equal. Those crimes
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
Re:This just in: (Score:2, Insightful)
You mean to tell me that they locked up Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz??
Re:This just in: (Score:5, Insightful)
What China does is *immaterial*. What Hitler did is immaterial. What Pol Pot did is immaterial. The United States is doing these things NOW. That is ALL that matters. Any noise to the contrary is just to try to distract you.
And, from a practical standpoint, the Chinese that you (rightly) detest can point to the fact that we're invading other countries and torturing anyone we choose. At least the Chinese torturers mostly stay home.
We can't preach from the moral high ground if we're not ON the moral high ground. How can we expect other countries to live up to ethical rules that we're willing to ignore whenever we find them inconvenient?
Because of Bush's actions, we have lost most of our ability to influence behavior in the world. The terrorists didn't just win, they hit the f*cking jackpot.
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
btw, screw the moral high ground. No one has ever had it in the history of man, no one ever will. Whose morality? What set of morals? Impossible questions to answer. The rest of the world laughs when the US even attempts to talk about freedom, or liberal democratic ideals....do they believe in the moral high ground? Does anyone think the US ever had
Re:This just in: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
China's experience is very different, and, historically, revolutionary change has been viewed with fear. A billion people may not like what their government does, but the culture of free expression has never really existed, and attempts in the 19th and early 20th century to transplant it have had
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
neologism (Score:2)
That's debateable, but it raises a good point. English could really use the following:
1) There's a lot of griping over the fact that "man" is the basis for "woman". The feminist solution of "womyn" is lousy, unless they consider themselves to be members of the humyn race (And "herstory" is just plain silly [invisibleadjunct.com]). It also neglects the confusion over whether "man" is meant in the male sense or in the general sense, et
Re:This just in: (Score:2, Insightful)
And 4 years ago thousands of people died to make it a place where citizens can be held indefinitely without a trial. Where "suspicion of terrorism" (without any proof) is enough to have searches of your house without notifying you. Where the books you check out from your library can
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
Re:This just in: (Score:3, Interesting)
your words demonstrate a portion of the culture dealing w/ self-repression.
what you repress is willingness to drop the quantitative when discussing the qualitative.
self-repression is common everywhere, so you are not alone.
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
Re:This just in: (Score:2, Funny)
Slashdot users who bash the US get modded troll but Bush-supporting mods whose only dream is a future Senate with a 100% republican ratio.
Slashdot users who bash China get modded troll by hippie Sinophile mods who think CHina or India will be the future superpower and vote Nader.
Slashdot users who bash both the US and China in same post (and hint that they live in some better "paradise" such as Canada, Europe or Australia") get modded insightful by mods thinking it shows both views of the ar
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
that's what CONTROL is.
if gwb had real control you wouldn't see him monkeying around, you'd only hear about the new scientific breakthrough that he single handedly made.
Re:This just in: (Score:5, Insightful)
A great example of this is South Africa. My family is from South Africa, and I still have many relatives there. If you'd told us twenty years ago that there were hit-squads, constant uprisings, military actions against blacks, and frequent prison torture, we would have had a tough time believing you. Even people who had just visited South Africa from abroad would have probably contradicted you. It seemed like a pretty nice place! Of course, in retrospect, all these things turned out to be true [doj.gov.za], but we didn't hear about it. We just went to work and went to school and never really crossed any of the invisible lines we didn't know were there.
Similarly, I can happily recommend that you go visit China sometime. It's a pretty nice place, most of the time, and you could probably even live there quite comfortably. Quite a few of my friends have been there and they enjoyed the trip. You'll have to look really hard for even the slightest signs of your being oppressed.
But that doesn't mean that everything's OK.
Re:This just in: (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:This just in: (Score:3, Interesting)
All in all Roman despotism -- then Muslim despotism after that, were vastly prefrable to the
Re:This just in: (Score:3, Interesting)
Too true. There's a lot of justified fear and worry over letting an autocracy like China become a superpower. But the path China is taking is economic, and that comes with certain conditions. The WHOLE REASON China is doing so well economically now is because they have a key resource the developed countries don't have - a seemingly endless supply
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
Re:This just in: (Score:2)
Yeah, but what kind of wussy Fascists are they if they aren't going to hang the dissenters?! "I like my [Fascists] - evil. You know, straight-up, black-hat, Tied-to-the-train-tracks, soon-my-electro-ray-will-destroy-metropolis bad."
Same ol', same ol' (Score:5, Interesting)
What's remarkable to me is that the admin group refused and was merely dismissed. A couple decades ago, I'd expect them to be jailed at the least.
Re:Same ol', same ol' (Score:2, Insightful)
Dismissed is a fairly broad word in a PR sense.
What puzzles me, is what makes them think they had anything to gain by refusal. There are so many subtler forms of 'mutiny' when in a position of limited power.
Regardless power to them for standing up for what they believe in.
Re:Same ol', same ol' (Score:2)
On the other hand, if I tell them the last programmer was dismissed due to the poor quality of their work, it might increase their enthusiasm considerably.
Re:Same ol', same ol' (Score:2)
I thought the word for that was "termination".
Re:Same ol', same ol' (Score:2)
MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
I'm simply not supprized (Score:5, Insightful)
Chineese record on free speech? (Score:2)
So its not a 'record', its more of a difference in opinion.
Tragic (Score:5, Funny)
Well, I'm off to but cheap clothes and electronics!
Admins with backbone (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Admins with backbone (Score:4, Interesting)
When SARS striked at the beginning, the central CCP goverment and Canton Province officials tried hard to hide every details about it. A group of brave people, including Yu Huafeng and Cheng Yizhong, made noise about the frightenning facts. Eventually, the government retreated by high pressure from inside and outside of the poor country.
But when everything settled down and people forgot about SARS, the government tried and prosecuted those peole for obviouly rediculous excuses. Mr. Yu Huafeng, one of a handful brave Chinese intellectuals, is still in jail.
I myself, a shameless Chinese coward.
Re:Admins with backbone (Score:2)
Re:Admins with backbone (Score:2, Interesting)
MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
I don't see how they can do it (Score:3, Insightful)
With the net on everything from watches to cell phones and jackets, and the myriad of procols available (especially with tunneling) it just seems like closing the door after the horses got out.
It's easy. (Score:3, Insightful)
Done and done.
Re:I don't see how they can do it (Score:3, Interesting)
You may not be able to shut it off completely with the current level of technology, but you can block it off to 99+% of the populace that use electronics. With all the evolution in computers lately, it is essentially an arms race between blocking those who want access to all info outside the great fire wall and those who control the fire wall and are trying to
Re:I don't see how they can do it (Score:5, Insightful)
To start with, you build the world's largest army, and then don't let the 1 billion citizens own guns.
You mean like the army of the Soviet Union? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I don't see how they can do it (Score:2, Insightful)
Well you see, the Chinese Ministry of Love is responsible for the identification, monitoring, arrest, and torture of dissidents, real or imagined.
They are also responsible for making every Party member love the Party.
Thank you George Orwell.
No Chinese Left Behind (Score:5, Funny)
Validated identities are required for anybody in a school in order to protect our children from those who might attempt to infiltrate our schools and victimize them. Content "censorship" is nothing more than ensuring they're not exposed to content that they're not ready for. Hell, I'm an adult who likes b00bies, and I was kinda grossed out by Janet's.
Oh, wait, this is China we're talking about. The totalitarian state. Umm, censorship is bad, mmkay?
> The admin team of the BBS of Nanjing University has refused to obey the order and has been dismissed.
"miss". So that's how they're spelling "appear" these days. Man, these kids and their SMS/TXT speak.
Politics (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Politics (Score:2)
Is democracy compatible with bribes and kickbacks?
China (Score:2, Interesting)
I guess they are learning from the 80's, when the startings of the internet helped demolish stalinism from Eastern Europe. They know they need to control the content people view to avoid letting their control on power drop.
My goodness! (Score:4, Insightful)
Now THAT is bravery!
China is a country that will incarcerate your for not thinking what you're supposed to. China is a country that will put a bullet in the back of your head and sell your organs to the highest bidder. These people should be revered. They have true bravery.
LK
Re:My goodness! (Score:2, Troll)
"Sell your organs to the highest bidder"? Charming. You forgot to call them the "damn Chinks" while you were at it.
These guys refused a government directive, and their weak-kneed employer fired them. Good for them for sticking up for what they believe
Re:My goodness! (Score:2)
Re:My goodness! (Score:2)
Let's ignore history for a second and pretend that this large group of unmarried men is not turned against their neighboring countries as an invading force. Fine, these guys make it to old age and now what? Does China have a good social welfare and pension system? Does it have any
As much potenital as china has (Score:3, Insightful)
right now they are benifiting from cheap labor, what is going to happen when the people decide they want more for what they do? add on the social issues as well and they are in for turbulent times before they are a viable threat to america.
Re:As much potenital as china has (Score:2)
In the end, I really do suspect that Taiwan will become independent. China is making fierce noises, but
A difference? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:A difference? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:A difference? (Score:3, Insightful)
Your public high school, on the other hand: It is a school funded by public money. They are just censoring you from reading certain distracting material on the internet. They cannot enforce their policies off scho
Re:A difference? (Score:5, Informative)
In China, the community did not set the standards for Internet usage; the government did. Just because we have free speech here doesn't mean you can surf porn at school.
I would also like to add that tomorrow you don't sleep through your U.S. Government class. If you've already taken that class, retake it.
Re:A difference? (Score:2)
...since you obviously didn't digest all the force-fed crap the first time.
Re:A difference? (Score:2)
Re:A difference? (Score:2)
Re:A difference? (Score:2, Insightful)
Maybe you should be paying a little bit more attention in English class, and leaving other activities for after school.
Re:A difference? (Score:2)
Different Mentality (Score:5, Insightful)
In order to understand why these things happen, you need to find out how people of China think. Using Western standards for benchmarking civil rights of China is not a smart idea because not everybody agrees with these standards.
I worked with an exchange student from China a while ago. She was a nice girl, but she could never get the freedom of speech (expression/religion) thing. Whenever we talked about civil rights in China, she pointed out to all the porn, violence, drug use and other negative aspects of life that Americans could see on TV and everywhere else. I could not argue with her. She was raised in a differet atmosphere and that was a big issue between the two of us. She hated many things about the United States and one of them was freedom to say whatever you wanted. Three years of schooling here did not change her one bit.
Now, I know that one person does not represent the whole country, but this experience gave me some insights on why peoeple may not like the Western way of life.
Re:Different Mentality (Score:2)
There is nothing inherently wrong with seeing porn, violence and drug use on TV.
This chinese exchange student thinks western culture has a problem because of what is being shown on TV and made available through other communication forms. We think chinese culture has a problem because someone can be thrown in jail or exe
Re:Different Mentality (Score:3, Insightful)
It's like certain American countries that raise their children to hate the Commies. Now maybe they give you reason, but when you see 6 year old kids chanting "Death to Commies" how can anyone justify such "educational" systems?
If people are going to hate China, or hate protection of distinct cultures, they should learn to hate w
Re:Different Mentality (Score:2)
And when and where exactly have you seen 6 year old kids chanting "death to commies"?
Re:Different Mentality (Score:2)
Re:Different Mentality (Score:2)
I see you got my point :)
The US has a distinct culture. It is not shared by the rest of the world. You fill in the rest. Remember who said "Democracy is two wolves and a lamb deciding what to have for lunch."
Remember also that AFAIK, no country in the world has created a democratically determined constitution. If you argue that the US has, it's time to re-learn your US history; the US is not a democracy. One bonus of the U
Perhaps W could lecture them on freedom (Score:2, Insightful)
If I had my way the U.S. would only recognize ONE China. The one whose government is in Taipei.
Re:Perhaps W could lecture them on freedom (Score:2)
The US did that for nearly a quarter of a century. Mao had even wanted to try to get contacts within the US, but the Red haters were so busy thinking the PRC was just a Soviet envelope with a funny-looking stamp that they missed a substantial opportunity.
You better read what Chiang Kaishek was doing before the Communists finally kicked his vicious, murderous hide off the mainland. I'm not defending Mao here,
Re:Perhaps W could lecture them on freedom (Score:2)
zerg (Score:2)
The slashdot summary is full of lies (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The slashdot summary is full of lies (Score:3, Informative)
2. Of course. When everyone's real name is exposed, you don't really need censorship to prevent them from talking against the government.
3. I don't know about this one so I have no comment. The students there have been required to provide a true campus address when they register on the BBS for quite some time now. It's not anything new.
4. TFA might be full of opinions, but I w
Re:The slashdot summary is full of lies (Score:2)
Grandparent is mostly right (Score:3, Informative)
All these are in Chinese and I don't have time to translate them (though Babelfish helps a little), and they are from BBSs, so they might not be all that accurate. Also, given current events I'm not sure that these links will continue to work.
I don't think it is dangerous in any way to post these links here, even if the government is as oppressive as you seem to think. Heck, I'm just helping you get the facts straight.
Fun with pattern replacement (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The story goes... (Score:2, Interesting)
Government sanctioned identity theft (Score:5, Interesting)
China had effected scrict financial penalties for having more than one child sometine last century. Unfortunately, the typical agricultural sector family unit survives by having cheap labor, in the form of extra children. However, in order not to incur legal penalties, these families often hide those extra kids. As these kids grew up, it quickly became apparent that these kids had no identity, and without identity, they wouldn't be able to find work or acquire government benefits. The PRC refused to ackowledge their existence.
Then, one day, the whole Tiananmen Square incident came about, and the PRC realized they could kill two birds with one stone. Rallying and arming as many "black children" [literal translation] as they could find on short notice, the PRC made a deal: "Kill one student protestor, and you may take possession of his identity. We will then cover the rest of your tuition and housing." After the bloodbath was over, all the "black children" were now legitimate, and since all students were accounted for, "no one" had really died. To this day, China can logistically claim there were no casualties in the incident. And what of the victim's families? They got a letter from school saying that their kids were striking off on their own and didn't want to see them again.
China's very good at understating a lot of facts. (I should know - I still have relatives there.)
Solomon Kevin Chang
Re:Government sanctioned identity theft (Score:2)
Re:The story goes... (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:If they don't like it (Score:2, Insightful)
in the end, nothing gets done.
in the US, Voters are morons and/or kool-aid drinkers and vote what they are told to vote.
in china you just can't vote.
Re:Civil War (Score:2)
Semi valid question.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Another thing many westerners do not understand is the politcal apathy of many of china's intelligentsia. The people know they do not have control, so they put it out of their minds. Concerning censorship- that is a lega