Adopt a [Chinese] Blog 279
malorkus writes "Here's a great way for bloggers and others with decent web hosting to help fight internet censorship in China and other restrictive countries. Adopt a Chinese Blog aims to match up censored bloggers with volunteer hosts."
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... in which case there isn't a single government that isn't guilty. So we're back to moral relativism. You have to make a judgment call at *some* point. Some things are more evil than others, from a human perspective.
Besides, these chinese bloggers ... an hour after you've eaten one, you're hungry again ... (there. someone had to say it. sat
Re:Block (Score:2)
We need to stand for the rights of developers to engage in reverse engineering proof-of-concept without being prosecuted.
We need to stand for so many things that our apathy has allowed undue recession into darker times. We wonder why our rig
Re:Block (Score:5, Interesting)
If all people exercise their right of free speech, free press and free association then those rights will persevere. If you back down, then you will cede your rights. Its easy to promote a popular cause. Its the unpopular ones that define your character.
Anyway, I'd like to help, but my ISP won't let me host a blog on my server. And I have to wash my cat this weekend.
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Seems like a very good idea for a blog!
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You're a hypocrite,
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Anyone care to put up a ticket for a permanant visit to N. Korea and the bottom of Maslow's hierarchy of needs [wikipedia.org]? (btwjftaf [BTW, just for the anticiated flamewar) I do not like Bush and I am working within the electoral processs to free us from his relatively mild form of tyranny)
Dead men can't type, surely you have choosen a one point to live rather than death.
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I thought the same thing, but several very intelligent posters pointed out that there *are* rights being violated. Article 35 of the Chinese Constitution [usconstitution.net] states:
Now I realize that the Chinese Constitution may not be worth the paper its printed on (I know of many violations of the constitution, including friends who fled China due to religious persecution - read: arrest/jail - directly in contradiction to article 36), but that shouldn't stop the Chinese from fighting for rights they've been explicitly granted.
A good writeup on the situation from a Chinese Law Professor is here [typepad.com], with a well reasoned rebuttal here [listlesslawyer.com].
Let's hope the Chinese people are able to fight for their constitution. If only it was as easy as taking the case before the Chinese Supreme Court.
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Re:MOD Training example (Score:2)
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1. Libel. Just as their are laws in the US about lying about someone I am sure that their are laws in China about lying about the government. An example might be someone claiming that Red Army attacked people protesting for democratic reform. While the "truth" is they where trying to over throw the government since China is already a democratic society really they are the People's Republic of China.
2.Another wa
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Keep in mind that it's just a translation. I seriously hope that the original (Mandarin?) is not quite so loosely worded. And even translated, it can be interpreted as granting a right.
Also keep in mind that Article 51 doesn't apply in this case because no law exists to prevent the discussion of democracy. (See the law professor's blog I linked to.) If this were America, one would simply file a court case and take it as far as the
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From what I've been told, the spirit of the law often comes into play too. To state in a legal document that the citizens of China derive pleasure from something would be a senseless thing to include. It's clear that that's not what it means, so the statement wouldn't be ambiguous.
Yeah, of course it is just an example. I agree completely that this ambiguity is just an artifact of the translation.
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From dictionary.com [reference.com]:
Enjoy:
v. tr.
1. To receive pleasure or satisfaction from.
2. To have the use or benefit of: enjoys good health.
I believe that the intent of the Chinese Constitution is under definition #2.
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Man, I'm glad I didn't go to your education system. You have a pretty warped view of history.
Our declaration of independence says the following:
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Gosh, and it doesn't say anything about the freedom to eat chocolate either. It does however say "Liberty".
Something else to note is that the US Constitution went into effect in 1789. Yet the First Ammendment (the right to free speech) was not added until 1791!
Statist fallacy #43. Neither the Constitution nor the Bill of Rights grants rights to citizens. They grant powers to *government*, and in theory government can act only in accordance with th
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From a more down-to-earth political viewpoint however, there are such things as universal human rights, which include, amongst others, freedom of thought and freedom of expression. Chinese law is in violation of those human rights, just like law in nazi-Germany and Japan during WWII, or laws i
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... or, if they post in english (or ingrish) then they aren't really communicating very effectively with their own countrymen, so it becomes just another political statement w/o much impact.
IOW, a cute idea, but not very practical or logical. Perhaps we're being trolled?
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That should be just fine with the adopters. Free speech is free speech. If you start deciding that only certain kinds of speech should be allowed, then your no better than the government censors.
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BTW, free speech isn't an absolute - you do not have the freedom to shout fire in a crowded theatre if there's no fire, for example.
I would be pissed as all hell if they were tell me that they were reporting on a civil rights protest, but it was really recipes for "how to wok your dog" in chinese and that I am one of the prime "dog ranchers" with really choice cuts from a wide selection of
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You pretty much have two options. Speak within the law, along with
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Samizdat didn't bring down the Soviet empire - the rest of the world continuing to advance economically and politically, along with trade sanctions, did them in. Same with South Africa. Eventually the "grass is grener" becomes irresistable, because, with increased trade, too many people are exposed to knowledge that there are oth
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I thought it was Visual SourceSafe that we wanted to do away with...
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How does this constitute the magazine forcing its values on me?
KFG
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Just for the record, the Communist system currently in place in China was developed in the west. It was forced on China in an extremely oppressive fashion (the Cultural Revolution). The Cultural Revolution was not simply about bringing in new ideas, it was a very violent Marxist program designed to completely wipe out China's past.
The post that labels free speech as forcing western values on China is quite amusing. Quite frankly the most like
In soviet Russia (Score:4, Funny)
In Soviet Russia, Bloggers host you!
Re:In soviet Russia (Score:2)
*I love this meme, can't help it*
Re:In soviet Russia (Score:2)
Adopt... (Score:5, Funny)
For just 5 megs a month you can adopt a Chinese blog. You will recieve letters, a digital camera picture and more from your sponsored blog. Your blog will recieve bandwidth, FTP access and encryption...
Just 5 megs a month. Isn't that worth it?
Why not? (Score:3, Insightful)
Punishment? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Punishment? (Score:3, Insightful)
1. The blogger (in China) pretends he just sent the content of the blog in a personal email and that
2. the host published the content of said email without permission.
IANAL and IANC (Chinese), but this seems to make some sense. This or something similar...
Re:Punishment? (Score:2, Insightful)
This sounds like a good idea, BUT... (Score:5, Insightful)
Another concern I'd have is that a blogger might have lots of harsh words about some local official, but how do I know it isn't simply slander? And what would my liabilities be in such a case?
Re:This sounds like a good idea, BUT... (Score:2)
Re:This sounds like a good idea, BUT... (Score:2)
Re:This sounds like a good idea, BUT... (Score:2)
Right, because getting a computer to match up names from visa applications to a list of "offenders" would be way too difficult.
Out (Score:3, Funny)
Outsourced (Score:3, Funny)
Not to rain on your parade but.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Not to rain on your parade but.. (Score:3, Insightful)
But if you're Chinese intelligence, the better method is to prevent people from getting to the adoption service in the first place. They don't want to throw people in lonely prisons after they publish damaging things, they want to prevent damaging things from being published. The best way to do that is to use the Great
Re:Not to rain on your parade but.. (Score:3, Insightful)
What country/world do you live in?? You're really contemplating the possibility that the Chinese government is going to hunt you down, "snatch" you away, and do horrible things to you?
Listen, America has a number of problems, but keeping its citizens safe from foreign aggression while on their own soil is not one of them. And I'm including "terrorism", even though that's not remotely the point
Great idea... (Score:5, Interesting)
That would be great! If I could move my project to a free country. Reading trivial patents is so boring you know...
Other countries? (Score:2)
Does anyone here appreciate the irony? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Does anyone here appreciate the irony? (Score:2)
Two questions:
1. Like what?
2. Where is here?
Adware hosting? (Score:3, Interesting)
BTW, what is wrong with opening a (Chinese) blog account on one of Western sites and emailing blog posts via some foreign Webmail site that provides HTTPS encryption of Web sessions?
Re:Adware hosting? (Score:2)
Popular blog hosting sites are trivially easy to censor and track. Hosting on thousands of unrelated volunteer sites is meant to be harder to block.
In other news... (Score:2)
At the risk of being off-topic... (Score:2, Insightful)
Their economic growth has been much better than ours over the last decade. Their top-down economy can decide to build new nuclear plants when they need them without having to deal with environmentalists interfering for a decade or more. [One of the best prospects for eliminating dependence on foreign oil is relatively cheap electricity combined with hybrid and
Re:At the risk of being off-topic... (Score:2)
I would rather be purvey to freedom and liberty than have a totalitarian government limiting what choices i can make in my life. You see, as china moves more towards a capitalistic society, where people are free to choose and expore, they are becoming quite successful. It isn't "communism" that is making them well to do, it is captialism and the free market.
Government controlled economies NEVER work, it was the end to the socialist USSR empire, it will be ours as we move closer to it.
T
Re:At the risk of being off-topic... (Score:4, Insightful)
The point of a democratic or representative system is that the worst case is limited, because no one person has the power to totally screw everything up. Presumably, therefore, at least some people will be decent, keeping the system from total failure.
So, yes, a planned economy can outperform a non planned one, if the planners are very good. A controlled political system can out perform a non planned one, if the planners are good.
But you have to have good planners. And they have to stay good, and operate in the interest of the system, not themselves.
An uplanned system, where everyone operates in their own best intrest, works fairly well, and does not depend on finding exeptional people to run it.
(My personal feeling, by the way, is that their economic growth has been more the result of technology upgrades than anything else. The US/Europe leads the world in productivity-enhancing tech, and a country that can jump a few grades closer to us will grow a lot faster than we will because we have to develop the next steps.)
Re:At the risk of being off-topic... (Score:2)
Re:At the risk of being off-topic... (Score:2)
Your reasoning is based on numerous fallacies. The biggest is that you are calling the Chinese economy "top-down". The top-down approach impoverished the Soviet Union, and would do the same to China. China professes to being a Communist, top-down economy, but it's not true. There is quite a bit of free enterprise carried on in addition to the state-owned version. This is where the growth is coming from.
The Chinese economy is
Re:At the risk of being off-topic... (Score:2)
So what? The ends do not justify the means.
Re:At the risk of being off-topic... (Score:3, Insightful)
Economic growth: growing from zero (china) has a better percentage gain than growth from peak (US). No news here. On the other hand, things that grow quickly have a higher risk. Put another way, a startup grows faster than GE or Microsoft. But they can also overheat/crash/fail for a lot of reasons that won't kill a stable diversified giant corporation.
Your posting also interchanges economic and political concepts. They're not the same thing, and untangling them is necessary to talk effec
Chinese gov't can adopt DMCA victim websites (Score:2, Interesting)
The Chinese government should return fire with fire by encouraging "legal" Chinese web site operators to "Adopt a patent-free website" or Adopt a DMCA victim".
They could start with the author of DVD Decrypter.
The American Government is no longer the squeaky-clean defender of the oppressed that i
Webspace (Score:3, Funny)
In exchange, I promise to be scathingly critical about nation you choose.
Yin and Yang (Score:2)
But I have one concern.
If I get caught by the Chinese government, all they can do is block my server. If the person I'm hosting gets caught, they get tossed in to jail or stood up against a wall and shot.
I must contemplate this on the tree of woe...
Re:Yin and Yang (Score:2)
Ah, the irony... (Score:3, Insightful)
BTW, -1 as a troll. To hell with my karma.
SPAM it out (Score:2)
If you can sell vI@gr@ and enlarge my penis maybe you can make me read all the things you have to say about living in a represive country (not that by living in Brazil we don't already know).
If you cannot blog it, SPAM it!
Communitycolo.net is the answer (Score:2, Informative)
What about LJ (Score:2)
Maybe Bittorent style blogging?
What's the Point? (Score:2)
Smart little trick (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:3, Insightful)
No way. This [abc.net.au] has gone way too far [www.cbc.ca].
If there is truth to these accusations that the Chinese government is intimidating citizens of my country in any way for something such as practicing Falun Gong [wikipedia.org], then we have a serious problem that need s addressing.
I'm in no way in favour of military action, but this is clearly and act of war on their part if it is true.
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
This is true too. I am much less familiar with that situation than this one. I am however aware that the Jew -vs- Muslim war has tyrants on both sides. Buddhism is concerned primarily with having compassion for others. I do not believe you will find an example of Buddhists retaliating against oppression. I have no idea the depths of what happens in Israel, or to Muslims when they travel there, but this quote is what I am concerned about:
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Sorry, I meant to respond to this as well. China's history with Tibet is enough to make me fear their persecution. Especially based on their lack of respect for international borders. The practice of Buddhism was banned there, as Falun Gong is now in China. To me this fear of political instability is almost as frightening as fear of opposing religions.
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
just look at Israel and what they do
What exactly? Protect their citizens (15% of which is Arab by the way)?
No, governments should do nothing while palestinians blow up kids in nightclubs and school buses.
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
Get some fucking perspective.
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
They should consider themselves lucky that the US gives them billions of dollars of weapons to fight enemies that are equiped with rocks and primitive explosives. Enemies that they imposed upon, and enemies that they threaten and steal from when they attempt to expand their borders.
Israel lost its sympathy card a long time ago.
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:3, Insightful)
They should consider themselves lucky that the US gives them billions of dollars of weapons to fight enemies that are equiped with rocks and primitive explosives.
WTF? Do you think they use all of those weapons on the Palestinians? The best thing that can happen for Israel is for he world to acknowledge that it *IS* a war. The fact is, if they used those weapons in an all out war, the Palestinians wouldn't have a fucking change.
And to describe palestinian as poor enemies with only rocks and primitive
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
The fact is, they should not have those weapons at all. I find the idea of giving someone weapons and calling it humanitarian aid offensive.
Isreal has been attacked by its neighbours, but Isreal has also attacked them. Neither one is right
Suicide bombers are attempting to show how hopeless they feel about their situation in the very loudest way possible. There is a fair solution, and it d
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2, Insightful)
The fact is, they should not have those weapons at all. I find the idea of giving someone weapons and calling it humanitarian aid offensive
What? Israel has been attacked by its neighbours who have sworn to "push israel into the sea" and the US shouldn't help Israel defend itself? it is in the best interests of the US and the world that Israel -- a stable multicultural democracy in the middle east -- survives.
Suicide bombers are attempting to show how hopeless they feel about their situation in the
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
Yes, exactly. They bulldoze homes of Palastinian people, and build settlements on their land. This is outrageous. It makes no more sense for you to defend the US' relationship with Israel, than it does for Syria or Lebanon to aid the Palestinians. Less so, because it's really none of the US' business until one side or the other decides to play fair at least.
"The
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
Yes, exactly. They bulldoze homes of Palastinian people, and build settlements on their land
Homes used by terrorists or to smuggle weapons (hidden tunnels).
It makes no more sense for you to defend the US' relationship with Israel, than it does for Syria or Lebanon to aid the Palestinians.
No, it does and I've already explained why.
Without US weapons defending Israel (deterrence works great), Israel would now be North Egypt, West Jordon and Southern Lebanon. The concept of a Palestinian state woul
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
Yes, well we all know what a threat to humanity hidden tunnels are.
"Without US weapons defending Israel (deterrence works great), Israel would now be North Egypt, West Jordon and Southern Lebanon. The concept of a Palestinian state would be a footnote in history."
So would Israel. I'm not sure Israel is justified in existing in the first place. What went on in Germany was attrocious, but I don't think it gives anyone the right to beh
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
Excellent point. This is why I am also not in favour of military action against China. On this account, at least you cannot call me a hypocrite.
I'm talking about diplomacy, and possibly outlawing trade with them.
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
Exactly. Besides, the rest of the world couldn't even afford a trade embargo with China at this point ...
And its not like other countries aren't doing the same ... (hello, France wrt louis vuitton auctions, Germany wrtnazi memorabilia, Microsoft wrt Mike Rowe Soft) ... oops, forgot, Microsoft isn't a country - they outsource that function by renting their politicians.
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
At this point I'm pretty sure the Chinese people feel hopeless about any chances for reform. Iraq, North Korea, and Cuba aren't involved in spying on and arresting citizens of foreign countries, that we know of. What a government does to its citizens is one thing, but foreigners are different. The citizens have a responsibility to keep their governments in line. I fear the sam
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
Re:What is their major malfunction? (Score:2)
The reality is, if we go to war with China nuclear weapons are going to be used. They will likely also ally with the "Axis of Evil" that Bush invented. We have to send a strong message that our citizens are free, and that isn't up for negotiation though. It doesn't take a war to do that.
Re:Fighter Censorship at Home!! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Fighter Censorship at Home!! (Score:2)
Re:Stop trading with them (Score:2)
In other words, why wouldn't we trade with them!
Re:Risk (Score:2)
Could this be turned into a gigantic social engineering blitzkrieg?
Re:I like... (Score:2)
This is only true for very old values of "today" (e.g. 1973). It's currently estimated at over 1.3 billion.