



China Telecom Blocking Skype Calls 297
Retrospeak writes "According to a Reuters report China is starting to block Skype service in Shenzhen, an affluent southern city of China. Local Chinese media report that China Telecom has plans to eventually block the service throughout its coverage area nationwide. Could this have something to do with the fact that China Telecom charges close to $1 per minute for calls to United States and Europe?" From the article: " A China Telecom spokesman had no comment on the reports about the Shenzhen blockage, but gave a broader view. 'Under the current relevant laws and regulations of China, PC-to-phone services are strictly regulated and only China Telecom and (the nation's other fixed-line carrier) China Netcom are permitted to carry out some trials on a very limited basis,' he said."
Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countries (Score:5, Interesting)
Here in America, at least we have the FCC and other governing bodies telling big business what they are allowed to do and what they are forbidden to do, and the majority of time the rules are followed at least. I know a while back that some major ISPs tried to block Vonage on their systems but after a major outcry from their subscribers this was changed quickly.
China has always been known to be a government that censor's free speech and tries to limit what it's citizens have access to. I am sure that their email systems are all monitored with anti-government emails being filtered out or those sending/receiving these emails being placed on watch lists, and am sure that each citizen's web surfing habits are monitored as well.
This is just another example of why I am glad to live here in the United States of America. We may complain about things from time to time, but at least we do have more freedom of information and able to know more, then most other countries out there. If my Vonage was blocked by my ISP, I would be contacting Road Runner in a hurry, and getting things straight, something that as an American we can take care of. I'm glad to not be helpless like the majority of private citizens in China are.
I wonder if this is proven to be a successful triumph on China Telecom's part, if it will help spur other ISP's in various countries around the globe to take a part in this as well. Voice over IP has been a wonderful blessing to many around the world, being used by many to reach other's in distant countries, at a far cheaper cost then a normal voice call would cost... hope this doesn't catch on and cause VOIP as a whole to start being shut down outside of America.
Hopefully, Skype can just one-up the Chinese, and change the way their system works, to more easily get around the blockage, as well as having the system be more intelligent in finding connections, bypassing any blocking measures that China Telecom might try to implement.
I'm not a lawyer, and curious about the legal implications of this. I know that with China being a communist nation, that the people probably have no rights, but could Skype turn around and have a lawsuit against China Telecom, for "obstruction of service" or "tampering with service" which is essentially what they are doing?
Nope (Score:5, Insightful)
It's hard enough to sue a sovereign nation for violating it's *own* laws, let alone over something like this. IANAL either, but I can tell you that a snowball would have a better chance lasting in hell than Skype would have in winning such a suit.
Re:Nope (Score:2)
I dunno.
Does China Telecom interoperate with U.S. LD carriers? And, if so, might there perhaps be grounds for a U.S.-based venue because China Telecom does business in the U.S.?
LD charges are distributed among carriers, and depending on how that is done, there may be China Telecom assets in the U.S. that could be siezed.
Yeah, it's a long shot, but I think a bit bet
Re:Nope (Score:2)
Re:Nope (Score:3, Informative)
The big boys would just as soon see Skype and Vonage and all the rest of this newfangled foolishness simply disappear. That's apparently true in China as well as the U.S.
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2, Funny)
You know, it's fine if you want to be glad that you don't live in China, but you should at least recognize that being better than China when it comes to human rights is kinda like bragging that you're not the stupidest kid on the short bus.
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2)
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2)
I think you missed this story [slashdot.org].
Communist 'cement-heads' always last to 'get it' (Score:2)
I don't wish to sound like a old cold-war, earth-burnin
Re:Communist 'cement-heads' always last to 'get it (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, true, but this story has nothing to do with that, it's just about good old robber-baron style capitalism, big companies who are well-connected with the government abusing the rights of consumers to protect their profits.
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2, Interesting)
China is NOT a communist nation. It is an authoritarian nation. Big difference there. In other words, The authorities are asserting their authority. Tell me something new. It happens all over the planet. We don't need to single them out. We use IP law to do precisely the same thing. It all depends on the spin that's put upon it. You can use censorship to protect property or one's power over others. It makes no difference. It's still censorship. Your entire
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2)
No, it's a huge difference. Maoist China was a communist nation ruled by communists. Modern China is essentially a capitalist nation ruled by communists. North Korea is about the only real "communist nation" left.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2)
The ruling party might be called 'Communist' but they sure don't act like it.
Moral equivalence (Score:2)
No it's not the same as IP law at all. Just because a nation enforces *any* type of law, doesn't
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2)
This is just another example of why I am glad to live here in the United States of America. We may complain about things from time to time, but at least we do have more freedom of information and able to know more, then most other countries out there.
You'll be suprised how many countries there is actually out there.
*Most* countries have the same body of regulators, have you heard of this thing called the UN? Check it out same time, you'll find a lot of countries "doing the right thing" in terms of freedom
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2)
I got modded down as "flamebait"....
I guess the tradition is that I spend the next 12 years crying myself to sleep every night, right?
Eh, fuck that, I think I'll just go ahead and laugh at the ignorant fuck that modded me down. Fact is that he's probably an 18 year old college student who has never spent a single day of his life in the "real world"...
Should be fun watching him "adjust" once mommy and daddy stop paying his bills for him and he actually ends up in the unfortunate situation of
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2)
There is some beautiful countries out there, all I'm saying is look around - you'll be surprised what you find.
Oh, there certainly are. My biggest complaint with our government is that we haven't annexed them yet.
Take Mexico for example. With the Florida coast jammed beyond capicity with old farts, the US desparately needs more beach property. It would take about a 2 week war for us to gain control of Mexico. I w
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2)
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2)
INVADE MEXICO NOW!!!!
And while we're at it, let's carpet bomb India with nukes. Those fucking assholes are coming over here, stealing jobs from home-grown Americans, and then moving back to India. The sick part of it is, the foreigners get preferential treatment for job openings at most big companies.
The United States DOESN'T FUCKING NEED to import talent
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2)
Back in the early 90's I was working for a "tiny" little company that was, at the time, operating under the name of "Norwest". I was, at that time, a wicked C/C++ programmer, but management had some sort of "PC" program going on where they needed to put foreigners in high paying positions in order to look good on some report that was coming up....
To make a long story s
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2)
Whee! They have that in China too.
In fact, China Telecom is the government. Or vice versa.
It's pretty meaningless to talk about things like consumer choice or business regulation in China. The government is essentially communist, and even though things appear "free market" in essence nothing happens in China without the government's approval and, in fact, urging.
This is not a matter of profit
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:5, Insightful)
Can you join a Nazi party in your Country? Many European Countries you can not, in the US, you can.
Can you buy a copy Mein Kamf? Many Countries you can not, in the US, you can.
Can you buy anything that is printed? In the United Stated, bomb making books are printed and sold, legally.
Are your basic rights outlined in your constition? Freedom of Speech, Right to Assemble, Freedom of the Press and Freedom of Religion are the basic foundations of this Country are protect by our Bill of Rights.
Europe and other countries can bash us for many reasons and in some areas are more free than we are, but in the Big Picture, we are more free than anyone else.
What a joke (Score:5, Insightful)
If I'm blocked from attending a town hall meeting put on by my President because I'm a Democrat, I'm not very free.
If elections can be decided by a court, I'm not very free.
If neoconservatives can threaten to impeach judges because they don't decide cases based on religious contrine, I'm not very free.
If big businesses can invest their money wisely enough to buy off a Congress, I'm not very free. (See the energy, telecommunications, defense, highway bills.)
If oil companies formerly run by our Vice President get no-bid contracts and take over Iraqi oil fields, I'm not very free.
If the government office in charge of investigating abuses of power (like those no-bid contracts) say they're "too busy" to investigate Cheney, despite having three times the case load when they approved a Clinton investigation, I'm not very free.
If my uncle down south, along with others, is asked to leave his church because he's a card-carrying Democrat, I'm not very free.
If wealthy people get billions of dollars and, as a result, we cripple state budgets and tens of thousands of people die because of a Hurricane, I'm not very free.
The truth is, honest to God, I'd trade in my copy of "My Struggle" if it reversed all those things. Freedom is in the eye of the beholder. The rich and the religious feel very free. In fact, they feel ENTITLED. But the truth is, there's a reason Norway is #1 on the UN's list of countries to live in and the U.S. is #37. I can't imagine Norwegians are screaming for liberty and freedoms. They're free, they go about their lives, and they do well.
The U.S. has turned a corner and is on a very dark path right now. If you don't see it - even just a glimpse of it - then you need to, because power tends to consolidate, and if past actions lend to future ambitions, we're in for big trouble as neocons continue gaining strength.
Your simple test is misguided. It's not about which party you can join. After all - Germany had a problem with Nazis and outlawed them. We spent a better part of the 20th century tearing to pieces Communists in our own. Even today, in the 21st century, many folks spend their time talking about "killing" (yes, hate speech) the liberals who ruin this country. They are perverse, sick, disgusting individuals who are so entrenched in a false system of values.
The true test of freedom is the consolidation of power. Is it centralized in the people in America? I would say less and less. Corporatism is the new threat - and the neocons (and even many Conservatives) are perfectly aligned to feed it. This threatens our values. These are not our American values -- hell, they're not even good Christian values, if you want to bring religion into it.
Love your country, Mullen. Just don't love it too much. The Constitution is a pitiful and weak thing -- it is not the protector of our great democracy.
We are.
Re:What a joke (Score:2)
Re:What a joke (Score:5, Insightful)
We are.
I wholeheartedly agree. And I agree with many things you've said: corporations and their bitches, aka lawyers, are consolidating power at an alarming rate and Americans don't do enough to protect our liberties. However, I have issues with your idea of freedom.
If I'm blocked from attending a town hall meeting put on by my President because I'm a Democrat, I'm not very free.
If my uncle down south, along with others, is asked to leave his church because he's a card-carrying Democrat, I'm not very free.
Your idea of freedom seems misguided. You can flip it and look at it from the other point of view. If a congregation believes that a Democrat in their midst is a bad thing, then its their freedom to turn that person or persons away. Is that truly what God would want? Most decidedly not, but its their choice to do so. Likewise, banning someone from a town hall meeting because of their political persuasion is their choice as well. Is it politically savvy to do so? Probably not. Will it create anger and unrest? Yes. Does it infringe on your rights to attend that meeting?
If you always look from the perspective of how you were screwed of your freedom then any decision anyone makes is an infringment of your freedom. Get pulled over for speeding? Infringment of my freedom! Why? Because I'm obviously not free to speed.
If neoconservatives can threaten to impeach judges because they don't decide cases based on religious contrine, I'm not very free.
Sure you're free. Just as neocons are free to threaten to impeach judges for not voting along neocon lines, you're free to fight back if you disagree with them. Simply because you disagree with people doesn't mean your freedom is trampled on. You are guilty of what you imply: that we don't do enough to protect our freedoms.
Re:What a joke (Score:4, Insightful)
Every American has the right to have their criticism of the government heard by the government. Every American has the right to demand accountability. A President who locks himself away behind loyalty oaths, yes-men and closed doors comes frighteningly close to negating those rights.
Re:What a joke (Score:2)
So you'd be more free if other courts made ex post facto changes to election law to suit your position? Great for you; not for everyone on the other side.
If big businesses can invest their money wisely enough to buy off a Congress, I'm not very free. (See the energy, telecommunications, defense, highway bills.)
See every budgeting bill since 1776 regardless of the party in the majority. What's your point, or is this just a cheap shot?
Re:What a joke (Score:2)
Re:What a joke (Score:3, Insightful)
Correction (Score:2)
Should read "from Nigeria." And yes, I know Saddam did try to build a nuke power plant at one point, and had one that was observed by the IAEA.
My point here is that the documents were rigged, everyone knew it, and Bush still used them.
Re:What a joke (Score:2, Interesting)
It's unfortunate you seem to hold most dearly those values related to the Nazi revolution. Unfortunately, I don't like settling for that kind of freedom.
What, a national socialism? I don't think that's what the parent was advocating at all.
If I'm blocked from attending a town hall meeting put on by my President because I'm a Democrat, I'm not very free.
So you think the government should control who is allowed to meet with whom? No freedom of assembly? Hmm.. that doesn't sound very free to me.
If electio
Re:What a joke (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't get it? You're complaining because the economic well-being of companies is debated by congress? I'm don't get it.
Power is, to some degree, like a zero sum game. Political donations influence elected officials.
The purchase of influence dilutes the influence of voters, and is hence anti-democratic.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2)
Can you join a Nazi party in your Country? Many European Countries you can not, in the US, you can.
Can you buy a copy Mein Kamf? Many Countries you can not, in the US, you can.
Can you buy anything that is printed? In the United Stated, bomb making books are printed and sold, legally.
Are your basic rights outlined in your constition? Freedom of Speech, Right to Assemble, Freedom of the Press and Freedom of Religion are the basic foundations of this Country are pr
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:2)
You simply buy it at Barnes and Noble, pay cash, take it home and enjoy. No paper trail, no problems.
Re:Sad Future of Broadband Access in other countri (Score:5, Informative)
You didn't see our country piling innocent arab-americans into prisons after 9/11??
Erm, yes [freemuse.org] I [cnn.com] did [amnesty.org].
In short, no, we don't go after commies anymore.
Oh, and yes [bbc.co.uk] , you do [amazon.com].
Having lived in both Japan and Europe (Score:2)
On the whole, we are all in the same ballpark, however.
Clearly, though, the freedom of the press is greater in the first world than in many less-developed countries, and definitely China.
I think a better attack on China in this instance is to start calling
Re:The Real Reason (Score:2)
That's widely considered by analysts to be quite fictional. Otherwise, I don't see your connection between hoding back a peasant revolt and blocking Skype calls. That's mostly about protecting income from overseas calls, and if your average peasant can call some relative working overseas occasionally I don't see how this can destabilise the country (more than the first-hand stories these relatives have when they
This is surprising from Communist state-run media? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This is surprising from Communist state-run med (Score:2)
I'd go $0.75 an hour to build handsets for my own voip service, though.
Boy, its come down then (Score:5, Informative)
Boy, it has come down then. When I was in China a few years ago it was $2/minute to the USA. It was a bargain to get to Japan and have calls cost only $1/minute.
Australia, last December by comparison was about 4 cents/minute on a phone card.
Can get much lower... (Score:2)
Just one more way that VOIP is changing the face of telecommunications.
Re:Can get much lower... (Score:2)
I'm wondering - if they're wanting to be restrictive, why don't they deny all but http access out of the country? Seems like they're gonna get to this point....
Re:Can get much lower... (Score:3, Interesting)
If Skype give the chinese government the encryption keys then I'm sure they'll be unblocked...
Re:Can get much lower... (Score:2)
Re:Boy, its come down then (Score:2)
The cheaper rates are available if you agree to a contract - much like everywhere else.
But China Tel is not the only game in town - there are literally hundreds of resllers out there each specialising in a service or destination country.
I bought a card last week allowing me to send 3,000 SMS text msgs for a total of US$4.00
Best of luck with that (Score:3, Interesting)
Regardless of any efforts to block its use, once people realise the advantages of VOIP, organisations, whether Governments or companies who want to enforce some kind of monopoly, will have to embrace this worthwhile development.
Re:Best of luck with that (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Best of luck with that (Score:2)
Slashdot appears to be messed up. Didn't you mean to post that on this story [slashdot.org]?
Oh, come on. Nobody was going to get it if I modded your post as funny, so I had to reply instead.
Re:Best of luck with that (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Best of luck with that (Score:2)
You're exactly right. There is only one thing in the world more valuable and useful than money. Power.
Re:Best of luck with that (Score:2)
Regardless of any efforts to block its use, once people realise the advantages of VOIP, organisations, whether Governments or companies who want to enforce some kind of monopoly, will have to embrace this worthwhile development.
That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard. Get away from your keyboard for a little while and try to run a business. You'll find that o
It may be a censorship issue (Score:2, Insightful)
It's the way of such governments.
Re:It may be a censorship issue (Score:2, Interesting)
1.) The Government,
2.) A Chinese Big Business, or
3.) some nefarious underground type deal, (mafia-ish).
Profit ???
Basically, he has told me that if you try to skip this crucial relational step, they'll pirate, steal and plunder your market share there int
Re:It may be a censorship issue (Score:2)
The mechanisms are (on the surface) a bit different, but the list of allies that you need in order to be succesful are strikingly similar.
Re:It may be a censorship issue (Score:4, Interesting)
Although, this would be no reason for them to block standard SIP, which typically is unencrypted. Although SIP is a generic enough solution to support encryption at some layer, most existing VoIP solutions don't do this. I know that my IP telephony at home doesn't use any encryption, but I'm not that concerned about it, since neither would a standard POTS line if I were to have one of those.
But then again, when you're not raking in $x/minute for phone calls, but instead routing IP traffic at your own expense, your budget for sniffing IP telephone traffic gets that much smaller. Why invest in new technology to eavesdrop on VoIP calls when you can just maintain the status quo by adding some new rules to the Great Firewall of China?
Re:It may be a censorship issue (Score:2)
The cause may lie elsewhere (Score:4, Informative)
As the article stated:
I'd say it has more to do with the fact that people (mainly Falun Gong [falundafa.org] practitioners) like to use services such as Skype to tell Chinese mainlanders, who don't have access to free (as in speech) media, the truth about the persecution [clearwisdom.net] that's going on there.
Re:The cause may lie elsewhere (Score:2)
How about using the "1997 Hong Kong handover" event instead. That's communist society gobbling up a capitalist society.
Re:The cause may lie elsewhere (Score:2)
Re:The cause may lie elsewhere (Score:2)
China's government fears its people. It fears the power they might have. It gives the rising middle class the baubles of the West; cell phones, computers and cars, because it hopes that will satiate any desire for true freedom, the freedom to call the autocrats evil or to believe in a third eye. It is a paranoid, wicked government run by self-serving technocrats.
Re:The cause may lie elsewhere (Score:2)
Mystical religious beliefs are not inconsistent with technical skills. A lot of American fundies are engineers and such. Anyway, the Falun Gong have used technology to very good effect. Several times they've hijacked satellite TV transmissions in China and made their own broadcasts and they're very active on the Internet.
Re:The cause may lie elsewhere (Score:2)
Maybe it is, maybe it's not.
It doesn't matter. Nobody cares.
Re:The cause may lie elsewhere (Score:2)
Or both.
Either way, its got nothing to do with democracy or any freedom other than the freedom to send money to some guy in America.
Re:The cause may lie elsewhere (Score:2)
Outside the courthouse were some Fulan Gong folks, providing information about the torture and oppression they face in China. I found them persuasive and reasonable - basically nice little old ladies, with solid evidence supporting their claims. Possibly I
How is it identified for blocking? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How is it identified for blocking? (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah I'm wondering the same thing too. My guess is that Skype was just caught unaware and was sitting there with its ass in its hands like the original Napster service was. Big centralized login server, easy to block. "Problem" for the Chinese, solved.
VoIP isn't just going to go away, although Skype as a corporation probably will, at least from the Chinese market. But there are lots of ways to disguise an internet phone call -
Re:How is it identified for blocking? (Score:3, Interesting)
Avoiding the political censors is a laudable and reasonable goal, but getting clever this way makes it that much tougher to have a real phone policy in a secure environment where you are *not* supposed to have un-logge
Re:How is it identified for blocking? (Score:2, Funny)
We block the signals by running iptraf on a 486 Linux box connected to the China -> California gateway. Iptraf, as you may know, is ncurses-based, so we have a REALLY BIG SCREEN on it so we can see all the connections going on.
Then, we have a bunch of short, four-eyed people on ladders in front of the screen watching the connections. Whenever someting nefarious happens, they scream out port numbers to one of our typists who f
not because of money (Score:2, Informative)
Anyway, this is the day that the great firewall really becomes useful (in a painfully annoying way)
by the way, calls from china to the US are not 1 dollar per minute. nobody uses those services. everyone buys IP cards for maybe 2 cents a minute or so. FYI
How ironic... (Score:2)
I am talking to Shenzhen NOW on skype (Score:5, Informative)
Re:I am talking to Shenzhen NOW on skype (Score:5, Informative)
Re:I am talking to Shenzhen NOW on skype (Score:2, Informative)
((25/60)/8.09) = 0.051503914297486608982282653481665 usd/minute. of course its state run, but also think about atleast 4 million people using that service in this city (shanghai), but when i can't be fucked to go out and buy a card off the street i'll just fireup skype and hope it doesn't consume up all my processor io whilst i work a
Lived in China two years, no surprise to me (Score:5, Insightful)
Funny, I was in Beijing two months ago and there was a HUGE billboard for Skype, right in the center of the business district.
My guess is that they are just using a heavy hand to pressure skype into two things:
1) handing over some money/bribes.
2) making sure they can listen in on conversations
3) They did something like this to Google a few years back. Even now google experiences outages all the time. I guess this is just the way the chinese gov't is used to doing business.
Skype just has to figure out the right person to bribe and this will all go away.
Re:Lived in China two years, no surprise to me (Score:2)
In Soviet Russia... (Score:2, Funny)
I have a workaround... (Score:2)
This is a problem? (Score:2)
Re:This is a problem? (Score:3, Insightful)
Never thought I'd say this (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm usually all for leaving other countries' governments alone, but I'm starting to feel like there's a certain threshold which you can stifle people's rights, and China is well past that and needs to be dismantled/reshaped.
Btw, I should note, that I don't feel like this solely due to Skype - I could care less about skype.. Watching a country try and make
Re:Never thought I'd say this (Score:2)
We SHOULD care (Score:2)
First it makes us more tolerant to abuses here in the USA (sorry non-USA folks out there). For example as the Patriot act erodes our freedom, we can be more tolerent because we see other governments abusing their constiuency even more. So we let the abuses slide since we can always say "at least its not as bad a China).
Second it sets a precedent for the lobbyists to follow. Our telcom industry will say to the c
mask the packets? (Score:2)
Re:mask the packets? (Score:2)
Overreacting (Score:2, Insightful)
I think this is just overreaction by Reuter and other slashdotters. Internet based phone is incredibly common in China, you can buy "IP Phone cards" that work with any phone for ridiculously cheap prices. (100 RMB cards selling for 50 RMB, plus buy one get one free.)
Skype has always been somewhat blocked in China since they signed the agreement with tom.com. Sometimes buying credits directly from Skype.com doesn't work unless you're an existing user. Sometimes the entire skype.com site is blocked.
As for pop
here we go..."freedom" blather etc (Score:2)
"If I'm blocked from attending a town hall meeting put on by my President because I'm a Democrat, I'm not very free."
An this is exactly what happened in the US a few months ago.
I do not have a link, but you must recall the woman who was denied entry in just this situation, because agents spotted her car with a democrats sticker on it parked several hundred yards down the road.
THis china story is nothing but commercial dominance.
Telecom in New Zealand have not blocked IP calls per sey, but have
Thwarting private communication? (Score:2)
No, more likely it has to do with the fact that Skype calls and chats are encrypted [skype.com], preventing the controlling communist government and party from eavesdropping on their populace via their state-controlled telcoms. Certainly such a thing is absolutely unacceptable for the Chinese Communist Party.
Party Line (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:does anyone else (Score:2)
You think you have it bad? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:You think you have it bad? (Score:3, Insightful)
Excellent point!
When I read TFA, I was wondering "Why is this listed as 'Your Rights Online', when it is clearly a political discussion. China maintains a stranglehold on their populace and the only thing we can do is bitch about is Skype getting blocked?
I'm sure China's telco blocking Skype what this guy was pissed about when this [asianamericans.com] photo was taken.
Re:Priorities (Score:2)
Re:Skype vs. China (Score:2)
Please tell me you're not claiming regulators and corporate goons aren't in bed with each other in the U.S...
Not in the same order of magnitude (Score:2)
But at the national level you have that canceled out by many competeing interests also donating money. So for instance MCI might donate a lot of money to someone, but so can Sprint...
Then on top of that all the money is (mostly) recorded, so if someone taking a lot of money from one company suddenly starts throwing everything there way people look at that a little funny, and true rascals get thrown out eventually.
In China you have one h
Re:This is really bad for me... (Score:2)
A possible workaround: get an accomplice outside of China, connect there over a VPN (either IPsec or OpenVPN or anything else suitable for the purpose), route the packets through the VPN to the gateway outside of China.
Where is Rome? (Score:2)
Guess whose alphabet you're using right now?
China as a whole country has 2500 years history.
As do other regions of Eurasia. In fact, Iraq, Egypt and Greece and other areas have way, way more than 2500 years of documented history.
Hell, even the word 'China' refers to the 'Chin' dynasty - a bunch of semi-literate barbarians who overthrew the Ming Dynasty about the time America was being settled.