Chinese, U.S. Condemn Censorship 238
More reactions both at home and abroad to the censorship issue. picaro writes "According to the BBC, 'party elders' in China released an open letter decrying the current state of censorship in China, and suggesting that 'history demonstrates that only a totalitarian system needs news censorship, out of the delusion that it can keep the public locked in ignorance.'" LWATCDR writes "The US government is upset over restrictions of freedom of speech on the Internet. The United States, has 'very serious concerns' about the protection of privacy and data throughout the Internet globally, and in particular, some of the recent cases raised in China."
In other news... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:In other news... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Uh oh.... (Score:2)
Re:Uh oh.... (Score:3, Funny)
Wikinews (Score:2)
A Few Questions... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm wondering what purpose this announcement serves. I'm glad to hear this, but is this just lipservice or a precursor to some real action?
I'm at a loss as to how such a major policy change can be brought about in China aside from a sudden onset of mass altruism. Part of it stems from a very poor understanding of the Chinese government structure. I'm sure I'm not the only one in the U.S that doesn't know.
Can someone fill in these information gaps?
A few answers (Score:3, Informative)
Re:A Few Questions... (Score:2)
And a few answers (Score:3, Informative)
1) A government for a country of that size is NOT monolithic. For example, it would be foolish to say that everyone in the US government is in favor of having troops in Iraq: there are a lot of Senators who are not happy at all. Likewise, the Chinese government has v
Remarkable candor (Score:2, Insightful)
It would be trivially easy for the Chinese leadership to appraoch Google, Y! et al and say "Just serve up the same search results as you do in any other country. We won't throw anyone in jail or kick your servers out of the country if you do. We welcome the internal discussion this would provoke because we want to support free speech."
Let's see if in fact they do that. Nothing short of that exact approach is likely going to cut it.
Re:Remarkable candor (Score:2)
Re:Remarkable candor (Score:2)
I would also guess that Google has no servers in France, and they are regulated there as well.
Re:Remarkable candor (Score:2)
While you make a lot of good points this is the prime problem. The Chinese government can stop the transfer of money to Google if Google does not comply to the govt's will. They have strict controls over all types of info, not just political.
Yeah right. (Score:5, Funny)
Sadly, the writers made the unfortunate mistake of pointing out important parts using the infamous "black highlighter." They could not be located for clarification.
Let Me Get This Straight: (Score:5, Insightful)
If China censors free speech, that's bad.
But if fundamentalist religious zealots threaten us with violence for exercising free speech, we're okay with that.
Seriously - WTF?
Re:Let Me Get This Straight: (Score:4, Informative)
Sad.
Re:Let Me Get This Straight: (Score:3, Insightful)
Just because you can say it doesn't mean there aren't consequenses from saying it! To think that someone can stand on their soapbox and rant on about something that infuriates others and not have their ass kicked shows a severe lack of common sense.
That said, there's definitely room for tolerance of conflicting opinions, views, etc. in our world. But don't expect everyone to act that way.
Re:Let Me Get This Straight: (Score:5, Insightful)
This is such a god damm strawman argument and I am so sick and tired of it. People who say that freedom of speech and of the press are important values (like the GP) aren't saying that speech should be free from consequences. However consequences is defined in a very particular way. When people, correctly, say that there are "consequences" to speech, they aren't talking about bombings, riots, murder, and all that bullshit. Stop equating some doofus at some university for getting himself kicked out because he posts stuff on the internet (a legal consequence), with people who riot in the streets, burn buildings, cause violence, kill each other, and threaten to kill the people who said stuff they disagree with half a world away.
Muslims, including many moderates, feel that a paper should not be allowed to insult their religion. That is the very definition of a violation of free speech. Threatening to kill Danish citizens is not a "consequence" of freedom of speech. Pissing someone off doesn't give them the right to burn shit, and kill people. That is not a valid "consequence" of speech.
Re:Let Me Get This Straight: (Score:2)
Re:Let Me Get This Straight: (Score:3, Interesting)
>This is such a god damm strawman argument and I am so sick and tired of it. >People who say that freedom of speech and of the press are important values >(like the GP) aren't saying that speech should be free from consequences. >However consequences is defined in a very particular way.
It'd be nice if you gave a definition and not examples.
>When people, correctly, say that there are "consequences" to spe
100% dead wrong (Score:2)
if someone attacks you violently for what you say, they are wrong. the punishment for a crime cannot exceed the damage caused by the crime. otherwise, you have an escalation of violence. you cannot blame someone for inciting you to do a crime which is worse than the crime you are resonding to
if i slap you, and you shoot me in the face in retu
Re: (Score:2)
Re:100% dead wrong (Score:2)
There are many immoral acts that are entirely legal.
There are many illegal acts that are entirely moral.
I think that the discussion being had was more about what was moral than what was legal, and a judge is perhaps a poor choice of guide for morality... he'll get too hung up on the relevant law.
If someone strikes you, you have many options... It is entirely morally acceptible for you t
well said (Score:2)
you're completely wrong (Score:2)
Re:Let Me Get This Straight: (Score:2)
No, but what do you propose we do about it, other than get into a "Bush is bad," "No, Islam is a violent religion," fight?
Re:Let Me Get This Straight: (Score:2)
That's weird. I think Bush is bad, and I also think Islam is a violent religion. I'm confused. These don't seem like opposing viewpoints to me.
exactly (Score:5, Insightful)
however, the problem is that, even with all of these mitigations, there is still a worrisome, large segment of the muslim world that thinks their reaction, violence, is appropriate. in other words...
1. the muslims were provoked: true
2. most muslims react peacefully and appropriately: true
3. western media shows a disproportionate amount of violent reaction: true
and yet, after all of those mitigations, there still really are a lot of muslims, a disporportionately, worrying large amount, who reacted with violence. and this points to a real problem in the muslim world, that haters of the west, and apologists for the muslim world, or anyone else for that matter, would be foolish to think they can ignore as a serious issue.
Re:exactly (Score:2)
Re:exactly (Score:3, Insightful)
Small percentage? There's thousands of Muslims rioting and attacking embassies. If it were a few small groups of extremists, that'd be one thing. But popularly-supported riots with thousands of people is another thing entirely. It's pretty obvious that the behavior of these violent Muslims is fairly representative of the feelings of the majority.
You can't call them "a few extremists" any more when there's thousands of them
Re:exactly (Score:5, Insightful)
Let us do some math.
Assuming that there were demonstrations in 10 countries, and there were 2,000 people in each demonstration, this makes up for 20,000 Muslims involved.
I am in a generous mood, so let us say 5,000 in each demonstration, in 20 countries. Total is 100,000 Muslims then. Mind you not all of these were violent, nor involved property damage. The most notable torching of embassies was in Lebanon and Syria, perhaps a couple of others.
Now, how much is 100,000 in the total population of Muslims worldwide which is estimated at 1.2 billion or more? This is 0.008% of the total.
Even if we assume that there are 1,200,000 Muslims involved, this is still 0.01%.
Negligible for sure.
You can read an alternative view in some thoughts on the prophet Muhammad cartoons controversy [baheyeldin.com].
You have a point here about the victimization complex, and I agree with it.
On the other hand, if it not have been for the two recent invasions of Muslim countries, this argument would have been stronger.
Too bad that you sympathy is gone because of some choice footage in the media that leaves a lot of background and context.
By the same token, the rest of the world solely judges the USA from what they see from Hollywood and TV shows, as well as its actions (foreign policy and military). This is unfair, but it is the sore thumb sticking out. Judging should be based on a deeper multi-facted analysis.
Good idea. Intervention was wrong in the first place. But it is not going to happen, since there is so much at stake (oil, geo-politics,
Re:exactly (Score:2)
Negligible for sure.
Sorry, I still don't buy it. I really don't care about the total number of Muslims in the world; what's more important is how many people are gathering and having a violent protest in one place. Any time you have thousands of people in a single place, that's a lot. If there's enough people in Lebanon who have gathered and are able to torch an embassy (somehow without any resistance from law enforcement, w
Re:exactly (Score:2)
Where is the islamic world's condemnation of Syria manipulating the affairs of Lebanon? Nowhere.
The goal of most governments in Islamic states is to maintain a sense of unbalance within their populations, to keep the focus of the ills of the populations on the Western Infidel governments, etc.
Only in Lebanon do we have a sense that SOME people in the Islamic world have a clue, that
Re:exactly (Score:2)
Blame the leadership. For instance, in Beirut many people attended what they expected to be a peaceful demonstration that then turned violent. [bbc.co.uk] Also, several Danes in Beirut have said that they have felt support from the local population and have wanted to stay. Some of them have gotten cold feet along the way, but that's somewhat understandable since 100 good neighbours might not be enough to save you from one crazy islamofasc
Re:exactly (Score:2)
Also ironic is the fact that people are getting violent over the fact that someone insinua
Re:exactly (Score:2, Interesting)
Provoked perhaps deliberately. Here [brusselsjournal.com] are the 12 cartoons that were actually published. However it might be much of this furor is over three cartoons that were never published.
This is from the following article [alternet.org]...
"The dossier contained at least three cartoons that had never been published in Denmark. These were brutally offensive; indeed, they were incendiary. One shows Mohammed as a pedophiliac demon. Another shows Mohammed with a pig snout. The third shows a pray
Re:exactly (Score:3, Interesting)
that's an accurate statement (Score:3, Funny)
it even started, ironically, with a danish troll: the cartoons. trolls being a nordic invention, i think, that makes sense?
Re:Let Me Get This Straight: (Score:2)
Our opinions count too you know.
Plus some of those cartoons arguably count as hate speech.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: False choice there (Score:2)
>
> But if fundamentalist religious zealots threaten us with
> violence for exercising free speech, we're okay with that.
Find a single person who is "okay with that."
The whole cartoon situation is two problems, one much worse than the other. First, printing something that is offensive (shouldn't be a big deal, it happens every day, but it is still offensive). Second, reacting violently - which is completely inexcusable.
Re: False choice there (Score:2)
I'm not a Muslim, so all of those various comics simply elicited a chuckle from me, the same as the numerous comical portrayals of Jesus elicit a chuckle from me, the same as the humorous portrayals of Athiests elicit a chuckle from me... None of those comics are offensive to me. On that
Re: False choice there (Score:2)
You are also an idiot because you don't understand that there are different cultures in this world. Perhaps rather than looking at them through your eyes, you look at what those cartoons would mean to a person that was raised to revere god above all else and then has to deal with some hip western journalist making a joke about that.
lol. I'm the one that should understand th
Re:Let Me Get This Straight: (Score:2)
The Chinese government is in no sense a democracy, and thus government censorship policies should in no way be taken as indicative of the desires of the Chinese people.
Worldwide Press Freedom Index 2005 (Score:5, Informative)
Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Ireland, Netherlands, Norway, Switzerland all tied for 1st place.
The USA ranked 44th. (Fell more than 20 places)
China ranked 159th.
Re:Worldwide Press Freedom Index 2005 (Score:2)
The article states that the US fell in rank for imprisoning reporters who wouldn't divulge sources. This was due to an overzealous prosecutor investigating the CIA operative leak. So the Democrats are responsible for destroying freedom of press since getting back at the Republicans is more important than basic civil liberties (Republicans do this all the time too).
"The Index also refutes the theory frequently advanced by leaders of poor and repressive countri
Re:Worldwide Press Freedom Index 2005 (Score:5, Insightful)
There is a reason why the USA slipped of course and ranks at 44th place, but abuses of press get a lot more press if it happens in the USA. The only way to know about these abuses is more or less the same mechanism that the report is criticizing.
Take for example Hungary, my home country at the 12th place. Now, around 80-90% of the media here is owned by ex-communist leaders who transferred their political power into economic one. That makes for a pretty biased press. I'm not sure if I would take the USA's press over what we have here, but I'd take the UK's press any day (especially the beeb) and they got the 24th place while Hungary is 12 places higher.
This freedom of press report should be taken with a pinch of salt. I'm no expert on press in most of the world, but based on how it represents local press I have to conclude it to be pretty inaccurate.
Re:Worldwide Press Freedom Index 2005 (Score:2)
Re:Worldwide Press Freedom Index 2005 (Score:2, Insightful)
The people making this report have a different idea of what free press is than here. Many of those countries at the top would jail anyone who ran a Nazi or otherwise racist publication. In the US, you have the right to free sp
Stunning. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Stunning. (Score:2)
Which is exactly why I don't trust them. Yet if they're just jockying for influence with the current government, and maintain their totalitarian roots, then I don't understand why they would choose this tack. Are they just willing to forment unrest and revolt in whatever way possible? Seems like they would be undermining their own position... B
...but they'll gladly take billions from China (Score:3, Insightful)
If they're so evil, stop accepting the money, it's really simple
Re:...but they'll gladly take billions from China (Score:3)
Talk (Score:2)
make up your minds... and ours.... (Score:3, Funny)
I'm so confused...
All I'm going to say (Score:2)
Crock O' Shite (Score:4, Interesting)
When a woman who has spent the majority of her adult life in service to Rev. Moon there's very little credibility there.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
in other news.. (Score:2)
Fight For Your Rights! (Score:2)
Oh, heh.. nevermind.
It's Not Just Censorship (Score:2, Interesting)
For instance, they're [REDACTED] about the [REDACTED] insofar as [REDACTED] is concerned, and yet they continually [REDACTED] the [REDACTED] for as long as they can [REDACTED].
I wish they'd address those issues as well.
Ironic (Score:2)
Hey, there's some progress. Next thing you know, the US will be voicing it's "very serious concerns" about warrantless searches.
In other news... (Score:2)
Strange (Score:2, Insightful)
What you don't hear about is the riots in the countryside and local government officials (mostly even more corrupted than the central officials) gathering warlord-like power and basically dickslap the orders/directives from the central government.
Chinese central government is not as strong as mo
Not ironic (Score:2)
I don't get it (Score:3, Interesting)
Don't get me wrong, I don't pretend to understand all the issues - or politics really.
But I don't understand why US lawmakers are giving US companies a hard time for complying with Chinese law in China. I mean, seriously - if you go to your local retailer and look at the goods for sale half say "Made in China", 49% more say "Made in Taiwan", and 1% say "Assembled in the USA". (Which reminds me, in Bush's recent state of the uninion didn't he say the foreground of the US economy was going to be our developing manufacturing industry?)
Anyway, point being - if the US lawmakers feel so strongly why are there not import/export sanctions on China rather then politcal badmouthing and epeen flexing?
Like I said, I just don't get it - but sure would like to understand more - I've googled but all I can find is fingerpointing and namecalling rather than any real pertinent information about why it's working this way. (Which I imagine someone is going to say it's political and all there is to be had on the subject is opinions, fingerpointing, and namecalling anyway.)
Ohh well, I suppose were it up to me I'd be doing my best to make sure importing goods evened out with manufacturing them here in the US. Guess that's why it's not up to me! (Kinda like I'd like to see outsourced IT end up costing US companies just as much (yes I know some would argue it already does) as having a US citizen as an employee)
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
China not Totalitarian? (Score:2)
Totalitarian: A political system based on absolute power of a single party or dictator.
If 1984 is anything to go on... (Score:2)
The U.S. has a very high ratio of spending on military vs. Education.
Heck today on slashdot they have an Artical about the U.S. military using video games to train soldiers
Ahhh - The Irony (Score:2)
So the Elders offer their comments to a news source they know cannot be read in China.
Oh, the irony (Score:2)
TWW
Re:hm (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:hm (Score:5, Informative)
There is a difference between protecting privacy and censorship. Privacy protection involves stopping the dissemination of personal information. On the other hand, censorship involves stopping the dissemination of public information.
For example, protecting my medical records, making it inaccessible to others without my permission, is protecting my privacy. Stopping news report of an earth quake, for another example, would be censorship.
Cheers.
B.Pascal
Re:hm (Score:2, Interesting)
in most cases I suppose, it is pretty easy to determine how the data should be flagged.
what about the cases where the line is not so black and white?
one could make arguments for both sides regarding something like the formula for a new drug. or source code. heck, even your medical records would be valuable public data when aggregated with large amounts of other records.
my only point is that i don't think it
Re:hm (Score:2)
The personel records of school janitors? We recently had a local TV news reporter leafing through an elementary school janitor's HR records on camera in a story about a suspected pedophile case.
Should the yearly pay of that janitor be public knowledge?
Should the home address of, say, a Probation Officer be publicly available?
It is amazing how much data that would normally be considered private (even if easily obtained given an SSN)
Re:hm (Score:5, Informative)
Sorry to go slighly off topic, and to do some lecturing myself, but I find it incredibly sad that we've (rather, the influence of the MPAA/RIAA and similar) have created a society that actual believes your statement above. That the absurdity of owning an idea as if it were tangible property is not apparent to everyone, but rather embraced by many if not the majority, almost brings me to tears over the future of civilized society. The really sad part is that this concept of private ownership goes well beyond existing IP laws. People don't actually "own" IP; the laws allow a limited (in time and extent) right of denial for copying, distributing, or implementing the IP depending on it's form. This limited monopoly is not an inherent right of ownership, but rather an incentive to publicize the IP so that others can learn from it and use it in the long run, thus benefiting society.
To quote Thomas Jefferson [red-bean.com]:
Re:hm (Score:2)
Re:hm (Score:3, Informative)
Not really. Censorship means preventing the originator of the information from publishing it. Protecting privacy means enabling the originator of the information to keep it private, that is, not to publish it if he or she does not wish to. The one case in which protection of privacy and censorship come together is when party A wants to publish information about party B. There is then a potential conflict between A's freedom of speech and B's right to privacy.
In US law, and generally in the law of countri
Re:Hypocrits (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hypocrits (Score:2)
Re:Hypocrits (Score:3, Insightful)
No, it is not. "Censorship" would be actually preventing or punishing display and distribution of said cartoon. Expressing disapproval of someone else's speech is itself a subset of free speech (not that the Government technically has First Amendment rights, but the principal applies.)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Hypocrits (Score:2)
The real tragedy here is that you also lost. Twice.
But you still don't realize it.
Regards,
Ross
P.S. Not that Kerry was that much better. I so wish that McCain wins the Republican primary. He's a candidate that I'd vote for in a minute.
Re:Hypocrits (Score:2)
So get the fuck over it yourself.
Re:Hypocrits (Score:2)
China not being hypocritical here? What???
Re:Hypocrits (Score:3, Insightful)
I say we should be willing to forgive some degree of hypocricy, in ourselves and in others, if we want to make progress. That doesn't make hypocricy OK, but acknowledging that we are not perfect is a step in the right direction. A hypocrite needs a way to move forward. It's simply insane to demand that all hypocricy stop at once. If you have ever tried to abandon hypocricy in your own life you will kn
Re:Hypocrits (Score:2)
Moderators are making like a Chinese official and censoring the crap out of you. The meteoric rise and fall in your karma has satisified me.
Re:Hypocrits (Score:3, Interesting)
BTW, it's spelt 'hypocritEs'.
Re:mod down this moron (Score:2, Offtopic)
Then of course, this national spying was squelched for a bit.
Likewise, we have GWB and the doj trying to censor Sibel edmunds. She is a wh
Re:mod down this moron (Score:2)
Re:Content Censorship (Score:2)
Censorship is normally construed to mean prevention of publication of what the writer has to say, which most of the time takes the form of his or her own words. Therefore, in copyright restrictions can only lead to censorship in limited circumstances. They aren't a broad tool for censorship as you suggest.
It is true, though, that sometimes what one has to say requires the citation of someone elses words as evidence. This is supposed to be covered by the Fair use exemption. The classic case is that of a
Re:Copyright - Censorship (Score:2)
Uh, "limited circumstances" like one TV interview, not exactly most or all or even a very significant part of the material relevant to a presidential election. Furthermore, if you actually red the article about the Bush case, you'll discover two crucial points. First, there's no evidence that Bush or his people had any role in this. It was NBC. Second, and crucially, in spite of the fact that NBC refused permission, the journalist in question used the clip anyway, relying on his Fair Use rights.
So, as I
Re:Copyright - Censorship (Score:2)
The Kerry example is not good either. As with the Bush example, the entity enforcing the copyright is not Kerry or his campaign, it is the professional photographer who took the pictures. Professional photographers tend to be fussy about copyright for commercial reasons - there isn't any reason to believe that this one is attempting any sort of censorship. Indeed, one of the first comments on Slashdot was from the photographer for Howard Dean's campagin making this very point.
Here again, if these photog
Re:Content Censorship (Score:2)
Good point. I agree.
Re:Isn't this like (Score:2)
(hhgttg reference for those who heard a great big *whoosh* as it blew right over their heads...)
Re:But what are they censoring ? (Score:2)
Re:Why you guys bother? (Score:2)
And as another sign of how the west censors the Internet, not a single mention of western powers invading China in the early 1900s can be found. Are you talking about the Boxer Rebellion [wikipedia.org]? "Invasion"?
Re:Why you guys bother? (Score:2)
Re:do want partial truth or manipulated whole trut (Score:2)
(chinese) you have a government censor your information but you know that it is censored and therefore not the whole truth. (western) you have media networks censor and manipulate your information at their will and benefit but you think you have an objective view about the entire state of the world?
the first is a subset of what is happening in the real world, but it doesn't contradict the whole truth. the second claims to be the whole truth but isn't - and people happily live believe it.