EU Views Net Censorship As a "Trade Barrier" 245
I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "The European Parliament just passed a proposal to treat internet censorship as a trade barrier, in particular the 'Great Firewall of China.' If passed by the European Council, the issue would be raised in trade negotiations and could lead to economic sanctions and trade restrictions for those countries unwilling to remove oppressive Net censorship." We have discussed some of the ways in which the EU, and its member countries, engage in their own brand of censorship.
The EU May Be Censoring... (Score:5, Funny)
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~Hands you your Captain Obvious hat~
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Re:The EU May Be Censoring... (Score:5, Insightful)
I still believe if we had extended full trade relations towards Cuba as soon as they revolted, their communism would have quickly changed into something more balanced.
Oppression can only exist in a vacuum. Opening your doors to such nations doesn't encourage them, it makes them interdependant, and exposes them to better systems. Just look at China - they are by no means perfect, but exposure to the free market has changed them drastically.
Re:The EU May Be Censoring... (Score:4, Funny)
There, fix that for you.
So you're the one who let the terrorists in. Jerk.
Re:The EU May Be Censoring... (Score:5, Funny)
There, fix that for you. So you're the one who let the terrorists in. Jerk.
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I so wanted to shoot myself in the head just so I wouldn't have to hear them debate a play on words endlessly...
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Cuba is not a degraded high-output copier... (Score:2)
it makes them interdependant, and exposes them to better systems.
In the case of the Far East, it's just enabled quicker and more effective means of oppression.
Just look at China - they are by no means perfect, but exposure to the free market has changed them drastically.
They still make the same low-quality junk and still oppress their own, just by the hand of business. This is nearly 30 years later - and they flood our schools, forcibly devalue their currency, pull regular cook-booking stunts on larger orders than Enron, and cant seem to act more than a degraded copying machine. Same oppression, different system, higher scale.
Then you wonder why a large sizable chunk wants to "b
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Well, in that situation they pay market price for tuition, which at government universities is far higher than domestic students pay. Western universities make billions of dollars from Chinese students. Of course there is a price to pay in communications difficulties since differences in language and academic culture make teaching them, working with them and hanging out with them harder but this is the ultimately the choice of the university involved rather than some imposition from
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Oh, you mean the way the CPC managed to conglomerate fortune for itself at expense of relinquishing very little power, sustain unbalanced economic growth at the cost of environmental degradation and labour abuse, arouse national sentiment to further consolidate conformity and suppress opposition, and best yet, dump products to the largest economy of the world and then become its banker, and in
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Good greif, have you people never heard of the silk road? And didn't Columbus trip over America while trying to find a short cut to Asia?
Mao was a nut-job who did a 'back to nature' thing on China that makes Pol Pot look like a flower child. Since Mao's cultural revolution was abandoned, China has dragged more people above the poverty line than the rest of the planet put together.
China, like the US is
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Re:The EU May Be Censoring... (Score:5, Insightful)
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The only situation where I see censorship for a "think of the children" argument is in public school where they are mandated to serve "in loc
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While I agree that some of the censorship in Europe is the more benign kind - I'm talking about the holocaust denial prosecution - it is probably less helpful than if society's moral self-censorship would be allowed to run it's course.
Re:The EU May Be Censoring... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:The EU May Be Censoring... (Score:4, Insightful)
He was saying that the government should crush and destroy those subcultures that are trying to gas dozens of millions of people in gas chambers and use them as fertiliser.
And I have no problem with any such subculture being crushed and destroyed, as I think that mass genocide and world war is something completely different than "annoying freedom". Unfortunately, censorship is not the answer.
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There's absolutely no need for a blanket ban
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Asking the state to censor an idea because you find it wrong and offensive is advocating totalitarian oppression, plain a
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As the present and unbroken line leading to the current Chinese government has, sadly during its various terrors unleashed by its still hero, Chairman Mao, killed far more than the nazis in Europe, is your position that you advocate the censorship and blocking of everything Chinese? The Chinese government recently looked like it would fin
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As the present and unbroken line leading to the current Chinese government has, sadly during its various terrors unleashed by its still hero, Chairman Mao, killed far more than the nazis in Europe, is your position that you advocate the censorship and blocking of everything Chinese? The Chinese government recently looked like it would finally acknowledge how bad Mao was, but in the end, they concluded "he was more good than bad."
Maoist groups have a similar political standing in Germany as neo-Nazi groups, as both are considered anti-constitutional.
The difference in what is banned has to do with the fact that there were dozens of millions of Nazis in Germany half a century ago, and there are still many out there right now, whereas there have been approximately 200 Mao supporters in the entire history of Germany (a slight hyperbole here). Maoists IN GERMANY don't pose any threat whatsoever, and probably never will. Just like Nazis
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It is not a matter of personal disapproval with the neonazis. It is a recorded danger.
I didn't realize that catholic paraphernalia was also banned in Europe, as it must be since the Inquisition is a recorded danger that executed people of other faiths, especially jews.
I realize my reply is somewhat flippant, but you must understand that many, many groups are responsible for terrible crimes throughout history. I don't approve of Nazis, nor Neo-Nazis. On the other hand I do believe that free expression is a basic human right and I don't see that painting a swastika implicitly removes the ri
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If secular government had power in Europe at the time they would have rightly done just that. However, they were not and the inquisition is hundreds of years in the past now.
The world wars have been over for a long time too. Most of the people who were alive during them are now dead.
The entire cultural basis on which it operated has changed.
I disagree. There are still numerous christian extremist groups responsible for murder. Jews, homosexuals, atheists, etc. have all been killed in the past year by intolerant christians. (And lets not look at religious motivations for recent wars.) What about Islam? In the name of Islam a lot of people have been killed lately. Should the EU ban Islamic imagery?
The danger of the neonazi groups is that they are modeled on existing cultures and so must be dealt with until nothing remains for them to operate and cause such immense damage again.
That will never be true. Someone
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That's exactly what makes the whole thing still dangerous after 60 years. He was charismatic. He could win people to his side. He could speak to the masses. He could play with the emotions of the people. This is why it is still outlawed to broadcast his speeches in full and uncommented on
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They claim they want to give the public more power - in fact, the film was approved years ago after the BBFC relaxed its censorship policies, after consulting with the public. What they actually mean is, they want the power to ban films everytime there is a media uproar from a vocal minority (who haven't even seen the film).
Of course they string out Nazism as the worse example, but we know th
Re:The EU May Be Censoring... (Score:5, Insightful)
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I'll have to remember that one as a retort for the next time I try to have unprotected sex with a lady.
Re:The EU May Be Censoring... Adult Porn (Score:2)
(Said law is currently going through the House of Lords, and if not stopped will be law by 8 May [backlash-uk.org.uk].)
Although having said that, the EU does at least give a tool to fight these various kinds of censorship, in that the European Convention on Human Rights at last gives us the
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EU Moving to Ban Online Hate Speech [slashdot.org]
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Mind reading CAPTCHA? barbecue
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That country is Finland.
Finnish Censorship Expanding (Score:3, Informative)
It was discussed on
Finnish Censorship Expanding
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/02/19/0252236 [slashdot.org]
This one was a surprise to me. Link provided for those who don't want to hit Google to find WTF.
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Positive movement (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Positive movement (Score:4, Insightful)
Correct. The real power in Europe is not found in Brussels, but in Paris and London and Berlin. The member states are very powerful and independent; the Brussels government is really just a jumped-up trading association, whose remit is to unify the European market for free trade, and to speak on behalf of the member states as a union in disputes with foreign powers such as the US and China.
So, the EU directives tend to have to do with trading standards - hence the standardisation of weights and measures, the ongoing harmonisation of labour laws, and the project to establish a common currency. The member states make their own decisions about media censorship, based on local standards: hence the famous ban on Nazi memorabilia in Germany.
However, EU directives are binding on the member states and do have to be implemented - at least in theory. So this might well be a good thing. Not sure it's the best precedent, though; it reminds me more than a little of the way the American federal government abuses the 'interstate commerce' rule to usurp the states' power. That's not something even I want to see in Europe, and I'm way over on the federalist side of the spectrum.
So self-righteously inflicted self-harm? (Score:2, Insightful)
Man, I always thought that they were somewhat self-destructive but damn...
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EU states have been getting in trouble with the EU for years. Mostly it is about money.
Each country is entirely sovereign and can make its own policy. They just may have to answer for it...
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Selective law enforcement is what the corrupt and oppressive governments do to dissidents, political opponents, and other undesireables all the while claming to uphold the law.
One recent example of this is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mikhail_Khodorkovsky [wikipedia.org]
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A
Social justice will create better markets (Score:2)
Re:Social justice will create better markets (Score:4, Insightful)
This is why there are many vibrant communities for the support of racism, discrimination, xenophobia, and suspicion of conspiracies by Other People.
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Re:Social justice will create better markets (Score:5, Funny)
I like it. I can't help but believe that unfettered world wide access to information will lead to a more informed populations that will shun oppression and xenophobia in favor of participatory government and ethno-religious tolerance. This, in turn, will lead to more prosperity and consumer spending.
Because the internet is such a haven of enlightened tolerance now.
This move could be a big mistake (Score:4, Insightful)
France, for example, could wind up with a lot worse than old Jerry Lewis movies if the US is able to to turn this argument against the EU.
No, the should never have let China into the WTO until there were *real* advances made in China's human rights record.
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It also has to do with the fact that western workers are essentially competing with serfs and other bonded laborers. People in China are not free, and their working conditions and standards reflect that. How is someone in a democracy supposed to compete with a factory owner in China who can literally own slaves [bbc.co.uk]?
Do w
Germany? (Score:2)
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AND France, and Austria, and Slovakia, and Czech... and others. A significant percentage of the EU censors something. So to describe this as disingenuous is generous to say the least.
God only knows what the UK censors... since I am an inmate there... I mean live there... I can't see out past Hadrian's Firewall, so I've n
UK blocked sites? (Score:2)
I see this list of domains: http://lapsiporno.info/filtered.demon [lapsiporno.info] (from a Google search for uk net censorship list)
It claims the sites aren't accessible, and perhaps it's true. I'm not willing to look too closely, they're (apparently) child pornography sites an
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My ISP isn't on the list of ISPs implementing the blocking, so my experiments with DNS requests might just show that the sites aren't reliable, though it's strange that the MIT nameserver resolves where mine won't. Perhaps they are using a different system based on similar information?
(Back to the point -- this is much differen
nazi ban (Score:2)
And that is basically the only thing banned, else you are free to say or do anything. I have no problems with the nazi ban, large portions of my family (non jewish) suffered dearly under the nazis and as far as I'm concerned it's a crimin
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So why aren't Roman artifacts banned as well?
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I really, really wish I was kidding.
Re:nazi ban (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm against censorship, but some people lack any perspective whatsoever....
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Re:nazi ban (Score:5, Insightful)
Using Nazi symbols is explicitly allowed in Germany, if it is used for historical reasons, in documentaries, movies depicting that time, or any scholarly purpose. The museums are full of historical artifacts from that time. What "destruction" are you talking about?
What is not allowed is glorifying the Nazi regime and holocaust denial, as well as reselling Nazi symbols. Mein Kampf is not banned, or illegal, it just can't be printed. There are plenty of copies floating around. But it's illegal to take a copy to school, and then try to convince kids that it's full of great ideas and that they should try them on their colleague with immigration background. Which happens right now, in Germany.
I agree that banning things is not the way. But some people act as if Germany is doing it out of some childish spite, not real historical and political reasons. Millions of people were executed in concentration camps by the Nazi regime and there are many people still around who are trying to repeat that today. Comparing TODAY's Nazi gangs with Romans and Carthage shows complete lack of perspective.
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In the US they are allowed free speech, freedom of assembly, etc.
They are allowed free speech, freedom of assembly, etc. in Germany too.
In the USA, you're not allowed to openly advocate murder of somebody or issue death threats-- it is illegal and will land you in jail. In Germany, you are not allowed to glorify the holocaust or the Nazi regime in addition to that. There are still Nazi political parties in Germany, and they are represented in some smaller local parliaments. Only they can't directly praise the third reich or the holocaust. Their programme is not that dif
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I understand what you're saying and why you're saying it, but I don't agree with you. Censorship is always wrong. As one who has lived in Berlin for a long time and seen a great deal of Neo-Nazi activity, I know it is terrifying, and it is getting much worse. However, the censorship is part of the problem, it's encouraging it and not preventing it.
You add censorship then you add mystery, glamor and excitement of breaking a taboo.
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You add censorship then you add mystery, glamor and excitement of breaking a taboo. You also drive the Nazis underground and make them hard to find.
I actually agree with you. You cannot ban ideas, you have to fight them in the open. The censorship is simply the admission of the government that they have no better solution. It's a desperate attempt to stop the spread of said ideologies by making sure it can't be spread publically.
It's just that some people don't understand that Nazi symbols have a very different weight in Germany than Roman or Mongol insignia, both historically and today.
Re:nazi ban (Score:5, Insightful)
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Sucessssss like Cuba? (Score:3, Insightful)
Perhaps I ought to bow to the intellectual gods who populate the European Parliament and give them whatever rights I have left, because although this sounds pretty contradictory to me, I'm sure they are correct! After all, they are from the government, therefore their job is to help me!
The trade embargo with Cuba hasn't seemed to have worked...it's proponents have had enough time to prove it. So why would sanctions just magically work here? How would oppressing the already oppressed people China in the EU help?
Their logic is like this: some people are oppressed a bit it in some other country far away that makes stuff for us cheaply. So the way to fix it is to oppress the country even more, while simultaneously oppressing home! Why can't these do gooders leave people alone? Perhaps they can't get a job anywhere else? Also, kind of ironic that China looks like it is getting freer, in contrast to the EU.
What an earth would we do without the EU? I can't imagine life without it, the world would surely collapse, society would be in ruins!
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The trade embargo with Cuba hasn't seemed to have worked...it's proponents have had enough time to prove it. So why would sanctions just magically work here? How would oppressing the already oppressed people China in the EU help?
I'm not saying that I think the EU's plan would work, but one big difference here is that a big part of China's economy is based upon exporting stuff to the West. As far as I know a big part of Cuba's economy isn't?
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The trade embargo with Cuba hasn't seemed to have worked...it's proponents have had enough time to prove it. So why would sanctions just magically work here? How would oppressing the already oppressed people China in the EU help?
I'm not saying that I think the EU's plan would work, but one big difference here is that a big part of China's economy is based upon exporting stuff to the West. As far as I know a big part of Cuba's economy isn't?
There are other western countries than the USA that trade with Cuba -- e.g. Netherlands, Germany, Canada. I can't easily find anything saying how much of Cuba's economy depends on this.
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That's an important question, but trade sanctions did help to end apartheid in South Africa. So why does it work sometimes and not at other times? Looking at Cuba - having trading partners left which are willing to help you (like Russia, and several Latin American countries) could be one factor. Another could be whether you have segments of the population which have some economical and political power and stand to lose from the embargo. The central governmen
nazi paraphernelia (Score:2)
kettle, meet pot. (Score:2)
OUR censorship isn't bad, but other people's cencorship is...
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OUR censorship isn't bad, but other people's cencorship is...
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He was the head of the country, voted legally in by the citizens. His campaign was truly democratic, and look what it got the peoples of Germany.
I could understand safeguarding the government so that kind of corruption could never happen again.
We look it as censorship.. I'd say they look it as shame as part of their history.
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Usage of nazi symbols is forbidden in toys. Video games are characterized as toys. Nazi flags are nazi symbols.
This 3 pieves of information should explain all details of what the OP seems to think to know.
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You can kill Nazis. They can goosestep around the place and give stiff-armed salutes and sing the Horst Wessel Song and shout achtung achtung for you Tommy zer war is over. They just can't display the insignia: chiefly, no swastikas.
Which is why the Germans in WW2 games tend to have a red flag with a white circle on which is emblazoned the Iron Cross.
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(if your weren't one, you would spot the difference between the facts and what he (or you) thinks)
Interesting. (Score:2)
i kind of sympathize with europe (Score:2)
if the usa went through the kind of trauma they did over nazism, i can see myself being convinced to give up my freedom of expression fundamentalism and make a special unique case for clamping down on nazi expression, with an expiration date in a generation or two when the spectre doesn't hang over europe and is instead more of a horror story from ancient history
meanwhile, in china and iran, the motivation to censor is purely power retention and ridiculous notions of fundament
not likely (Score:2)
To the extent there is any actual organized power in international trade relationships -- I mean, power other than that collectively wielded in an unorganized, ad hoc way by various bilateral agreements between concerned nations -- it resides in the G8.
Just because people call themselves an i
Re:not likely (Score:5, Informative)
Together, these countries represent about 65% of the world economy. Half the G8 is European and can vote as a block for European interests. Aside from a 2 country North America block, the other countries have no reason to be unified, unlike the European countries.
So in fact the EU Parliament does have huge influence in the G8.
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The European parliament makes laws that can be enforced across all member countries. Most of the time the countries act as individual countries, but above them all is European law which can dictate certain stances and actions right across Europe.
So while the EU Parliament does not have direct power over bodies such as the G8 they can enact/enforce laws in all EU countries in the G8.
That is power.
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That is true for the G8, but the G8 is an artificial economic group. It's really the G7 plus Russia. Russia isn't anywhere near the economies of the rest, nor is it anything like the 8th largest economy. They just had lots of weapons and wanted in during the time of the Cold War.
Thus the EU does dominate the G7, it's more than half. Although the US has a bigger economy that the r
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The USA does not have a bigger economy. Of course it depends on how you are measuring that. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(PPP) [wikipedia.org]
Rank Country GDP (PPP) $m
EU European Union 14,953,057
1 United States 13,543,330
2 China 11,606,3361
3 India 4,726,537
4 Japan 4,346,080
5 Germany 2,714,46