China’s firewall: not technology, but psychology. Fascinating article. 
Posted: 23 March 2008 12:53 PM   [ Ignore ]
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http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200803/chinese-firewall?reddit

The first thing they’ll probably notice is that China’s Internet seems slow. Partly this is because of congestion in China’s internal networks, which affects domestic and international transmissions alike. Partly it is because even electrons take a detectable period of time to travel beneath the Pacific Ocean to servers in America and back again; the trip to and from Europe is even longer, because that goes through America, too. And partly it is because of the delaying cycles imposed by China’s system that monitors what people are looking for on the Internet, especially when they’re looking overseas. That’s what foreigners have heard about.

They’ll likely be surprised, then, to notice that China’s Internet seems surprisingly free and uncontrolled. Can they search for information about “Tibet independence” or “Tiananmen shooting” or other terms they have heard are taboo? Probably—and they’ll be able to click right through to the controversial sites. Even if they enter the Chinese-language term for “democracy in China,” they’ll probably get results. What about Wikipedia, famously off-limits to users in China? They will probably be able to reach it. Naturally the visitors will wonder: What’s all this I’ve heard about the “Great Firewall” and China’s tight limits on the Internet?

In reality, what the Olympic-era visitors will be discovering is not the absence of China’s electronic control but its new refinement—and a special Potemkin-style unfettered access that will be set up just for them, and just for the length of their stay. According to engineers I have spoken with at two tech organizations in China, the government bodies in charge of censoring the Internet have told them to get ready to unblock access from a list of specific Internet Protocol (IP) addresses—certain Internet cafés, access jacks in hotel rooms and conference centers where foreigners are expected to work or stay during the Olympic Games. (I am not giving names or identifying details of any Chinese citizens with whom I have discussed this topic, because they risk financial or criminal punishment for criticizing the system or even disclosing how it works. Also, I have not gone to Chinese government agencies for their side of the story, because the very existence of Internet controls is almost never discussed in public here, apart from vague statements about the importance of keeping online information “wholesome.”)

Depending on how you look at it, the Chinese government’s attempt to rein in the Internet is crude and slapdash or ingenious and well crafted. When American technologists write about the control system, they tend to emphasize its limits. When Chinese citizens discuss it—at least with me—they tend to emphasize its strength. All of them are right, which makes the government’s approach to the Internet a nice proxy for its larger attempt to control people’s daily lives.

Disappointingly, “Great Firewall” is not really the right term for the Chinese government’s overall control strategy. China has indeed erected a firewall—a barrier to keep its Internet users from dealing easily with the outside world—but that is only one part of a larger, complex structure of monitoring and censorship. The official name for the entire approach, which is ostensibly a way to keep hackers and other rogue elements from harming Chinese Internet users, is the “Golden Shield Project.” Since that term is too creepy to bear repeating, I’ll use “the control system” for the overall strategy, which includes the “Great Firewall of China,” or GFW, as the means of screening contact with other countries.

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Posted: 23 March 2008 02:52 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]
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Sadly, this is only the tipity top of a very dirty iceberg. China has used IT attacks to silence groups as diverse as Tibetan and Uiyghar protesters to yoga groups, All blogs are blacklisted unless on a special server, and once any site in a group comments negatively on China, all sites in that group are forever blocked- Ign.com (a video game site) is blocked, even.

Strangest of all is the complacency the people have in regards to this. I am currently a professor at a University somewhere in China (obviously I won’t say exactly where as I am still in China). A few months back, I had my students write a report on their opinions regarding censorship of media and internet by the government. The results were surprising to say the least. Out of 500 students, 495 were strongly in support of it. Statements such as “it is the government’s role to protect us from harmful knowledge”, and “we do not need to be aware of all things from foreign lands” were the norm. Indeed, it is not just foreign lands that are blocked. The Chinese media is so controlled as to what they can report that the vast majority of people will not view it. It was very telling yesterday that I was the first person to tell my students that anything was happening in Tibet (a now blackout-ed news item here). The only people I see who are aware of the news seem to be the very ones the government is trying to silence- they read the news daily so as to know the official company line and not have to visit one of the several new reeducation centres built for the Olympics.

Hasta la victoria siempre.

For those here in China, get firefox and gladder. gladder is a great ladder for the great wall. If you are in a sensitive area, look into VPN. Ask at your local DVD bootlegger...who is not Han (Mongolian, Muslim, Tibetan are good). Tor and proxies are ok too, but most of all- wipe your hard drive. Get ccleaner and run NSA level every day. You have no rights to privacy, so they will check your computer in person if they cant online.

For those back in the US and UK, start fighting now. We’re heading down the totalitarian path as well, and its only a matter of time until a thread like this needs to be made for the good ol’ western states.

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Posted: 25 March 2008 04:36 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]
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The real modern China is old Egyptian.  You can’t imagine what they use.  You don’t have numbers, ranges, spectra, vectors ... for it.  Mind is energy.  Beijing is a quantum computer.  So is Shanghai.

So fucking what.

China is as much at war with itself as the rest of the world.

Fuck it.

Fuck Faberge eggs ... within eggs… within eggs.

Fuck it.  Kill them all.  Let dog sort them out.  Kill us all.  Don’t foget about us, Mohave.

Fuck phoenix.  Fuck dragons.  Fuck ‘em all.

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“Don’t annoy us further, for we have our work to do.  Just think about the average:  what use have they for you?  Another toy that helped destroy the elder race of man.  Forget about your silly whim.  It doesn’t fit the plan.” Rush 2112

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Posted: 25 March 2008 04:44 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]
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Duh. China gets broadcast tech.  China gets Great Leap Forward.  China gets mind control.

Whatcha’ think we got? 

What you got?  æ€Žä¹ˆå«é†’ä½ ä»¬ï¼Ÿä¸ºä½•ç»§ç»­åœ¨ä¹Žï¼Ÿ

算了!我累了。

Too tired.  Fucking boring.  This or that.  Me or you. 

Always the same.  Lame.  So lame. 

No wonder it all ended the same. 

All just a numbers game.

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“Don’t annoy us further, for we have our work to do.  Just think about the average:  what use have they for you?  Another toy that helped destroy the elder race of man.  Forget about your silly whim.  It doesn’t fit the plan.” Rush 2112

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