Bloggers Who Pursue Change Confront Fear And Mistrust – Philip P. Pan

From The Washington Post (link): When Zhao Jing moved his blog to Microsoft’s popular MSN Spaces site last summer, some users worried the Chinese government would block the entire service. The censors had blacklisted the last site where the young journalist had posted his spirited political essays, and he seemed unwilling to tone down his […]

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Free Software Takes Users Around Filters – Philip P. Pan

From The Washington Post (link): A decade ago, China blocked access to three overseas Web sites — two pro-democracy sites and one devoted to Maoist ideals the government had abandoned in favor of capitalism, according to Michael Robinson, an American computer engineer who helped connect China to the Internet. Today, studies show thousands of Web […]

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The Internet and the ‘Axis of (Censored)’ – John McCain and Jon Kyl

From USA Today (link): The Internet and the ‘Axis of (Censored)’ During Ukraine’s Orange Revolution, the Pora youth movement mobilized thousands of demonstrators to protest fraudulent elections. In the revolution’s aftermath, Pora’s leaders were asked what single element was central to the movement’s role in Ukraine’s democratic transition. Was it money? International assistance? Trained organizers? […]

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Tear down China’s great firewall – Clarence Page

From The Salt Lake Tribune (link): As one who believes in the liberating powers of information technologies, I hope the Internet companies won’t wait for government intrusion. I hope they will take it upon themselves to use their considerable leverage to stand up to China’s cyber-censors and tear down what many are calling the “Great […]

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Google has no license for China service: newspaper – Reuters (UPDATED)

From Reuters (link): Internet search giant Google Inc.’s (GOOG.O: Quote, Profile, Research) controversial expansion into China now faces possible trouble with regulators after a Beijing newspaper said its new Chinese-language platform does not have a license. The Beijing News reported on Tuesday that Google.cn, the company’s recently launched service that accommodates the China’s censorship demands, […]

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Beijing’s media chill – Isabel Hilton

From OpenDemocracy (link): With the first public sign of dissent in senior ranks of the Chinese Communist Party, the tensions over China’s increasingly repressive approach to press freedom have burst into the open. In the last few weeks, Beijing has stepped up the pressure on China’s press, shutting down newspapers and picking off editors who […]

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Green regulation punishes misconduct – Sun Xiaohua

From China Daily: Environmental watchdogs in China who abuse their authority will be punished under a special regulation that took effect yesterday. The provisional form of the regulation, China’s first on disciplining dereliction of duty, was released yesterday by the State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA) and the Ministry of Supervision. The regulation aims to curb […]

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China faces uphill task on job creation in 2006 – Wang Zhenghua

From China Daily: Imagine 25 million men and women about the combined population of Australia and New Zealand pressing for new jobs. That is the daunting reality that the Chinese economy faces this year, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) has reported. This is the country’s worst employment crisis ever, as the children of […]

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Mao’s nervous minders pursued us everywhere – John Gittings

From the Guardian: Before handing over to my colleague Jonathan Watts in 2003, I covered a range of important stories to which I had been alerted by excellent reporting in the Chinese press or TV. There were powerful exposes of mining and environmental disasters linked to official corruption, of the plight of migrant workers cheated […]

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Artist creates city from biscuits – Mark Brown

From The Guardian: Does a Ryvita make a better foundation than a ginger nut? Or a Hobnob? Or an Abbey Crunch? Obviously wafers would be useless, only good for walls. And Tuc crackers, you suspect, would be a disaster waiting to happen. These are the headaches occupying the mind of the multi-media artist Song Dong […]

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Reference Tool On Web Finds Fans, Censors – Philip P. Pan

This article is part of a series called The Great Firewall of China by the Washington Post’s Philip Pan. Pan will discuss this series on the Washington Post website on Tuesday at 11 am ET: Officials tolerated Wikipedia at first, perhaps because it seemed to be exactly what the party had in mind when it […]

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52% of Chinese office workers write Internet blogs, complaining and privacy top blog themes – Interfax

From Interfax: Blogging has increasingly become more popular in China, with 52% of white-collar workers now keeping weblogs (blogs) according to CBP Career Consultants Co., Ltd., a leading career consulting firm in China. Unlike western bloggers who often focus on news and politics, the Chinese white collar bloggers see complaining alongside office and personal gossip […]

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A Spectator’s Role for China’s Muslims – Jim Yardley

From the New York Times: RELIGION is often hidden in China, so the unabashed public display of Islam here in the city known as Little Mecca is particularly striking. Men have beards and wear white caps. Women wear head scarves. Minarets poke up from large mosques. A bookstore sells Korans and religious study guides in […]

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Toxic spill in China leaves 20,000 without water – CBC

From CBC: Water for a town of 20,000 has been cut off for several days after untreated toxic wastewater was flushed into a river in southern China, a state newspaper said on Monday. Officials in Guanyin shut off the water supply last Wednesday because of the pollution, caused by a power plant on the Yuexi […]

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