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“Disturbed”的版本间的差异

来自China Digital Space

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心神不宁 (xīnshén bùníng): disturbed
 
心神不宁 (xīnshén bùníng): disturbed
  
[[File:gao ye.jpg|250px|thumb|right|''Gao Ye tells CCTV reporters about the ills of Google search.'']][[File:gao ye2.jpg|250px|thumb|right|''[[China Central Adult Video|CCAV]] interview: “My classmate tried several search methods until he discovered that Google's search results made him feel the most ‘disturbed.’”'']]In the summer of 2009, Google was threatening to withdraw from China, while China was stepping up its criticism of the company. On June 18, [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2009/06/regulators-target-google-for-pornographic-content-cctv-airs-fake-interview-netizens-react/ CCTV aired an interview with a “university student” named Gao Ye] who claimed pornographic content in Google’s search results had caused one of his classmates to be “disturbed.”
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[[File:gao ye.jpg|250px|thumb|right|''Gao Ye tells CCTV reporters about the ills of Google search.'']][[File:gao ye2.jpg|250px|thumb|right|''[[China Central Adult Video|CCAV]] interview: “My classmate tried several search methods until he discovered that Google's search results made him feel the most ‘disturbed.’”'']] A phrase that a CCTV interviewee is believed to have been instructed to recite in support of the government's position towards Google. In the summer of 2009, Google was threatening to withdraw from China, while China was stepping up its criticism of the company. On June 18, [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2009/06/regulators-target-google-for-pornographic-content-cctv-airs-fake-interview-netizens-react/ CCTV aired an interview with a “university student” named Gao Ye] who claimed pornographic content in Google’s search results had caused one of his classmates to be “disturbed.”
  
 
China’s [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2012/10/human-flesh-searching-grassroots-internet-justice/ human flesh search engine] kicked into high gear. It was discovered that Gao was not a student at all, but an intern for the very program on which he had been interviewed. This is reminiscent of a 2007 CCTV interview with a schoolgirl who complained about an “[[erotic and violent]]” website. Both incidents have called into question CCTV’s journalistic integrity.
 
China’s [http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2012/10/human-flesh-searching-grassroots-internet-justice/ human flesh search engine] kicked into high gear. It was discovered that Gao was not a student at all, but an intern for the very program on which he had been interviewed. This is reminiscent of a 2007 CCTV interview with a schoolgirl who complained about an “[[erotic and violent]]” website. Both incidents have called into question CCTV’s journalistic integrity.

2014年8月4日 (一) 12:18的版本

心神不宁 (xīnshén bùníng): disturbed

Gao Ye tells CCTV reporters about the ills of Google search.
CCAV interview: “My classmate tried several search methods until he discovered that Google's search results made him feel the most ‘disturbed.’”

A phrase that a CCTV interviewee is believed to have been instructed to recite in support of the government's position towards Google. In the summer of 2009, Google was threatening to withdraw from China, while China was stepping up its criticism of the company. On June 18, CCTV aired an interview with a “university student” named Gao Ye who claimed pornographic content in Google’s search results had caused one of his classmates to be “disturbed.”

China’s human flesh search engine kicked into high gear. It was discovered that Gao was not a student at all, but an intern for the very program on which he had been interviewed. This is reminiscent of a 2007 CCTV interview with a schoolgirl who complained about an “erotic and violent” website. Both incidents have called into question CCTV’s journalistic integrity.

Many netizens objected that the government was unfairly targeting Google. They also maintained that Chinese search engines produced a similar volume of pornographic search results.

After the word “disturbed” went viral, “Gao Ye” became a sensitive word: search results containing “Gao Ye” were heavily filtered by domestic search engines.

In current online usage, the term “disturbed” has become a catchphrase, just like “erotic and violent.” For example, a comment beneath the picture of a scantily clad woman might read, “Wow, this really makes me ‘disturbed.’”

Google left mainland China in March 2010 after a Chinese-originated email hack in late 2009.

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