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March 8, 2014 |
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Critics point out that the existence of big mamas are an example of infringement of freedom of speech and expression, and particularly fault Western companies such as Yahoo! for hiring big mamas on their Mainland Chinese sites. They note that big mamas extend the ability of the Chinese government to control and monitor content on discussion boards. However, others have pointed out that by allowing web discussion sites to exist in the first place, the system actually promotes freedom of expression. Furthermore, they argue that it is far better to have the internet content provider itself perform the censorship than it would be to have officials of the Chinese government review all of the content on the message boards. They note that the actions of big mama are confined to deleting objectionable postings, and that there is no effort made to track down posters and punish them, and that replacing them with Chinese government officials would have a far more chilling effect on discussion. The name is similar to Big Brother (1984)|Big Brother and may have been derived from George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four. See also: Internet censorship in China|Internet censorship in mainland China category:Mainland China Category:Internet in the People's Republic of China This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Big mama".
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