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March 8, 2014 |
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Much of the attention in the West has been placed on the interaction between the Internet and the authoritarian Communist Party of China. Early predictions that the Internet would bring the collapse of the party have proved unfounded. The Chinese government does block access to certain sites by IP address in which has been called the Internet censhorship in the People's Republic of China|Great Firewall of China. These blocks are http://www.zensur.freerk.com/ easily circumvented and are generally ineffective at preventing external news from entering the country. More effective have been Chinese government efforts to prevent the use of the internet to organize. Several web operators within China have been given stiff sentences. The Chinese government has also attempted with some success to incorporate use of the internet for its purposes. One of the most active and popular internet bulletin boards is the Strong Country Forum which is hosted by the People's Daily. The Internet has also created an extensive blog and chat community. Internet content providers in China generally have a company moderator known as big mama who monitors newsgroups and chat rooms for sensitive content and deletes it. The Internet has also provided some interesting tactics for the dissemination of news. In contrast to some early fears that the fluidity of web content would make it easy to rewrite history and strengthen the hand of the government, the opposite appears true. One common tactic in publishing senstive topics is to post the article on a newspaper website, and then comply with government orders to take it down. By the time the article is removed, people will have read it negating the point of the censorship order. June 3, one day before the fifteenth anniversary of the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, all access to Wikipedia was blocked by the Chinese government. After an appeal to the Chinese government by the Chinese administrators of Wikipedia who argued that Wikipedia was not an anti-government political site, the block was removed after 48 hours.
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 "Internet in the People's Republic of China".
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