Great Firewall of China
- added October 25, 2007
- 41 responses
-



-
embed code
-
-
-
- lauraling
- added this
-
-
- related topics
-
- Tech (7327)
- On Current TV (5347)
- Technology (3322)
- Internet (2517)
- China (2163)
- Outro (949)
- Censorship (249)
- Current Issue (225)
- Current Discussioni (172)
- Vanguard Journalism (128)
- Vanguard Weekly Special (49)
- Naked China (29)
- Rising Powers (26)
- New Freedom (7)
Laura Ling goes to China where an information battle is taking place between China's 120 million Internet users and the Chinese government's web censors.
-
None of this would fly in the US, we'd being suing the government left and right.
-
As always, a fantastic and important piece of journalism. Great work Laura! Blogging and censorship issues are super important, they even happen within our own government--remember that big uproar when they started blocking our troops in Iraq from using YouTube?
-
-
-
-
- sarahbelle
- 11 months ago
-
-
Recent ResearchA research team comprised of members from UC Davis, University of New Mexico and an independent researcher recently published a paper investigating the implementation of the Great Firewall of China. If you are interested in lists of blocked words or questions about our research please check out the paper or contact any of us through the link provided.
-
This is a really interesting look at what i deal with everyday here in China. the only thing is that things like Tor and UltraReach can't be downloaded within China (I just tried, UR is blocked here).
I think the most interesting consequence of this among the youth is the depoliticization of popular media interests. Like your interviewee said, they're not entirely after political content in the first place!-
-
-
-
- jonbrilliant
- 11 months ago
-
-
Google.com vs. Google.cnHere is a interesting link that allows you to perform comparison searches in Google.com and Google.cn (Google China).
American companies (Yahoo!, Google, Microsoft, Cisco...) actively cooperate with the Chinese government to restrict people's access to information. By complying with government demands, Yahoo! turned over information that helped sentence a Chinese journalist to 10 years in prison http://tinyurl.com/33psh5).-
-
-
-
- susiesosad
- 11 months ago
-
-
Awesome piece.
Very interesting, and well-edited.-
-
-
-
- okhihowareyou
- 11 months ago
-
-
Saw this on TV tonight. Absolutely incredible, and moving, especially to see how people quietly retaliate and persevere, all in the hopes of, eventually, a totally free China.
-
It's sad to think of the resources being wasted on censorship that only adds fuel to the fire. I'm sure these tens of thousands of internet censors could make better use of their skills doing something else...like mining gold in World of Warcraft.
-
Very interesting, and well-edited.
THAT WAS COOL -
You can't keep people from getting what they want---the internet is something people want and they want to be able to find things.
The technology to allow Chinese to search blocked sites is pretty cool.
I just can't believe people can't see what happens when government suppresses...it just makes group who is suppressed more gun-ho.
Good job on the reporting. Very informative. -
The people in china really wouldn't need to by the product that she did in this piece. The only thing you'd need to do is find a good proxy server to use which they could do for free. Every firewall can be bypassed.
-
Great pod. Really well done. Sites like anonymizer can provide handy ways around these kinds of restrictions by means of proxy servers, but that assumes of course that anonymizer itself is not blocked at the firewall. Another way around could be file sharing ala kazaa and what have you, again assuming those ports are blocked at the firewall. Again, great vid, keep em coming!
Todd-
-
-
-
- techniqeswithtodd
- 11 months ago
-
-
Wired articleThere seems to be many different ways to get around the Great Firewall. Nevertheless, this journalist's account is also sobering reminder of the reality of Big Brother, even if Big Brother can't keep watch over everyone all the time.
-
-
-
-
- joanneshen
- 11 months ago
-
-
I agree entirely. Well said!
Todd-
-
-
-
- techniqeswithtodd
- 11 months ago
-
-
I was an American expat in china for over a year and dealt with these firewalls everyday. It's cool to see all the insane stuff i dealt with in china on American t.v. most of my friends never believed half the stuff i told them and i wish i would have known about current when i was there.
Love laura lings stuff and look forward to seeing a peice on the black urban rivers of china.-
-
-
-
- norcalryan
- 11 months ago
-
-
Are there legal consequences for those who are caught using the software that allows users to bypass the firewall??? Has anyone been arrested for using it?
-
-
-
-
- shorescope
- 11 months ago
-
-
The law is of course relative depending on where the infraction took place and whether or not the judicial body in place decides that a give case should be prosecuted. So in short, in depends :) As for legal precendent (anyone been arressted...) That's a good question.
T-
-
-
-
- techniqeswithtodd
- 11 months ago
-
-
Great piece of journalism. It does frustrate me when here in the UK where we don't have media censorship there is such a political disinterest amongst young people. It does seem though that the chinese government is fighting a loosing battle, soon enough the voices that want to be heard will find a means of speaking.
-
I think I may be in china. I get censored by AOL and AIM sometimes when I get down to my opinionated ultra liberal core and believe free speech is my right. I get very frustrated when they remove what I say from a message board or return political activiist mailings instead of delivering them. Knowing how that feels, I commiserate with the Chinese over the many fewer options they have. I find it interesting that some of the companies that engage in curtailing their activities also are involved in curtailing mine.
-
Always wanted to know exactly what people could search for and what would get blocked. I knew that someone would come up with a way around it. All power to the software geeks. They are making new hyperspace bypasses to information and therefore eventually freedom for people. Well done. Awesome report!
-
Say no to the 2008 Beijing Olympics北京奥运 我不支持!
http://www.youchoose.net/campaign/say_no_to_the_2008_be...
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/4/boycott-the-2008-beiji... -
The Great Firewall of China WebsiteThis project by Dutch design students provides a tool to check from outside China, if a certain web address is blocked over there.
-
Great article from Wired magAll about the The Great Firewall in China
-
Fantastic POD! if you ever need any crew support please call me. I have ProdHD package with lights and sound, two man crew for your use.
www.omnificpictures.com
TJ Walkup -
Very polished, professional work on a very important topic. Look forward to watching your future videos. I recently read a book by Kang Zhengguo called "Confessions: An Innocent Life in Communist China." It gives excellent expression to bizarre realities of living there.
-
-
-
-
- CyberCitizen
- 11 months ago
-
-
I would say different but not bizarre, I suppose some people have different opinions on what "bizarre" actually is, but all around this POD is an ACE in my book ;p
-
I find it kinda funny that Ultrareach is blocked by Websense. I guess i'll do my work...
-
What sticks out most in this pod is the idea that Chinese youth are not as concerned with searching on the internet for political material. The peculiar thing is: does this stem from the fact that they have been so limited in their access to it in the first place? I think it is a possibility. For a generation that has grown up in the "internet age" with a firewall between them and this political material, I wonder how much they will be inclined to search for it once they have access. What I'm saying is, is the damage already done?
Great Pod!-
-
-
-
- kylesoehngen
- 8 months ago
-
-
What a fascinating piece, and pleasing to watch, too. Laura Ling is such has such an engaging and authentic personality that moves the pod along with grace and makes her subjects seem natural. Furthermore, what an issue: I love the final shot that slow-mo zooms on the USB drive, the little thing that represents the irrepressable will of the people; how encouraging it is to hear that the Chinese are refusing to be censored and are slowly making progress towards the goal of freedom of speech and access to information for everyone. That is one of the revolutionary ideas of the internet, is it not? Just how much does the idea that China is "within 5 years of being free" say about democracy via the internet?
-
I was actually a bit disapointed when only ultrareach was mentioned. The Electronic Frontier Foundation's tor network has been around longer for the same purpose, and has mirrors for the purpose of actually obtaining it. There are of course other alternatives as well...
-
-
-
-
- anonymouse
- 8 months ago
-
-
I wonder if China has web access to "Current"?
I also wonder how many world people can see the final cut of "Current" pods on the web, especially the folks who've appeared in them? There's a story to look into. -
I tried to got to www.ultrareach.net and the web page could not be displayed. Is this site blocked in the US?
-
Wow. This is really pretty inspiring. I think we take a lot of the freedoms we have in the US for granted. Just thinking about not being able to have access to all the free-floating information out there sounds pretty heinous to me. I mean, really, a government that censors what a citizen can learn is doing a great disservice. I'm glad that activism is gaining the Chinese people ground and expanding the Chinese government's tolerance.
I've always wondered though, if the government censors political websites, do they also ban pornographic ones as well? That would be a huge problem for people in the states...haha -
Again, I wonder how many world citizens who appear in Current Podcasts ever get to see the end results?
I'm betting that it's a lower total than we know.
How many places have full free access to Current.com or Current TV? That's worth digging into. -
I am working on taking a trip over the summer for an architectural internship and I have applied to a Shanghai based firm...if all works out, I wonder what I am going to experience
-
-
-
-
- BaniProductions
- 6 months ago
-
-
Very Interesting. I can't believe there's still censorship int he world, shows how many of us take our freedoms for granted and just assume that everyone else has the luxuries that we have.
-
not right
-
This piece was not only effective of informing non Chinese about the censorship the government imposes, but also, thought not in depth, how companies such as yahoo and google are more concerned with the bottom line and not civil liberties.
-
i am native chinese ....our firewall is shit ...never work well
-
In china I use websurfing.cn and it's always got the job done for me. Interestingly though, current.com doesn't seem to come up....
