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May 16, 2008 1:21:59 AM CDT


Stories related to: Internet censorship

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5 Stories

  • May 2008
    • China Won't Stop Censoring Web for Olympics

      China Won't Stop Censoring Web for Olympics

      China apparently will continue to censor the Internet during August's Olympics, but says the international press will have the access it needs to function, Jacqui Cheng writes on Ars Technica. Officials said they would guarantee as much access “as possible,” but “controls on some unhealthy websites” would continue. In defense, they said, “every country limits access to some websites.” More »

  • April 2008
    • Bill's Charity Linked to Tibet Crackdown

      Bill's Charity Linked to Tibet Crackdown

      Hillary Clinton's strong public stance against the crackdown in Tibet flies in the face of her husband's past fundraising ties in China, reports the LA Times . At the crux is a 2005 speech the former president gave for which he received an undisclosed donation to his charitable foundation—from Internet giant Alibaba. More »

    • Beijing Eases Limits on Wikipedia

      Beijing Eases Limits on Wikipedia

      Prodded by the International Olympic Committee, China has seemingly eased restrictions on the English-language version of Wikipedia, Reuters reports. But authorities continue to block access to articles related to sensitive topics such as Tibet and Tiananmen Square. Users in Shanghai and Beijing, the site of the summer Olympics, reported being able to view some pages on the popular web encyclopedia. More »

  • February 2008
    • EU May Name Censorship a Trade Barrier

      EU May Name Censorship a Trade Barrier

      The EU is out to hack down the Great Firewall of China, Ars Technica reports. A new proposal would classify the web censorship China and other oppressive regimes employ as a trade barrier, an approach its creator calls “unusual, but effective.” The measure already sailed through the European Parliament 571-38, and now awaits European Council confirmation. More »

    • Pakistan Bans Access to YouTube

      Pakistan Bans Access to YouTube

      Pakistan has blocked the country’s YouTube access over anti-Islamic videos on the site, the AP reports. One official conceded that a particular video offended authorities: a trailer for an upcoming film by Dutch legislator Geert Wilders. The filmmaker has said that his piece paints Islam as a fascist religion that glorifies violence against homosexuals and women. More »

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