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#OccupyCentral thread: Give me Liberty or Give me Death!

DianWei

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Re: What is Occupy Central? 10 key facts about Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement



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13. As protests escalated, China increased its online censorship.
Authorities blocked Instagram in mainland China, and users of Weibo, China’s version of Twitter, said a large number of reports were being deleted on the platform.


 

DianWei

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Re: What is Occupy Central? 10 key facts about Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement



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14. Chinese authorities continued to denounce demonstrations and warned against any foreign interference, The New York Times reported.


 

DianWei

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Re: What is Occupy Central? 10 key facts about Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement



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15. Hong Kong authorities said they had called riot police off on Monday, but protesters continued to turn out in huge numbers. The protests are expected to continue.


 

Spock

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Re: Official proof that US financed and brainwashed HK youth to provoke China

Half a million a year can buy street protest by tens of thousands? I think maybe can buy a few carpark spaces in Central.
 

laksaboy

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Re: Official proof that US financed and brainwashed HK youth to provoke China

This is not a protest. It is a rebellion to bring down a country, like what they had done in Egypt. The CPC will not allow it to happen in HK. If they did not crack down soon, HK would be ruined.

Such a situation should never be allowed to happen in sinkie land, whether paps or other oppo parties are in charge. To stage a rebellion is to destroy your own country.

It's only a rebellion if you equate the political party with the country, of which I think many Tiongs and Sinkies have difficulties telling the difference.
 

makapaaa

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HK: Use Firechat to Prevent Traitors Jamming Cellular Network

[h=1]THIS APP IS HELPING HONG KONG PROTESTERS ORGANIZE PROTEST WITHOUT A CELL NETWORK[/h]
<!-- /.block --> <style>.node-article .field-name-link-line-above-tags{float: right;}.node-article .field-name-ad-box-in-article {float: left;margin: 15px 15px 10px 0;}.node-article .field-tags{clear: both;}</style> Post date:
2 Oct 2014 - 5:42pm





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Anyone who has ever been to a big sporting event or a stadium concert knows that large crowds can quickly overwhelm local cell towers, making communication pretty much impossible.

Pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong -- who need functioning phones to organize -- appear to have found a solution to this problem.

More than 100,000 people in Hong Kong downloaded an app called FireChat in a recent 24-hour period. The app allows protesters to keep chatting, even when their phones lose mobile network connectivity.

FireChat works by connecting users in a daisy chain, or mesh network, via Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. No mobile network is required, and users can choose to remain anonymous.

"With FireChat, it's completely decentralized," said Micha Benoliel, CEO of Open Garden, the app's developer. "And that means you can get connectivity from the people and devices around you -- directly."

The benefits of FireChat have caught the attention of demonstration organizers, many of whom are encouraging protesters to download the app.

"Before you go near the government headquarters, please go to the App Store and download FireChat," Joshua Wong, the 17-year-old leader of a student protest group, urged supporters on Facebook. "Use this app to broadcast our situation to the outside world."

Benoliel, who was in Hong Kong as protests escalated over the weekend, said the protesters were well prepared and well organized, and had anticipated that large crowds would complicate communication.

"They knew that at some point the cellular networks would be shut down or would just be overloaded by a number of people gathering in the same place, so they know that Firechat is a way to remain connected and communicate," Benoliel said.




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While Benoliel said that FireChat was not designed specifically with protest movements in mind, it does seem to be catching on at demonstrations. In Taiwan, "Sunflower Movement" protesters also used the app earlier this year as they protested closer ties with Beijing.

Source: http://money.cnn.com/2014/09/30/news/firechat-hong-kong-protest/index.html
 

laksaboy

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Re: [Hong Kong] - gif image of police brutality during protests

Too tame. Should beat up the riot police and make them bleed.

Lima-Peru-Protesters-drag-away-a-riot-police-officer-after-he-was-knocked-off-his-horse.-Clashes-between-La-Parada-wholesale-market-workers-and-police-officers-left-two-dead-and-more-than-100-injured-650x433.jpg


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Without their guns, batons, helmets, shields and armour, they are also flesh and blood human beings who feel pain. They are nobody special. :cool:
 

steffychun

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Re: Official proof that US financed and brainwashed HK youth to provoke China

Why the US never finance and brainwash NUS students?
 

Reddog

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Re: Official proof that US financed and brainwashed HK youth to provoke China

China is scum. They were scum 40 years ago. They are scum now, and they will still be scum 40 years later. Only stupid chinks will want to be even seen with them

You will be glad to note that Sinkapore is a Chinese Country.
 

Jah_rastafar_I

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Re: [Hong Kong] - gif image of police brutality during protests

Too tame. Should beat up the riot police and make them bleed.



Without their guns, batons, helmets, shields and armour, they are also flesh and blood human beings who feel pain. They are nobody special. :cool:


Since when did the hk citizens want to engage in such violence and thanks for telling us the police are human too we all thought they were some type of intelligent androids with metallic skeletons just like the terminator.
 

tanwahtiu

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Re: [Hong Kong] - gif image of police brutality during protests

these civil servants did not hid inside ambulance van, protect government properties unselfishly.



Since when did the hk citizens want to engage in such violence and thanks for telling us the police are human too we all thought they were some type of intelligent androids with metallic skeletons just like the terminator.
 

Agoraphobic

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Re: [Hong Kong] - gif image of police brutality during protests

My wife's friend started a beauty parlour that closed after just two or three months after it started - many of the customers were Ah Nehs wanting to do waxing of their armpits.

Cheers!

oh fuck that's gross.
 

streetcry

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HK Protests: Police seen unloading boxes of rubber bullets

[h=2]Tensions rose in Hong Kong on Thursday (Oct 2) as the government urged demonstrators to "disperse peacefully as soon as possible" after police were seen unloading boxes of rubber bullets.[/h]
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Pro-democracy protesters face policemen as they wait for Hong Kong's Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying outside the Legislative Council Office on October 2, 2014. (AFP/Xaume Olleros)







HONG KONG: Tensions rose in Hong Kong on Thursday (Oct 2) as the government urged demonstrators to "disperse peacefully as soon as possible" after police were seen unloading boxes of rubber bullets.


The announcement followed confrontations between pro-democracy protesters and police outside the central government offices, with the government saying the protests were having "serious impacts" on the city.


"The government and the police appeal to those who are gathering outside the police headquarters, CGO (central government offices) and CEO (Chief Executive's office) not to block the access there and to disperse peacefully as soon as possible," the government said in a statement.


Protesters have been occupying several streets and intersections in the city for five days in a push for free elections of the city's leader and are calling for current Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying to step down.


Police had earlier carried long wooden boxes and metal barrels into the legislative headquarters, as angry protesters tried to block their path. Pictures shared widely on social media and television showed one barrel with the words "Round, 38mm rubber baton multi" written on it. Another barrel had the words "1.5 in, CS" emblazoned on it, a possible reference to CS gas.
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A pro-democracy protester holds up his phone to display a photo he took of police ferrying boxes of small arms into the government headquarters in Hong Kong on October 2, 2014. (AFP/Philippe Lopez)

"If protesters surround government property... causing total blockage, seriously affecting public safety and public order... the police will not allow this violent act to happen," police spokesman Hui Chun-tak said.


Protest leaders encouraged more people to join the demonstration. Andrew Shum, a member of protest group Occupy Central, told AFP: "I'm worried that the police will use force to disperse the movement tonight.

Everyone is discussing what they are going to do next."
 

tanwahtiu

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Loyal
Re: HK Protests: Police seen unloading boxes of rubber bullets

Look like another HK movie shooting: Ah Chan (peasants) vs Andy Lau (police man)?

Hong fei hong vs Quilo?
 

Sideswipe

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Re: HK Protests: Police seen unloading boxes of rubber bullets

rubber bullets or tear gas are unnecessary. just get some trucks to spray feces and urine on the protestors. confirm all will flee. :biggrin:
 

frenchbriefs

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Asset
Re: HK Protests: Police seen unloading boxes of rubber bullets

rubber bullets or tear gas are unnecessary. just get some trucks to spray feces and urine on the protestors. confirm all will flee. :biggrin:

who has more feces and urine,50,000 protestors or 500 police?
 

DianWei

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Asset
Re: What is Occupy Central? 10 key facts about Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement



FireChat


Open Garden - September 30, 2014

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.opengarden.firechat&hl=en



FireChat – the messaging app that’s powering the Hong Kong protests

The internet is vulnerable to state intervention, but demonstrators have found a way around it

The Guardian, Monday 29 September 2014 17.20 BST

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Pro-democracy supporters looking at a phone Pro-democracy supporters checking their phones during the protests in Hong Kong. Photograph: Anthony Kwan/Getty Images

Joshua Wong, a 17-year-old student in Hong Kong, had a problem. You will have experienced a version of it yourself: you are at a football match or a gig and you need to find a friend. But the crowd means that the network is overloaded, and you can’t get a signal on your phone. The thing that means you need to call someone is the very thing that means you can’t.

For Wong, the problem was more serious: he wasn’t at a football match, but playing a leading role in the organisation of the pro-democracy protests that have shaken his city over the past week. And he wasn’t just worried the network would be overloaded – he was worried the authorities would block it on purpose.

Every major display of social unrest these days seems to come with a game-changing technological accompaniment. The London riots were narrated on BlackBerry Messenger. Twitter played an essential role in the Arab spring. Turkish protesters who found the internet blocked turned to censor-proof Virtual Private Networks. But none of those innovations was much use without a connection. For Wong and his allies in Hong Kong, the answer was an app that allows people to send messages from phone to phone without mobile reception, or the internet: FireChat.

When you download it, FireChat looks like an unexceptional venue for inane online chat about sport and TV. But it’s more than that. If the network is down, FireChat can use Bluetooth – really just a sexed-up radio signal – to talk to nearby users. The protesters may find something satisfying in the way the system works, gaining strength like a movement, or a radical idea, not through a top-down imposition, but from thousands of little connections. Every new participant increases the network’s range and strength. “Usually, the more people there are in the same location, the less connectivity you get,” says Micha Benoliel, one of the app’s creators. “But with our system, it’s the opposite.”

FireChat has already been used in protests in Taiwan, Iran and Iraq, but never on the scale being seen in Hong Kong. After Wong urged his movement to use it, FireChat got more than 100,000 new sign-ups in Hong Kong in under 24 hours; it has registered 800,000 chat sessions since. If the Communist party isn’t quite reeling, its opponents’ lives have at least got a little easier.

Of course, users would do well to take care: there is nothing to stop the authorities hopping on to the network as well. Benoliel recommends people avoid real names; this is, he says, for information-sharing, not for secrets. Still, in a sense, that is exactly the point. “Our mission has always been freedom of speech, to help information to spread. So this is perfect.”
 
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