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Here are the three countries that heavily censor the Internet.

GoFlyKiteNow

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Here are the three countries that heavily censor the Internet.


In a world where access to Internet is ubiquitous, Internet censorship in North Korea, China and Burma (Myanmar) seem to have jumped out of another era. These three countries are quintessential examples of over-protecting citizens from being influenced from undesirable content widely available on the Internet.

Here are the three countries that heavily censor the Internet.

1. North Korea
2. China
3. Burma


Popular websites such as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Blogger are all blocked in China. (Photo: Associated Press)

Touted as “The Great Firewall of China” by the foreign media and officially known as the Golden Shield Project, the system filters block and censor the flow of information online within the People’s Republic of China.

Websites, blogs and forums that discuss sensitive content such as Dalai Lama, the 1989 crackdown on Tiananmen Square protesters, Falun Gong, and Taiwan independence are routinely monitored and censored by an estimated 30,000 Chinese civil servants.

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that's probably why many Chinese don't truly understand the secrets to the CCP revolution prior to 1949.

but the freedom of internet / thought and expression doesn't make many Japanese acknowledge or regret their ww2 atrocities and their politicians / academic scholars feeling some shame at whitewashing Japan ww2 actions either.
 
that's probably why many Chinese don't truly understand the secrets to the CCP revolution prior to 1949.

but the freedom of internet / thought and expression doesn't make many Japanese acknowledge or regret their ww2 atrocities and their politicians / academic scholars feeling some shame at whitewashing Japan ww2 actions either.

===

Japanese at their generation (WW2 time) already brain-washed by their leaders and emperor that they are fighting a "holy" war.

Japanese this generation din participate in this war and therefore feel nothing...

actually these Japanese are the first of "terrorists" - they are psycho by their leader (the emperor) that they are fighting for a holy cause.

they are the first to use kamikaze - suicide bombing.
 


Activists held, questioned by police after commemorating Tiananmen crackdown


At least six people interviewed by the authorities over a gathering ahead of the 25th anniversary of the suppression of the pro-democracy protests in Beijing in 1989


PUBLISHED : Tuesday, 06 May, 2014, 1:26pm
UPDATED : Tuesday, 06 May, 2014, 1:52pm

Verna [email protected] Keith [email protected]

pu_zhiqiang_scmp.jpg


Lawyer Pu Zhiqiang is in a detention centre in Beijing. Photo: SCMP Pictures

A prominent human rights lawyer in China has been placed under criminal detention and at least five other people taken away for questioning after they took part in an event commemorating the anniversary of the crackdown on pro-democracy protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989.

Pu Zhiqiang is in a detention centre in Beijing after he was accused of “picking quarrels and provoking trouble”, said his friend and rights lawyer Si Weijiang.

At least 15 people – scholars, activists and relatives of the victims killed in the Tiananmen crackdown – attended the gathering at a private home in Beijing on Saturday.

According to a statement released after the event, they called for an official investigation into the suppression of the pro-democracy movement and urged the authorities to compensate victims.

Pu, who took part in the Tiananmen protests as a student in 1989, was summoned by the police late on Sunday, according to Twitter messages posted by rights activist Hu Jia.

Police searched his home on Monday afternoon and took his mobile phones, computers and some books, the posts said. His mobile phone went unanswered on Tuesday.

Under mainland law, police can hold people for up to 30 days in criminal detention before deciding whether to pass the case to prosecutors.

The authorities suppress commemorations of the Tiananmen crackdown every year in the run-up to its anniversary on June 4, detaining activists or placing them under house arrest.

Among those detained after the gathering on Saturday were the liberal scholar Xu Youyu who was summoned by the police on Monday afternoon for questioning, said lawyer Mo Shaoping.

His current circumstances are unclear, said Mo.

Cyber activist Liu Di was questioned by the police on Sunday morning and was taken away on Monday night, her lawyer Shang Baojun said.

Liberal scholar Hao Jian, dissident writer and Christian leader Hu Shigen and former lecturer Liang Xiaoyan were also taken away by police for interrogation either on Sunday night or Monday, Shang said.

Shang said he was worried about their fates as people summoned by the police should by law be released within 24 hours.

“They have all been taken away for more than 24 hours – it’s not a good sign,” he said.

Qin Hui, a historian at the prestigious Tsinghua University and one of the country’s most prominent public intellectuals, said on Tuesday he and another Tsinghua scholar, Guo Yuhua, had also been questioned over the seminar, but were not detained.

He said he told police that whatever one’s view on the Tiananmen crackdown, it was not an “uprising” as it was labelled by the authorities 25 years ago.

The government regarded the weeks of peaceful protests by students and workers in 1989 to have been a “counter-revolutionary uprising” but in subsequent years toned down its rhetoric to describe it as an “upheaval”.

“One thing that is certain is that it’s not an uprising, even the authorities don’t say that now, so things should be changed: you can’t handle it like this,” Qin said.

The group Chinese Human Rights Defenders said the authorities’ handling of the gathering over the weekend was “particularly chilling”.

“This year’s significant quarter-century anniversary will no doubt see tighter restrictions than ever on rights to peaceful assembly, association, and expression,” said Renee Xia, the group’s international director.

“The Chinese government’s attempt to silence any expression about Tiananmen is a continuation of its 25-year policy to shelter those responsible for the massacre from accountability.”

 
Thread started in 2011.

Yeah i know... No one beats u at doing this. Have u forgotten so fast? :rolleyes:

Anyway i wouldn't mind the consequences since i don't value my clones like this one. I would rather take the risks. If any consequences, bans are temporary. And Montagut is free. :D
 
that's probably why many Chinese don't truly understand the secrets to the CCP revolution prior to 1949.

but the freedom of internet / thought and expression doesn't make many Japanese acknowledge or regret their ww2 atrocities and their politicians / academic scholars feeling some shame at whitewashing Japan ww2 actions either.

not so much CCP prevent citizens from knowing more but citizens themselves dont give a damn. Make worse by history text books either distort or remove the offending part of history. i ever ask a ah tiong DVD saleman who abt 20+yo, he dunno who is Lin Biao, the man who destroy CKS's legions at dongbei and was number 2 man in CCP during culture revolution. KNN, pester me to buy CCTV 8 route army theme drama serial yet dunno who is lin biao.:mad:

NK internet not censor but general public not connected in the first place. Email connecting to the real world are monitor by the NK version of NKVD.
 
Yeah i know... No one beats u at doing this. Have u forgotten so fast? :rolleyes:

Anyway i wouldn't mind the consequences since i don't value my clones like this one. I would rather take the risks. If any consequences, bans are temporary. And Montagut is free. :D

:rolleyes: Sure point a thread where i upped it from years back.

Who knows you could have been digging old threads with your other clones.
 
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