Post-Quake, China Cuts Access to Entertainment Web Sites 334
thefickler writes "The Chinese Government has issued orders that all entertainment web sites and regular television programming be shut down completely for the next 3 days. Only web sites covering the recent tragic 7.8 magnitude earthquake and television stations broadcasting CCTV earthquake programming will be allowed to remain live." Can anyone with Web access in China confirm this report? From an AP story on the state of communications in the country right now, it appears at least that China is (despite ongoing monitoring) allowing freer than usual communications in the wake of the quake.
Think it's a showcase? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Think it's a showcase? (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, I think it's a way to show the world that they are a lot better at handling a humanitarian crisis than totalitarian governments like Burma's junta after the cyclone or the USAs rebublicans after the hurricane. They are doing well with this and are keen to show it - as many governments on Earth would be.
Live From Beijing: Its Monday Morning. (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
I do not have sock puppets (Score:5, Funny)
Help! Help! I have been a victim of unfair moderations!
As you can see from my previous posts [slashdot.org], I am generally a trolling idiot who has nothing constructive to say.
But, but! Someone moderated me to +4 Insightful! If math serves me correctly, 3 someones!
I ask you to stop this unfair moderation and return me to my target of "-1 hopeless."
Arigatou gozaimashita!
(Besides, I don't have "sock puppets." That accusation is unfair to the world's other sufferers of dissociative identity disorder, who function just fine in society.)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
I do not think anyone obey those rules any more. But tradition is tradition, it is kind of like that when chinese people mourn the dead in this case. I do not find it any strange if you understand the culture.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Not that I agree with TwITter having multiple accounts, but 'it' does make valid comments fairly often. It may simply for the purpose of modding up his trolled accounts, or maybe just genuine comments, doesnt matter "why" it just matters what was said.
Mod down his trolls, and mod up his interesting/insightful/funny comments as you see fit, as you would anyone else.
Treating it differently just creates scepticism, more problems for the modding system. If everyone was wondering if the person had other acco
Re:monitored is not free (Score:5, Interesting)
So... the government is pissed, and is punishing the media organizations by sending them home for a while. I could be wrong, but that's more or less what I heard from my wife, and like in China, it's dangerous around here to disagree with the boss
Re:monitored is not free (Score:5, Informative)
In the days following the quake, I've turned on the television a couple of times. There is a lot of earthquake coverage, but I've also seen costume dramas, soap operas, musical variety shows, fund raisers, home-shopping-network style shows, and billiards tournaments.
I proxy my internet through an SSH tunnel, so I haven't noticed any changes to website availability, but I just fired up an unproxied konqueror, and I can get to the BBC, CBC, arstechnica, and slashdot through the national firewall. If somebody wants to post URLs they think are unreachable, I can give quickly determine whether they are reachable.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Yes. This is not about NEWS suppression. As TFA says, it's about entertainment. Since today was the first of three official days of mourning in China, (including here in Hong Kong), one week after the quake hit, many light-hearted events were cancelled or postponed. There was a three minute silence this afternoon at 2:28 pm, the time of the quake. Disneyland HK has cancelled its fireworks, the Olympic Torch run has stopped. Flags are at half mast.
There is
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:monitored is not free (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Brief reports of the quake came within an hour. More detailed reports of the quake came rolling in within 2-3 hours, detailing death tolls etc. Wen Jiabao flew to Sichuan on short notice and made an (national) announcement on the plane.
If your story is true everybody involved reacted real quick.
If anybody was trying to cover up the story it could only be the local (municipal?) government. If that's the case I'm not really surprised. It's no news that many local
Re: (Score:2)
I note with interest, over the past 6 months, the noticiable uninformed anti chinese bias of the articles on Slashdot.
I note with disinterest, that the situation has been going on for as long as I remember being on slashdot. It's just that perhaps in the past 6 months, the irrational China-haters have gotten less real issues to bash China, and the bias and absurdity is finally surfacing.
You didn't need to dig very far to find out that China is in 3 days of mourning.
Blame that on the editors. They think that a comment on some twitter messages are "news", despite that there's no report from more authoritative news sources, which TFA responsibly notes.
You guys appear intellegent but incapable of independent thought when it comes to China.
People here think they're smart yet I simply see t
Re:monitored is not free (Score:5, Insightful)
I couldn't resist answering your idiotic post that just asked lots of pointless, stupid questions (without a question mark no less!), that seemed to lead the reader into random circles of thought like a labyrinth with no exit.
I note with interest, over the past 6 months, the noticiable uninformed anti chinese bias of the articles on Slashdot.
Um, do you even read Slashdot? Point to one topic here that isn't covered in a biased manner.
You didn't need to dig very far to find out that China is in 3 days of mourning.
So if the government declares a day of mourning, I'm not allowed to laugh at a funny television show? That sounds completely unhealthy. I don't care what your culture is.
You guys appear intellegent but incapable of independent thought when it comes to China.
It seems that you really just don't get the cultural differences and you don't understand the inter-realtionship between responsibile reporting and control.
Ooh, this one's easy. Responsible reporting and control have nothing to do with each other. If it's controlled, it's propaganda, not reporting. Deal with it.
You flap about over freedom of the press, and yet appear to have no understanding of what that is or what it means.
Another easy one. It means the press can report whatever they like without fear of being prosecuted for it.
China is made up of 56 different ethnics groups, 800 million of which are on less than $2 a day. You want to throw into that the irresponsible, almost unaccountable, sensationalist press we have in the West?
So what? The US started off with lots of poor farmers, too. I frankly don't see how this can have anything to do with freedom of the press. Do people get docked pay every time a reporter criticizes the government?
Yeah that would really work. Reporting without responsibility great invention.
And reporting with censorship is better, how? I can think of a number of ways it's worse.
A truely free press is a dangerous thing. It allows everyone to peddle whatever truth the desire and to encourage others to believe it.
Oh, so you criticize the people on Slashdot for not thinking for themselves, then say that you need to limit the spread of opinion because people might actually believe it? Either you want people to think critically or you don't. Make up your mind.
Do you believe that any Western country allows a truely free press in that sense.
Well, no. But again, I don't see your point. Just because the west does it doesn't mean China should. If we don't have a perfect free press, then maybe China could beat us at it. As-is, though, the Western system seems quite superior.
Push a negative story a little, someone starts a rumor, and you have a blood bath on your hands.
A blood bath? Really? Where? The only blood bath I can think of is Iraq, and that wasn't the media, though you can maybe blame the media for not being critical enough. You certainly can't blame them for warmongering (well, except Fox, but that's not news).
In the UK many kinds of story are not covered here by agreement between the press and Government. There is a code of practice for journalist and editors covering what should be reported.
Well, whatever works for you. It might even make sense assuming it's a gentlemanly agreement to be civil rather than a "I'll scratch your back" thing.
The reason you have this is to try to instil some degree of responsibility into the press. Even with this totally ficticious and inflamatory stories are still run.
So it doesn't work? Go figure. Of course, you spoke of an agreement not to cover stories, not about making sure they were true, so it's an even bigger surprise that it fails to accomplish a goal it doesn't seem to have in the first
Over the top (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Over the top (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Over the top (Score:5, Insightful)
In the span of 1 minute, more people in China died than all the american lives lost in the "War on Terror" during the last 7 years.
Add it up and I dare anyone bashing China right now to respond saying this mourning isn't a natural and healthy response.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
And yes, much of America's response to 9/11 wasn't exactly what I'd term "healthy" either. One nation being batshit insane does not disregard another.
Re:Over the top (Score:4, Insightful)
BTW, I have so far not been affected in my access to the internet or TV, etc.
p.s assuming your not brain-dead enough to think everything i write are western lies, stop to consider for a second how you can put a percentage correctness on philosophical writings? Mao would hate the Chinese government more than I do.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
This sort of thing is hardly unique to China. There are all sorts of issues surrounding the US "Pledge of Allegiance", especially concerning the 1951 rewording. Then there was the way in which the death of "Princess" Diana was
The real reason (Score:5, Informative)
Check out:
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2008/olympics/05/18/bc.as.gen.china.earthquake.olympic.ap/
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/1982617/China-earthquake-Rescue-teams-overwhelmed-by-disaster.html
Re: (Score:2)
Exactly. More details here:
Again, to emphasize, these instructions went out to internal Chinese sites. Though I imagine they'll begin blocking access to other sites soon too.
China can't read slashdot (Score:2, Insightful)
No they can't, since this is an entertainment website.
Re:China can't read slashdot (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Wikipedia stopped working sometime last week, iirc, though it seemed like it was working for some of my friends at their work (no, they're not using VPN/etc). If I changed my IP address (it's dynamic/routable), then I could sometimes access it. Strange to be sure - almost sounds more like a networking issue in CNC.
Re: (Score:2)
Recent restrictions (Score:5, Informative)
TV stations are the same, and again, programming is dominated by earthquake news.
I noticed over the weekend that craigslist.org is no longer accessible from mainland.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
This sounds like a bit of a push to get the nation even more indoctrinated. my friends lived in the UK his whole life and since the Tibet thing, he suddenly thinks all western media is bull.
Filter news for young children.. (Score:5, Informative)
Parents should act like a filter for the world - especially the hype and circus that is today's news reporting.
Other than that - what is the usefulness of an order like this? I would think having something for kids and adults alike to watch other than death and destruction would help.
Re: (Score:2)
Parents should act like a filter for the world
No, parents should empower children to filter the world themselves by giving them the critical thinking skills that they need to do so. Failing to give them this toolbox will turn them into incompetent, naive adults.
Re: (Score:2)
No, parents should empower children to filter the world themselves by giving them the critical thinking skills that they need to do so.
This takes time. There is absolutely no reason for a young child to be exposed to horrible images or events if it can be helped. Hell, my daughter found it traumatic when we were at the petting zoo and the two alpacas got into a fight and one of them spit. You can't explain things to young children when they don't have the mental capacity - or even the vocabulary - to sort things out.
Re: (Score:2)
Parents should act like a filter for the world
No, parents should empower children to filter the world themselves by giving them the critical thinking skills that they need to do so. Failing to give them this toolbox will turn them into incompetent, naive adults.
Fantastic theory - but you'd make a horrible parent.
Take your three year old to many R rated horror flicks lately? Well what would you consider the video footage of people swan diving from the 100th floor of the twin towers - played over and over again on Fox news?
Yes, let them figure it out for themselves. Maybe they can discuss it with the boogy monster in their closet or maybe Pokemon has the answer.
Re: (Score:2)
National Days of Mourning (Score:2, Informative)
Coming this fall... (Score:2)
See earthquakes from exotic, foreign lands like Peru and Canada on our premiere programming, QuakeWatch! Or, tune in Thursday nights for a special episode of Classic Quakes, featuring a different home-grown American quake every week!
Tune in for the best documentaries about earthquakes, the latest quake news and reviews, and more! QuakeTV is the only channel a quake-watcher will ever
Fascism idiocy (Score:2)
someone would have listened to a song from a website that someone s/he lost liked very much, and remember, and find some solace in good remembrance or similar.
but no. not happening with cold war derelict dinosaurs and a fascist party at the government.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Anywhere, your attempted argument is nonsense, it's got nothing to do with "culture shock." You actually defeat your own argument--if "few people" would even think of seeking entertainment now, why does the Communist Party have to crack down? That doesn't make any sense, you need to consider motives when actions don't make sense based on your assumptions. Mourning is good and solidarity is good. Is enforced mourni
Re: (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_songs_deemed_inappropriate_by_Clear_Channel_following_the_September_11%2C_2001_attacks [wikipedia.org]
(pretty much any anti wto song + any thing to do with planes + anything by RATM)
fortunately it wasn't government forced tho
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
And what do you say to the people here claiming that net access is just fine, and they could, *gasp*, actually find that song for solace as you mentioned?
Do you actually honor *facts* instead of the fantasy world in your head?
Re: (Score:2)
"National Mourning Days" they say (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
obviously the local government won't follow suit
Linking to a Chinese (language) site isn't the accepted norm here, but I'm too lazy to find an English link.
http://hk.news.yahoo.com/080519/12/2u88q.html [yahoo.com]
Basically, the (Hong Kong) local government is following suit as far as they can. Of course in Hong Kong the government doesn't control everything, so participation from private entities/companies is on a voluntary basis, but they're asking people to do it. (if you can't read Chinese I'm sure you'll be able to find a colleague to do a bit of quick translat
I'm in China (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
The e-mail from my company states that the mourning will begin at 2:28 today. Indeed, I've gone to the sites I mentioned in my earlier post and in fact they have blocked the ability to search. You can only watch stuff on the front page. That, is fucking scary. From the e-mail I received from my company: all organizations and foreign embassies in China will lower the
flags; all entertaining activities will stop; sirens of automobiles, trains and ships will be on. As another poster mentioned, Youtu
China is opening (Score:5, Insightful)
To the Chinese natural disasters were, in the past, covered up and silenced. They are embracing not only independent local coverage, but independent FOREIGN coverage as well (foreign access is truly amazing).
I think despite some obvious failings even today, China is truly moving forward into a more open society. Give credit where credit is due...
-------
-1 nonconforming opinion
Is just a test for Olympic web access control and (Score:2)
Its regional (Score:5, Interesting)
Most Chinese TV down in Shanghai (Score:5, Informative)
Death toll now 33000 verified. Will rise above 40000 since now 9500 verified to be beried under rubble. 220000 injured.
HBO and Cinemax went dark at my hotel (Score:2, Interesting)
I have not found any websites blocked other than the usual ones.
This is nothing about Censorship (Score:2, Interesting)
ESPN and HBO (Score:2)
Hypocrisy (Score:2)
As much as I hate this sensationalist topic about China floating on Slashdot just like others Slashdot's front page everyday (literally). I have to start blaming this to either mass uninformed stupidity or the entire western media for so many years of biased and irresponsible reports on China. It seems that the more China is making progress in its modernization effort, the more biased reports on it surfaces for whatever reason.
The little village in Sichuan has lost 50K lives and had 200K injured and milli
Supporting this. (Score:2)
If you're in China, rather than spending your time goofing around online you should donate to relief, give blood, and get outside and be part of the community. This is not a free speech issue, not today.
There is nothing wrong or creepy about an entire country wo
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Getting the entire country to work in concert is what totalitarian governments do.
Wrong. Look at what good did it do to Collective Farms in Stalin's period.
His was the most totalitarian government you could get and still he could not improve farming output. (forget about purges).
The more hard you squeeze the sand in your palm, the more sand escapes.
Its a genuine outpouring of grief. Recognize that for what it is rather than saying bull$hit about totalitarian, etc.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Only that pearl harbor helped bring WW2 to end and made japan a peace-loving country.
9-11 ended in one country broken, one country on the verge of going back and US much poorer.
But then when the country is led by a single-digit-IQ oil-loving-Texan who still can't read books and thinks sacrficing Golf is the biggest sacrifice he can make...
Sorry. We are ashamed of him. And we didn't vote for him (if you know what voting & elections mean).
Disgusted (Score:5, Insightful)
The sort of reactionary and racist anti-Chinese attitudes that are commonplace on Slashdot really sicken me.
A short period of mourning is declared, with very little enforcement, and all you want to do is seize the opportunity to make it look like censorship, in particular censorship of the disaster. It is the exact opposite. Frivolous entertainment is being scaled down a bit for a mere three days, and the TV networks are saturating the public with quake information. Never has the Chinese government been more open. With previous tragedies we saw secrecy and a desire to save face, but this regime is clearly much more modern. The contrast with the terrible Burmese regime is very clear.
I don't actually agree with the declaration of mourning, and I wish that this government could be replaced with one truly chosen by the people, but this doesn't mean that the non-stop stream of slurs and vilification is OK.
In particular, I find the concept of a period of mourning to be much less offensive than Bush's 16 Sept official day of prayer for hurricane Katrina. Separation of church and state, please!
Re: (Score:2)
all you want to do is seize the opportunity to make it look like censorship
Actually, cutting off certain channels from the television, and redirecting certain sites to point to other ones is sort of censorship. If it's not, it is actually something more sinister - ala George Orwell. It is one or the other.
Having said that, I don't think I would be overly interested in find porn sites when my neighbors house was a ruined pile of crap, and I don't totally disagree with what they have done (some small part of me thinks it's not the worst thing they could have done) but don't be f
Re: (Score:2)
Kind of hard to do this with things like proportion of the population in prison though...
It is also usually Americans shouting about how the whole world and his dog is anti-American.
Or "anti-smitic" if the US/Israel relationship is involved.
It seems China and the USA have more in common than just the same aim of a totalitarian police state masque
Three days national mourning (Score:2, Interesting)
Dear colleagues,
In memory of the casualties in earthquake of Sichuan Province, the State Council has announced an official three-day national mourning. Flags are to be kept at half-mast and all public amusements will be suspended
Dear all China/Communist haters (Score:2)
Next time, please try to report on the EVIL CRIMES of CHINESE COMMUNISTS with a bit more subtlety. These days, with the free Internet, and more Chinese citizens on the Internet who've seen the real deal, blatant lies about the Chinese government will not work, and will get you discredited.
Please, for the sake of humanity and those who rightly believe in the CULT OF ANTI-COMMUNISM, run stories about CHINESE COMMUNISTS KILLING BABIES in their basements or something. Something t
Lets be mature regarding China (Score:2)
There is a whole list of problems we might have with China, but can we just shut up about them for five seconds to discuss this specific situation?
As far as any government can, they've done everything right with regard to the earthquake. The Premier (who is IIRC a geologist which I guess would be useful) went straight to the scene with thousands of troops to organise relief work.
Foreign aid was requested almost immediately, and the government allowed them to get on with their jobs and not use their pre
Exaggeration (Score:2)
As for Internet access... I think this is sensationalist BS. I'm on slashdot.org, people.com, youtube.com, cnn.com and wikipedia.org right now without any problems. Nobody's cutting access, they're just asking for a period of mourning and respect for the dead.
How is this different from our reaction to Pearl Harbor and/or September 11?
Re: (Score:2)
It's fine by me (Score:2)
Didn't the US pause events post-9/11 (Score:2)
Closure of Channel BT. (Score:2, Interesting)
All non essentials, ie p2p, will be shut down. All resources are to go into humanitarian relief.
Be prepared to wait a while for your latest episodes via Channel BT.
This is no reason to hate China... What did the rest of the US do when Cyclone Katrina hit? Oh, thats right, they sat on their bums and continued to watch Channel BT as they didn't want to know about their fellow citizens people drowning.
Re:Closure of Channel BT. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Closure of Channel BT. (Score:4, Informative)
Because it's a national disaster and the Chinese Government will eventually use it for propaganda purposes. Something along the lines of 'there was a tragedy, we rebuilt, see how awesome the Communist Government & Chinese people are'.
I expect some people will take exception to this, but you hear the exact same type of language surrounding the terrorist attacks of 9/11. The Chinese are already flying banners saying "fight the earthquake" [google.com].
Re: (Score:2)
That would be a fist timer - but maybe Comcast can provide some experience. The Chinese government is way more busy blocking public sources. It means that certain sites will be blocked by the great firewall (which can be circumvented by a simple proxy outside of China). From my ex-expat point of view that's nothing to worry about. If you really want to know you'll get the news regardless of censorship. In the TV domain it might be different, but I've seen many Chinese w
Re:Whats the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
I hope you understand what "national mourning" means and at least understand what the title means.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Whats the point? (Score:5, Informative)
I would think that after a tragedy, it would better to OPEN the internet as much as possible.
I think this is part of the 3 days of mourning [google.com] going on in China right now, to raise even more awareness of the quake.
Also, sites regarding the earthquake will stay up. So the websites created by people to track missing relatives, or to gather donations, will stay online. Was this absolutely necessary? probably not. But I don't think this move will hinder the rescue effort at all, but rather raise more awareness of it since earthquake related info is all the Chinese people will get in the next 3 days.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Whats the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
I would think that after a tragedy, it would better to OPEN the internet as much as possible.
I'm really starting to hate China.
-Red
If you want to see real government relief effort problems, look at Burma. China pales by comparison.
Re: (Score:2)
No, they have not!
All frontline coverage of the disaster should "uphold unity and encourage stability" while "giving precedence to positive propaganda", ordered Li Changchun, a member of the party's supreme politburo standing committee. Such edicts are a reminder that - in spite of a flourishing market economy, social liberalisation and a media revolution - the party still holds to the Maoist tenet that power depends on control of "two barrels": that of
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Whats the point? (Score:4, Interesting)
Then, by US standards, China is doing just fine. The USA used 911 for nation building, fueled the fear of terrorists, and made Americans approve two invasions, one of which is viewed as a stupid war everywhere around the world.
You saw a bit more free speech in China after the quake. You saw less free speech in USA after 911.
So, what standards are you proposing to hold China to?
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Whats the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Can anyone with Web access in China confirm th (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
And, the story isn't accurate. They declared a 3 day mourning, they didn't cut off the Internet.