Friday, March 15, 2019

Who is watching us on the web? :: China Censorship Internet Papers

Who is watching us on the web?I. contextP.R. chinaware is a communist country with rather strict control everyplace its citizens political activities. The decentralized Internet - which is growing extremely quickly in mainland chinaware - puts a new challenge to our Chinese organization, who was used to grant fully control over newspapers, television, and any other media. In 2001, near 52.38 million Chinese visited world famous faceing websites google and AltaVista according to CNN. In Jun 2002, China stayed Google and AltaVista along with other famous Chinese websites hosted in the United States like Wenxuecity, Chinesenewsnet, and Dajiyuan. Chinese officials announced that Google logs all search equipment casualty together with the IP chip, a time stamp, an unique cookie ID, and web browser information. Current U.S. laws require Google to provide the information to the feds. If the information is available to the bailiwick Security Agency from Google, especially whe n the Internet user is a non-U.S. citizen in a country that is of national security interest to the U.S, China has to block the use of U.S. engines to protect their own national security.Was that true?The privacy policies of search engines generally do not cover items such as IP number and storage of search terms. In the case of portals that use Google results, it is heavy to know the portal do NOT forward the IP number to Google along with the search terms. Interestingly, China unblocked the U.S. searching websites a few months after. corresponding many people, I may never know the true figment behind Chinas blocking and unblocking U.S. searching websites. However, we can learn the truth from Xiao Qiang, the executive director of New York-based Human Rights in China. He said, Our Chinese government was deluged with outcries from the nations 46 million Internet users when access to Google was cut off. Internet users in China are an apolictcal crowd. They tend to be people w ho are doing well, and they do not usually voice strong views. But this stepped into their digital freedom. Well, what is the workaround accordingly?The quick workaround is that Chinese authorities tweaked the national firewall, making the new Google China different from the site that was turned off. Today, Chinese who use Google to search on terms like falun gong or human rights in China receive a standard-looking results page.

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