Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • In 2000, President Bill Clinton said China’s attempts at internet censorship werelike

  • trying to nail Jell-O to the wall”. But actually, China’s authoritarian government

  • has proven very adept at censoring the internet and other media. So what do they restrict?

  • Well, anything that questions or threatens the ruling Communist Party of China, including

  • any political, religious, and cultural information. This applies to free speech, state and foreign

  • media, in print and online. Internet search results for terms likedemocracy”, “revolt”,

  • orstudent strikeare allegedly blocked. Even information about politically-charged

  • events likeTiananmen Squareis restricted because it shows a side of history that the

  • government wants to suppress.

  • Chinese internet doesn’t look like the rest of the world’s internet. It’s more like

  • a closed-off bubble where only state-run websites and a few heavily-censored foreign sites are

  • allowed to operate. Facebook and Twitter aren’t allowed in China, because of their alleged

  • ability tospread rumors”. Western news websites like the New York Times and the Wall

  • Street Journal have also been blocked for their reports mentioning Chinese officials.

  • Even Google search is currently blocked in China, after struggling with their censorship

  • rules for years. Additionally, all pornography has been illegal since 1949, including online.

  • China has nine government censorship agencies, employing a reported 2 Million people as of

  • 2013. Programs which block IP addresses, reset connections, and filter web addresses are

  • part of an overarching blockade referred to as theGolden Shield”, or, “the great

  • firewall of China”. The system works so well because, unlike American websites with

  • Internet providers all over the country, Chinese websites have a few majorbottleneck

  • points, which the government can switch on and off at will.

  • News agencies are required to report only state-approved news. And any reporter who

  • covers a breaking story WITHOUT getting that approval, can lose their journalist license,

  • and even go to prison. International books and movies are also edited before being released

  • to the public. In a recent James Bond movie, violence towards Chinese people and suggestions

  • of government corruption were removed.

  • Although censorship in China has largely prevailed, there are some signs that this will change

  • as opposition grows. A prominent Chinese dissident and recent Nobel Peace Prize winner denounced

  • China’s censorship policies on a global stage. Recent student protests in Hong Kong

  • also illustrate some of the youth’s disillusionment with their government. Microblogs, which are

  • a cross between twitter and blogs, have become popular places for them to voice covert discontent.

  • And with the number of China’s online users ballooning from around 20 million in the 2000,

  • to more than 600 million in 2013, China’s “net of censorshipis reportedly feeling

  • the strain.

  • Freedom of the press in the United States isn’t really as free as you might think

  • either. You can learn all about it in our video hereor if you want to learn about

  • what free speech really means in the country, take a look at the video from AJ+ below. Thank

  • you for watching TestTube! You should be sure you subscribe to get all of our latest!

In 2000, President Bill Clinton said China’s attempts at internet censorship werelike

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

B1 中級

中國的審查法有多嚴格? (How Strict Are China’s Censorship Laws?)

  • 156 12
    Jack 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
影片單字