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A lesson in censorship(2008)

Read ‘Notes on the Net’, Zola’s article on Internet activism for Index on Censorship‘s ‘Made in China’ issue here (pdf ) ,it was published in 2008, I am archive it on my blog.

Chinese blogger Zhou Shuguang’s journey through censorship, journalism and the Internet – from the Great Firewall to reporting banned stories

A lesson in censorship

In 2002, I hung around the online forum bbs.tencent.com. My first encounter with a BBS [bulletin board system] was also my first encounter with keyword filtering. On that website, all articles were censored by the software before they were posted. If certain sensitive words were found, such as ‘4 June’, ‘Falun Gong’, ‘hooker’ or ‘revolution’, the piece would not be posted. Sometimes, if an article contained non-political sensitive words like ‘fuck’, it would still be posted, but the system would replace those words with the * symbol. So I frequently saw BBS articles that contained * symbols. Some people used other symbols to separate individual characters in words like ‘revolution’ to avoid being censored by the software. I began to understand online censorship from that point.

Propaganda rules

On occasion, I’ve seen netizens make BBS posts about ‘propaganda notices’ and ‘propaganda rules’ which include prohibitions against reporting on ‘rights crusaders’, religious issues, family planning, forced eviction and demolition. The traditional Chinese media supervision framework consists of a strict registration and review system, a post-hoc censorship system, a personnel management system, and a permit system for practitioners, thereby exerting strict control over the dissemination of news.

How it works

All domestic websites must be registered, including non-commercial websites. The government assigns monitors to comment in chat rooms, direct the discussion and thereby influence public opinion. Server rooms control website content, under the supervision of the Internet Data Centre (IDC): if they discover sensitive content on websites under their jurisdiction, then the IDC will exert pressure to delete that content. ISPs and ICPs [internet content providers] are also tapped for content control. All sorts of online intimidation, complaints, administrative punishments and legal actions are employed to guarantee that all content is under the government’s control.

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interview

interview:Censorship in China

A Government Major at California State University ask me some questions about Censorship in China, below are my answers:

What kind of censorship do you face from the government?
as a blogger, if I use the BLOG service in China,content will censored when submit post, filter some keywords; after posted, may get remove article request from authority. if I use the blog and hosting in abroad, the GFW will censored keywords and key url on Internet, connection will be reset or block when people try to access it who live in Main land China.

What punishment do you face for violating censorship regulations?
there is no punishment in law, even Constitution said will protect our speech rights. If I using China service and violating censorship, my site or BSP(blog service provider) will take down by authority; if I using abroad webhosting, my site will block in China. actually my blog https://www.zuola.com/weblog/ still blocked in China.

How do you get around or avoid censorship/punishment?
no way to avoid censorship in fact, but in technical we have some way, for example, promote RSS subscribe, enable SSL over HTTP, but not win for long time, GFW will Poisoning on DNS system to block China user to access specific web domain . but blogger still have subscribers because Google Reader still work and Google reader , and social network also help content distribute, and a lot of reader have bypass GFW capability.

Since you’ve been actively blogging, have you seen a change in how the government censors media or news?
Yes. government have to monitor BLOG to censor news, and a lot of media get news source from blogs, lot of Publicity instruction related with blog news. in China,mainstream media under pressure but blog not, so government monitor a lot of blog and give pressure to BSP to censor content.

What are you hopes for the future of censorship in China?
I hope censorship in transparent ,let us discuss why need censor in each case.