Tag Archives: censorship

Record censorship of China’s social media as references to Hong Kong protests blocked

PUBLISHED : Monday, 29 September, 2014, 2:09pm

UPDATED : Monday, 29 September, 2014, 6:14pm
Patrick Boehler
[email protected]

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Not Even China’s Great Firewall Can Shut Out News About Hong Kong’s Democracy Protests

By Christina Larson September 29, 2014

0929-firewall-Hong-Kong-970-630x420Riot police disperse demonstrators with tear gas during a protest near central government offices in Hong Kong on Sept. 28
Photograph by Lam Yik Fei/Bloomberg Continue reading

Censors in China keep mainlanders in dark about Hong Kong protests

While the world watches tense protests in Hong Kong, many mainland citizens in China will not be able to see the unrest because of Chinese censorship.

By TIMES STAFF ChinaMedia IndustryCensorshipInstagramHong Kong Continue reading

The Rights and Responsibilities of Disagreement

Posted on 21 September 2014 by Katherine Morton

As part of the robust engagement of the People’s Republic of China with media and academic opinion internationally, outspoken interventions, pointed critiques as well as rambunctious Continue reading

Minitrue: Scrub Story on Shuttered Libraries

The following censorship instructions, issued to the media by government authorities, have been leaked and distributed online. The name of the issuing body has been omitted to protect the source. Continue reading

CDT eBook: Decoding the Chinese Internet

September 15, 2014 9:42 AM

Posted By: Anne Henochowicz

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Tienchi Martin-Liao:If the government treats the people as its enemy…

November 21, 2012
The Chinese Communist Party has not yet blocked this website.

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greatfirewallofchina.org Continue reading

Can Frank Underwood Beat China’s Censors?

 

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6 SEP 5, 2014 2:31 PM EDT

By Adam Minter

At first glance, the Chinese government’s announcement of regulations restricting foreign programming that can be shown on Chinese streaming-video sites would appear to be very bad news for business. After all, foreign programming — especially shows produced in the U.S., Europe, Japan and Korea — is wildly successful in China. In April, when “The Big Bang Theory” and three other popular programs were pulled from streaming sites by government order, there was widespread public outrage.

That’s hardly surprising. According to China’s broadcast regulator, as reported by the Wall Street Journal, foreign programs are so popular that they account for more than half the television content on popular Chinese video websites. Not all of them are successful, of course. But those that are popular — Korean soap operas, “House of Cards,” the BBC’s “Sherlock” series, to name some recent examples — have a tendency to reach the top of most-viewed lists, dominate social media and become national topics of conversation. That results in part from the fact that streaming video sites are subject to far less regulation and censorship than television in China — a fact that naturally galls the country’s state-controlled television industry and programmers. It also seems to bother Chinese President Xi Jinping, who has been busy promoting the establishment of new media groups. Sooner or later, the government was going to tighten its grip on video streams.

On Friday afternoon, China’s broadcast regulator issued a notice that the new rules — which aren’t yet public — will go into effect next spring. According to Bloomberg News, they’ll require streaming sites to register foreign films and TV programs with the government and restrict foreign programs to 30 percent of a streaming site’s content.

For streaming sites, which compete fiercely for the rights to foreign programs (producers of popular Korean programs can ask as much as $300,000 for a single episode, according to the Wall Street Journal), that might be the best news they’ve received since the invention of the Internet.

 

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