Tag Archives: China

POSITION PAPER ON WORKING CONDITIONS FOR FOREIGN CORRESPONDENTS IN CHINA

12 September, 2014 (04:00)

September 2014

Executive summary

China’s ruling Communist Party continues to erect hurdles to foreign journalists, and the media companies that employ them, discouraging reporting on many aspects of Continue reading

Activist lawyer vows to keep fighting for human rights

Campaign for human rights and rule of law on mainland will not be defeated by crackdowns or defence of one-party rule, activist insists

PUBLISHED : Sunday, 31 August, 2014, 4:49am UPDATED : Sunday, 31 August, 2014, 4:49am

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e95532e7f339c40a083a8fb3bb4be171 Continue reading

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.

Tienchi_firewall
greatfirewallofchina.org Continue reading

174 Writers in Prison in China

Writers in Prison Committee

Independent Chinese PEN Center

August 2014

Writers and Journalists in Prison in China (recorded since 2004)

No.Name of WiP Sentence in Jail Remarks

1 KONG Youping 10 Years (15 y) 10 y Released

2 HUANG Jinqiu 8 y 1 m (12 y) 8 y 1 m Reduced

3 DU Daobin 3 Years 3 y + 1 m Released on bail

4 OUYANG Yi 2 Years 2 y Released 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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China Targets Family, Friends to Coerce Activists

The Associated Press’ Didi Tang reports on the pressure applied to friends Continue reading

How Israel is winning the social media war in China

PETER CAI 2 SEP, 7:05 AM
The ongoing conflict between Israel and Palestine has captivated and polarised international opinion. While Israeli fighter jets were pulverising buildings with “precision weapons” Continue reading

China’s Education Gap

By HELEN GAOSEPT. 4, 2014

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Credit Dom McKenzie
BEIJING — Every September, the campuses of Peking and Tsinghua Universities, dubbed the Harvard and M.I.T. of China, Continue reading