Re: /. [How Chinese Evade Government's Web Controls]

2005-09-28 Thread Peter Thoenen
Chinese Web Controls and Tor ... a subject I happen to have close personal
experience with.  Just took a three week vacation to Dali, China and after
hitting the Great Firewall of China (tm), hopped over to the eff site,
downloaded tor and privoxy, and 10 minutes later was up and running bypassing
the supposed Great Firewall.  While I was at it, grabbed i2p and punched right
through also utilizing the i2p www proxy.

As much as folk want to rail against Tor for allowing malicious users to mask
their identity, it really does serve a higher purpose.  

As for the WSJ article, EFF or I2P really needs advertise better.  Why pay
local Chinese Internet Cafe owners when you can punch right through for free.



/. [How Chinese Evade Government's Web Controls]

2005-09-28 Thread Eugen Leitl

Link: http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/09/27/1235203
Posted by: CmdrTaco, on 2005-09-27 13:37:00

   [1]Carl Bialik from the WSJ writes China is moving to 'centralize all
   China-based Web news and opinion under a state regulator,' the Wall
   Street Journal reports, but determined citizens have found a way out
   of previous restrictions in what has become a cat-and-mouse game:
   '[2]Many Chinese Internet users, dismissing what they call government
   scare tactics, find ways around censorship. The government requires
   users of cybercafs to register with their state-issued ID cards on
   each visit, but some users avoid cybercaf registration by paying off
   owners. In response, the government has installed video cameras in
   some cafs and shut others. ... While certain words such as democracy
   are banned in online chat rooms, China's Web users sometimes transmit
   sensitive information as images, or simply speak in code, inserting
   special characters such as underscoring into typing.' Also noteworthy
   is that major portals seem to be cooperating with authorities'
   restrictions: 'Insiders who work for the big portal sites say they are
   already in regular contact with authorities about forbidden topics,
   such as the outlawed Falun Gong religious group, which their teams of
   Web editors pull off bulletin boards.'

References

   1. mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   2. 
http://online.wsj.com/public/article/0,,SB112777213097452525-zRQZ3S8IZkZDPMZNay0R6RUfXOw_20060926,00.html?mod=blogs

- End forwarded message -
-- 
Eugen* Leitl a href=http://leitl.org;leitl/a
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Re: /. [How Chinese Evade Government's Web Controls]

2005-09-28 Thread Tyler Durden
What the heck are you doing there for three weeks? Buying some golden 
triangle goods?


I hear it's beautiful, however, but it's not like you took a direct 
international flight there...


-TD



From: Peter Thoenen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Eugen Leitl [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: /. [How Chinese Evade Government's Web Controls]
Date: Tue, 27 Sep 2005 11:48:31 -0700 (PDT)

Chinese Web Controls and Tor ... a subject I happen to have close personal
experience with.  Just took a three week vacation to Dali, China and after
hitting the Great Firewall of China (tm), hopped over to the eff site,
downloaded tor and privoxy, and 10 minutes later was up and running 
bypassing
the supposed Great Firewall.  While I was at it, grabbed i2p and punched 
right

through also utilizing the i2p www proxy.

As much as folk want to rail against Tor for allowing malicious users to 
mask

their identity, it really does serve a higher purpose.

As for the WSJ article, EFF or I2P really needs advertise better.  Why pay
local Chinese Internet Cafe owners when you can punch right through for 
free.