Re: [Wikimedia-l] No internet censorship in Hong Kong

2012-05-11 Thread Deryck Chan
Not a problem. Many east and south-east Asian countries' citizens enjoy
visa-free access to Hong Kong (
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HK_Visa_Policy.png ).

Visa-on-demand for business or leisure travel is also available for
residents of most major cities in mainland China and all of Guangdong
province (the province surrounding Hong Kong). Application needs to be done
prior to travel, but rejections of such visa is unheard of in the last few
years. I have relatives from Guangzhou who visit Hong Kong regularly on
these visas and they've never had a problem :)

That said, more complex procedures are needed for people from rural areas
of mainland China to visit Hong Kong. With our working partnerships in the
Meeting and Exhibition Office in the government, we endeavour to ensure
that every registered attendee of Wikimania 2013 gets the visa assistance
they need.

There are special visa for residents of Taiwan to visit Hong Kong. Other
than a few extraordinary cases involving high-profile controversial
politicians, rejection of such visa is also unheard of.

Deryck

On 11 May 2012 22:53, Katie Chan k...@ktchan.info wrote:

 On 11/05/2012 21:16, Kim Bruning wrote:

  Right. My concern about Israel was that almost no one from the
 surrounding area would be
 able to visit.  (This turned out to be accurate, but it was too late to
 fix).

 Will many people from surrounding countries be able to visit .hk without
 problems? If so,
 that should be ok then.

 That and I'm looking forward to visiting a place with sane border customs
 practices for a
 change ;-)


 While pretty much every countries from Europe, NS America  Australasia
 are visa free according to the bid page, a lot of Asian and Middle Eastern
 countries would require visa. Even those places from where visa would be
 required, they should be okay I believe. Ironically, the only exception to
 that is if the person is from mainland China (PRC).



 KTC

 --
 Experience is a good school but the fees are high.
- Heinrich Heine

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] No internet censorship in Hong Kong

2012-05-10 Thread Deryck Chan
Dear all,

It has come to the attention of the Wikimania 2013 Hong Kong organizing
team that there may be confusion over the situation of internet censorship
in China and whether it affects Hong Kong. [1]

We would like to clarify that, although Hong Kong has been nominally part
of the People's Republic of China since 1997, the city-state of Hong Kong
retains complete independence over civilian affairs. This, of course, means
that internet regulation in Hong Kong is completely separate from that of
Mainland China, and therefore internet censorship in Mainland China (the
Great Firewall of China, [2]) does not apply to Hong Kong.

We would like to reassure all Wikimedians, especially those considering to
attend Wikimania 2013, that *Wikipedia has never been censored in Hong Kong*.
Visitors to Hong Kong will enjoy, among other things such as exuberant
local cuisine and efficient public transport, uncensored internet
connection and unhindered access to Wikimedia projects.

We hope to see you all at Wikimania 2012 in Washington DC and Wikimania
2013 in Hong Kong.

With best wishes,
Deryck Chan
Global engagement coordinator
Wikimania 2013 organizing team / Wikimedia Hong Kong

[1]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:Wikipedia_Signpost/2012-05-07/News_and_notes
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Firewall

(cross-posted to wikimania-l, internal-l and wikimedia-l)
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] No internet censorship in Hong Kong

2012-05-10 Thread Mingli Yuan
Hi, Todd and all,

I don't think WMF support any regime implicitly which censor the online
speech.

I am from Mainland China, I hate the censorship, I had did some small steps
to against it just as lots of our friends on Chinese Wikipedia.

The only thing I want to talk is that small changes are taking place in the
country, and the access of Wikimedia projects inside China will help the
process.

Be confident for the young people here.

Regards,
Mingli

On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 5:27 AM, Todd Allen toddmal...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Thu, May 10, 2012 at 2:39 PM, Deryck Chan deryckc...@wikimedia.hk
 wrote:
  Dear all,
 
  It has come to the attention of the Wikimania 2013 Hong Kong organizing
  team that there may be confusion over the situation of internet
 censorship
  in China and whether it affects Hong Kong. [1]
 
  We would like to clarify that, although Hong Kong has been nominally part
  of the People's Republic of China since 1997, the city-state of Hong Kong
  retains complete independence over civilian affairs. This, of course,
 means
  that internet regulation in Hong Kong is completely separate from that of
  Mainland China, and therefore internet censorship in Mainland China (the
  Great Firewall of China, [2]) does not apply to Hong Kong.
 
  We would like to reassure all Wikimedians, especially those considering
 to
  attend Wikimania 2013, that *Wikipedia has never been censored in Hong
 Kong*.
  Visitors to Hong Kong will enjoy, among other things such as exuberant
  local cuisine and efficient public transport, uncensored internet
  connection and unhindered access to Wikimedia projects.
 
  We hope to see you all at Wikimania 2012 in Washington DC and Wikimania
  2013 in Hong Kong.
 
  With best wishes,
  Deryck Chan
  Global engagement coordinator
  Wikimania 2013 organizing team / Wikimedia Hong Kong
 
  [1]
 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:Wikipedia_Signpost/2012-05-07/News_and_notes
  [2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Firewall
 
  (cross-posted to wikimania-l, internal-l and wikimedia-l)
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 It is still disgraceful that WMF, an organization supposedly devoted
 to free information, is implicitly supporting a regime that routinely
 and as a matter of policy refuses free information flow to its
 citizens. Hong Kong in particular may not do that, but Hong Kong is
 part of China, and China does. China will receive money from this
 event.

 Perhaps Google and the like are concerned only with profit and will do
 business in China regardless of ethical considerations, but WMF is a
 nonprofit dedicated to the exact opposite of China's policies, and
 should refuse to provide any monetary support for China until and
 unless China removes all censorship from its population. The fact that
 it has failed to do so, and is indeed implicitly supporting China, has
 me strongly reconsidering both my editorial and monetary support.

 --
 Freedom is the right to say that 2+2=4. From this all else follows.

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] No internet censorship in Hong Kong

2012-05-10 Thread Deryck Chan
Todd,
I'm afraid you've mistaken. Hong Kong is fiscally independent from the rest
of China, and not a single cent of the Hong Kong government's income is
passed on to the PRC government in Beijing.
Deryck

On 10 May 2012 22:27, Todd Allen toddmal...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Thu, May 10, 2012 at 2:39 PM, Deryck Chan deryckc...@wikimedia.hk
 wrote:
  Dear all,
 
  It has come to the attention of the Wikimania 2013 Hong Kong organizing
  team that there may be confusion over the situation of internet
 censorship
  in China and whether it affects Hong Kong. [1]
 
  We would like to clarify that, although Hong Kong has been nominally part
  of the People's Republic of China since 1997, the city-state of Hong Kong
  retains complete independence over civilian affairs. This, of course,
 means
  that internet regulation in Hong Kong is completely separate from that of
  Mainland China, and therefore internet censorship in Mainland China (the
  Great Firewall of China, [2]) does not apply to Hong Kong.
 
  We would like to reassure all Wikimedians, especially those considering
 to
  attend Wikimania 2013, that *Wikipedia has never been censored in Hong
 Kong*.
  Visitors to Hong Kong will enjoy, among other things such as exuberant
  local cuisine and efficient public transport, uncensored internet
  connection and unhindered access to Wikimedia projects.
 
  We hope to see you all at Wikimania 2012 in Washington DC and Wikimania
  2013 in Hong Kong.
 
  With best wishes,
  Deryck Chan
  Global engagement coordinator
  Wikimania 2013 organizing team / Wikimedia Hong Kong
 
  [1]
 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:Wikipedia_Signpost/2012-05-07/News_and_notes
  [2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Firewall
 
  (cross-posted to wikimania-l, internal-l and wikimedia-l)
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 It is still disgraceful that WMF, an organization supposedly devoted
 to free information, is implicitly supporting a regime that routinely
 and as a matter of policy refuses free information flow to its
 citizens. Hong Kong in particular may not do that, but Hong Kong is
 part of China, and China does. China will receive money from this
 event.

 Perhaps Google and the like are concerned only with profit and will do
 business in China regardless of ethical considerations, but WMF is a
 nonprofit dedicated to the exact opposite of China's policies, and
 should refuse to provide any monetary support for China until and
 unless China removes all censorship from its population. The fact that
 it has failed to do so, and is indeed implicitly supporting China, has
 me strongly reconsidering both my editorial and monetary support.

 --
 Freedom is the right to say that 2+2=4. From this all else follows.

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] No internet censorship in Hong Kong

2012-05-10 Thread Nathan
This is a similar argument to those made against Egypt or Israel etc. It's
a facile and false notion that holding Wikimania in a particular city is an
implicit political endorsement for the national government of the host
city. You could just as easily interpret it in the opposite manner -
holding a Wikimania event in Egypt, Israel, China, the U.S. or elsewhere
supports knowledge liberalism and draws attention to the mission of the WMF
in the areas where it may be most poignant. More likely, the decision of
where to hold the event is made independent of political concerns and the
WMF, as well as the host Wikimedians, take no political positions implicit
or otherwise.

~Nathan
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] No internet censorship in Hong Kong

2012-05-10 Thread Itzik Edri
+1. I totally agree with Nathan.

On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 12:49 AM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com wrote:

 This is a similar argument to those made against Egypt or Israel etc. It's
 a facile and false notion that holding Wikimania in a particular city is an
 implicit political endorsement for the national government of the host
 city. You could just as easily interpret it in the opposite manner -
 holding a Wikimania event in Egypt, Israel, China, the U.S. or elsewhere
 supports knowledge liberalism and draws attention to the mission of the WMF
 in the areas where it may be most poignant. More likely, the decision of
 where to hold the event is made independent of political concerns and the
 WMF, as well as the host Wikimedians, take no political positions implicit
 or otherwise.

 ~Nathan
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] No internet censorship in Hong Kong

2012-05-10 Thread James Alexander
It does, at least at some level, seem to be an argument (usually from
different people) every Wikimania. There just isn't a way to have it in a
place that everyone is happy with (especially if you want to rotate around
the world. I'd also point remind people that among all of the places
Wikimania has been it's also been in Taiwan in 07. It has seemed to be much
better to do the selection non-politically (while not being shy about who
we are and what we believe).

James

On Thu, May 10, 2012 at 3:25 PM, Itzik Edri it...@infra.co.il wrote:

 +1. I totally agree with Nathan.

 On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 12:49 AM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com wrote:

  This is a similar argument to those made against Egypt or Israel etc.
 It's
  a facile and false notion that holding Wikimania in a particular city is
 an
  implicit political endorsement for the national government of the host
  city. You could just as easily interpret it in the opposite manner -
  holding a Wikimania event in Egypt, Israel, China, the U.S. or elsewhere
  supports knowledge liberalism and draws attention to the mission of the
 WMF
  in the areas where it may be most poignant. More likely, the decision of
  where to hold the event is made independent of political concerns and the
  WMF, as well as the host Wikimedians, take no political positions
 implicit
  or otherwise.
 
  ~Nathan
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] No internet censorship in Hong Kong

2012-05-10 Thread Richard Symonds
I must admit I had concerns, but they're allayed considerably by the
statement that HK is fiscally independent from the PRC. Hopefully having
such a free event in an area of the world where freedom of information is
in relatively short supply will do wonderful things for the movement and
the world!

Thank you to WMHK for clarifying things.

Richard Symonds
On May 10, 2012 11:47 PM, James Alexander jameso...@gmail.com wrote:

 It does, at least at some level, seem to be an argument (usually from
 different people) every Wikimania. There just isn't a way to have it in a
 place that everyone is happy with (especially if you want to rotate around
 the world. I'd also point remind people that among all of the places
 Wikimania has been it's also been in Taiwan in 07. It has seemed to be much
 better to do the selection non-politically (while not being shy about who
 we are and what we believe).

 James

 On Thu, May 10, 2012 at 3:25 PM, Itzik Edri it...@infra.co.il wrote:

  +1. I totally agree with Nathan.
 
  On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 12:49 AM, Nathan nawr...@gmail.com wrote:
 
   This is a similar argument to those made against Egypt or Israel etc.
  It's
   a facile and false notion that holding Wikimania in a particular city
 is
  an
   implicit political endorsement for the national government of the host
   city. You could just as easily interpret it in the opposite manner -
   holding a Wikimania event in Egypt, Israel, China, the U.S. or
 elsewhere
   supports knowledge liberalism and draws attention to the mission of the
  WMF
   in the areas where it may be most poignant. More likely, the decision
 of
   where to hold the event is made independent of political concerns and
 the
   WMF, as well as the host Wikimedians, take no political positions
  implicit
   or otherwise.
  
   ~Nathan
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] No internet censorship in Hong Kong

2012-05-10 Thread Tom Morris
On Thursday, 10 May 2012 at 22:49, Nathan wrote:
 This is a similar argument to those made against Egypt or Israel etc. It's
 a facile and false notion that holding Wikimania in a particular city is an
 implicit political endorsement for the national government of the host
 city. You could just as easily interpret it in the opposite manner -
 holding a Wikimania event in Egypt, Israel, China, the U.S. or elsewhere
 supports knowledge liberalism and draws attention to the mission of the WMF
 in the areas where it may be most poignant. More likely, the decision of
 where to hold the event is made independent of political concerns and the
 WMF, as well as the host Wikimedians, take no political positions implicit
 or otherwise.




As one of the people who worked on and supported the London bid, I agree. I 
would hope that if London had got it, people wouldn't have inferred support for 
the UK's planned internet censorship regime (or, indeed, the Digital Economy 
Act, the enormous and growing gap between the rich and poor, the presence of 
unelected clerics in our legislature—a trait we share only with Iran, our 
government's horrible mistreatment of disabled people, the lack of full civil 
equality for LGBT citizens, indoctrination in religious schools, our terrible 
libel laws, or seventeen other issues I can and do get angry about very 
frequently).

Spending a week or so in a country for a conference is not the same as living 
there, becoming a citizen, pledging allegiance to the flag or the Queen or the 
Party or whatever.

In the bidding process, there rightly are some minimum standards, specifically 
with regards to freedom of speech laws and whether or not the cities in 
question are welcoming to religious and LGBT minorities. If we wish to include 
anti-censorship as one of those requirements, it'd be worth knowing that 
up-front so Wikimedians who wish to bid in the future can take that into 
account rather than have it brought up after the bidding process is complete.  

--  
Tom Morris
http://tommorris.org/



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Re: [Wikimedia-l] No internet censorship in Hong Kong

2012-05-10 Thread Katie Chan

On 11/05/2012 00:14, Tom Morris wrote:


In the bidding process, there rightly are some minimum standards,

 specifically with regards to freedom of speech laws and whether or not
 the cities in question are welcoming to religious and LGBT minorities.
 If we wish to include anti-censorship as one of those requirements,
 it'd be worth knowing that up-front so Wikimedians who wish to bid in the
 future can take that into account rather than have it brought up after
 the bidding process is complete.




If the community want to include anti-censorship (and or numerous other 
possible complaints) as one of the requirements, then good luck finding 
any city in the world to host Wikimania.


On 11/05/2012 00:07, Richard Symonds wrote:
 I must admit I had concerns, but they're allayed considerably by the
 statement that HK is fiscally independent from the PRC. Hopefully
 having such a free event in an area of the world where freedom of
 information is in relatively short supply will do wonderful things
 for the movement and the world!

Or one can just read [[Special administrative region]] (among other 
related articles) and see Currently, the two SARs of Hong Kong and 
Macau are responsible for all issues except diplomatic relations and 
national defence.



If people have a problem with one of the most multi-ethnic, 
multicultural  number 1 ranked index of economic freedom place in the 
world with constitutional guarantee of freedom of speech and press, then 
I give up.


KTC

--
Experience is a good school but the fees are high.
- Heinrich Heine

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