As far as I can tell, China doesn't keyword-filter in the sense most
people think of that phrase. That is, the Great Firewall isn't inspecting
all the text which flows through it, failing to deliver any web pages which
have offending words. The filtering is of two main types:
1) any of
As far as I can tell, China doesn't keyword-filter in the sense most
people think of that phrase. That is, the Great Firewall isn't inspecting
all the text which flows through it, failing to deliver any web pages which
have offending words. The filtering is of two main types:
1) any of
Mary L. Gray and Kate Crawford are kicking off a special section for IJoC
that takes a critical look at big data: from the disciplinary perspectives
and methods, to issues of access and epistemology.
*Call for Papers
“Big Data, Big Questions, or, Accounting for Big Data” *
International Journal
Rebecca MacKinnon would be one to ask about Internet censorship in China - she
studied it at the University of Hong Kong a few years ago, and is on the board
of Global Voices Online. She's now a fellow at the New America Foundation.
Bio/contact info: http://newamerica.net/user/303
On Aug 15,
Rebecca's study is here:
http://firstmonday.org/article/view/2378/2089
She found significant variation in ISP practices at the time.
Cheers
Ivan
Ivan Sigal
Executive Director, Global Voices
i...@globalvoicesonline.org l +1 202 361 2712
www.globalvoicesonline.org
On Aug 15, 2012, at 9:35
On Wed, Aug 15, 2012 at 02:55:33PM +0800, cra...@oneotaslopes.org wrote 14K
bytes in 386 lines about:
: As far as I can tell, China doesn't keyword-filter in the sense most
: people think of that phrase. That is, the Great Firewall isn't inspecting
: all the text which flows through it, failing
On Aug 15, 2012, at 2:46 AM, Eric S Johnson crates at oneotaslopes.org
wrote:
There are persistent reports that China?s cybercensorship can
sometimes vary (a little) by ISP, but I?ve never seen this (I?ve only
been to ~13 of the 34 PRC-defined provinces), and Alkasir hasn?t ever
detected any
This paper Ignoring the Great Firewall of China is a few years old, but
at the time China was inspecting TCP packets for verboten keywords:
http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~rnc1/ignoring.pdf
The blocking was easy to circumvent. The researchers were able to just
ignore TCP reset packets and the
Rebecca's brilliant study (cited by Ivan) was about how companies which host
content domestically (in China) monitor that content and delete anything
they think doesn't belong. It has nothing to do with ISPs, and nothing to do
with the blocking of foreign content (the Great Firewall).
Best,
On Thu, Aug 16, 2012 at 03:04:04AM +0800, Eric S Johnson wrote:
Yes—they stopped doin packet inspection in about 2008, near as I can tell.
From: Steve Weis [mailto:stevew...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, 16 August 2012 00:56
To: Eric S Johnson
Cc: Stanford tech list
Subject: Re:
On Wed, Aug 15, 2012 at 02:55:33PM +0800, Eric S Johnson wrote:
Sometimes (inconsistently), an attempt to see blocked content
results not only in the content not being delivered, but also a “punishment”
meted out to the offending user: all attempts to access servers outside China
Hi Phillipp,
Eric, that's interesting, could you elaborate on that?
According to my own experience, deep packet inspection in China is still used
I'm not saying China doesn't do DPI. I'm just saying that, from my own
experience living in China for the past three years, DPI doesn’t
Eric S Johnson:
Hi Phillipp,
Eric, that's interesting, could you elaborate on that?
According to my own experience, deep packet inspection in China is still used
I'm not saying China doesn't do DPI. I'm just saying that, from my own
experience living in China for the past
Hrm. You did actually say:
Yes-they stopped doin packet inspection in about 2008, near as I can
tell.
That's a bit confusing as we've seen direct evidence of DPI that results
in real time *probing* of Tor bridges. We know they do DPI to do this
and we know they trigger specific kinds of
On Thu, Aug 16, 2012 at 05:15:49AM +0800, Eric S Johnson wrote:
I.e. it's easy to register a new domain (call it TestChinaCyberFiltering.org)
and put up onto it a handful of pages which include every possible word and
phrase which we know are problematic to the Chinese censors. Start with the
On Thu, Aug 16, 2012 at 05:15:49AM +0800, Eric S Johnson wrote:
I.e. it's easy to register a new domain (call it TestChinaCyberFiltering.org)
and put up onto it a handful of pages which include every possible word and
phrase which we know are problematic to the Chinese censors. Start with the
I.e. it's easy to register a new domain (call it
TestChinaCyberFiltering.org) and put up onto it a handful of pages
The first is that DPI could be occurring at border routers, so that
traffic within China is not undergoing DPI scanning by default. If your
hypothetical
From: Steven Murdoch steven.murd...@cl.cam.ac.uk
Dear all,
I am co-editing an issue of IEEE Internet Computing on Internet
Censorship and Control. If anyone has proposals for a short article
(up to 5,000 words), then please email me a brief description of the
article you plan to submit by 15
Yeah but that's just one paper - she's written, been quoted, testified before
congress, spoken at conferences, etc about internet freedom and censorship,
inside china and crossing the border and by private companies, along with many
other countries around the world - including the US. And in
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