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Category Archives: Censorship

China's influence threatens American universities, experts say

Posted: December 4, 2014 at 8:42 pm

The Chinese government's influence over American universities is broad and deep, ranging from such subtle pressures as the denial of visas for vocal American scholars to more overt efforts, including opening Chinese cultural institutes on U.S. college campuses, experts on human rights and education told lawmakers Thursday.

That influence has become more pronounced as American universities open satellites campuses in the country and welcome Chinese government-funded programs on their stateside campuses, experts said.

"U.S. colleges and universities should not be outsourcing academic control, faculty and student oversight or curriculum to a foreign government," Rep. Christopher H. Smith (R-N.J.) said at a House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing. He said he would call for a Government Accountability Office study into academic agreements American universities have made with China.

Much of the debate centered on the Confucius Institutes, Chinese government-sponsored cultural centers at universities worldwide. Funded by the Chinese government, the institutes provide language instruction and sponsor cultural exchanges, but some experts worry they allow China to engage in "soft power" propaganda campaigns and encourage censorship over certain topics.

China says the institutes which experts estimate could number more than 400 worldwide are established only at schools that invite them and do not force their curriculum on any campus.

Experts suggested that the federal government could do more to finance Chinese-language programs within the United States, rather than relying on Chinese funds to do so.

"Why should we hand our young people over to an authoritarian government because they supply the funds?" asked Perry Link, a Chinese-language professor at UC Riverside. "We have enough funds for that."

Experts also called on lawmakers to withhold visas for Confucius Institute instructors as long as China continues to do the same for American scholars.

Mainly, they said, American universities must do more in their negotiations as they develop partnerships with China, pushing for broader discussion rather than quieting debates over controversial topics on their campuses.

"If you don't stake out the borderline, natural self-censorship will stick in," Link said.

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Serbia: MP grows BEARD in protest over censorship – Video

Posted: December 3, 2014 at 7:44 am


Serbia: MP grows BEARD in protest over censorship
Video ID: 20141130-029 M/S Aleksandar Senic working at his desk C/U Calendar on Senic #39;s desk SOT, Aleksandar Senic, MP New Democratic party (Serbian): "I cam...

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FSRN ACTA Renews Internet Censorship Fears – Video

Posted: December 1, 2014 at 11:42 pm


FSRN ACTA Renews Internet Censorship Fears

By: Abby306

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Safety of Journalists in Somalia a Major Concern

Posted: at 10:45 am

MOGADISHU

U.N. agencies, the Somali government and the Somali journalists' union are working to address the problem of censorship and the threat of violence against journalists in Somalia.

So far this year, at least three journalists have been killed and three more seriously wounded in the country.

Abdirizak Ilmi, a local TV journalist, was the latest victim.

Unknown gunmen shot Ilmi at close range outside his Mogadishu home. He survived but suffered severe wounds.

'Become a peaceful nation'

The government said its time to address the safety of journalists.

Mustafa Duhulow, Somalia's Minister of Information, said, As you are all aware, Somalia is moving forward to become a peaceful nation. Therefore, this is the best time to address all the challenges, such as impunity, safety of journalists and understanding the need to develop Somali media, as each countrys development depends on how free its media are."

Journalists in Somalia have been meeting with key partners to discuss their security concerns.

Recently, representatives from the United Nations, Somali government and Somali journalists union jointly expressed their concern over attacks on the media.

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Africa: Censorship in Africa – We All Lose

Posted: at 10:45 am

Blog

Many governments exercise censorship to prevent the spread of ideas they do not like. Our blogger, Shaun Matsheza, say why he thinks that African society loses out because of excessive censorship.

"When you tear out a man's tongue, you are not proving him a liar; you're only telling the world that you fear what he might say." George R. R. Martin: A Clash of Kings

In Africa, many governments censor their citizens or deny them access to information - in the name of maintaining political dominance and strengthening their grip on power.

It's unfortunate that censorship did not remain in the past era of traditional printed media. The first official act of Internet censorship in Africa occurred, according to research done by Freedom of Expression Institute (FXI), in February 1996 when the Zambian government removed a banned edition of The Post from the newspaper's website by threatening to prosecute Zamnet, the country's main Internet Service Provider (ISP).

Many other examples have occurred since... In April 2011, Uganda's Communications Commission (UCC) quietly ordered ISPs to block Facebook and Twitter for 24 hours in light of a Walk to Work protest against spiraling food and fuel prices in the country. In 2012, South African authorities attempted to censor Brett Murray's painting 'The spear'. Throughout the years, the Zimbabwean government has passed legislation inhibiting the freedom of speech, particularly the now unconstitutional Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA).

Few governments like to have their ideology questioned. It's the same with individuals. It's only natural for human beings to set up a defense reaction when presented with new, strange and/or extravagant ideas. We always find ways to avoid them by saying such an idea is foolish, "no good" or simply illogical. Ruling regimes are no different and they particularly detest any ideas that do not toe the line. So we can easily see how the threat of any social change related to politics, economics or religion can easily lead to censorship and propaganda by those in power.

Censorship is essentially a negative process; it is inhibitory and restrictive of action. It derives its force largely from fear and the threats of power. All forms of social taboos are designed to do just this. They furnish the individual with guideposts in his thinking, which keep him within the boundaries set by the dominant power. Where it exists, censorship greatly inhibits creativity and innovation.

In his essay 'On Liberty', John Mill makes an excellent argument for freedom of thought and freedom of expression. He believes that when restricted, it's the whole society, and not just the silenced individual, that stands to lose.

Humans are not perfect. We get things wrong. And we can never be 100% certain that we have something entirely right. Our best hope of improving our opinions is to make them public, so that others may show us our errors. By having open discussion and challenging each other's ideas, our understanding can grow. As Mill says,"to have a belief without knowing the reasons for it is no way to hold a belief; the belief may be true, but it is held as a prejudice."

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Bitcoin lets users avoid censorship

Posted: at 10:45 am

3 hours ago

In his graduation research, computer science student Krzysztof Okupski has developed software to encrypt messages with the Bitcoin network. Using his software, it costs around 50 cents to send an A4 page of text. This easily accessible and low-cost method can provide an attractive option for dissidents to avoid censorship, so they can send messages unhindered across national borders. Okupski graduates on 1 December.

Bitcoin is a virtual currency that can be used at increasing numbers of places to make online payments. In fact Bitcoins are unique pieces of code that are calculated by computers. The basic principle is that the system has no central organization or regulators to control the currency. At present the exchange rate of the currently fluctuates around 300 euros for one Bitcoin.

Okupski has developed two programs: one that posts messages and another to read them. If you want to post a message, the first program converts the text into Bitcoin transactions. The underlying principle is similar to the idea that a succession of payments are transferred to someone, and you have agreed with them that one euro represents an A, two euros represent a B etc. The recipient can then 'see' which word the sender meant to transmit, using the received amounts.

Many options

But in Okupski's case, the way the method works is a lot smarter. "The program that posts the messages creates a million Bitcoin accounts, free of charge, after which money is transferred backwards and forwards between those accounts", explains Boris Skoric, TU/e researcher and supervisor of Okupski. "The number of different accounts, and the fact that you can divide an amount of money into multiple parts, offers a lot of options. The currency itself is extremely small; one Bitcoin consists of 100 million 'Satoshi', and all amounts are expressed in Satoshi. The program that posts the messages converts them into a chain of transactions, and sends them out into the Bitcoin network."

Identifier

Because all Bitcoin transactions are public, the second program is able to convert the chain of transactions back to text. All that's needed is an 'identifier', through which the program knows where it has to start 'reading' the transaction. The principle is similar to tuning an antenna to the right frequency. The only charges involved are the administration costs that have to paid to the Bitcoin network for each transaction. These are around 50 cents for an A4 page of text. There are no real costs to be paid because senders simply recirculate money within their own accounts.

Anonymous

This method allows uses to avoid censorship, because anyone with an internet connection can use Bitcoin. In other words, no government that allows citizens to use Bitcoin can censor messages that are posted in the transaction chain anywhere else in the world. Only the sender is traceable. "Even if only your account number is known by the Bitcoin network, it's still possible in theory using the IP address to trace the owner of an account", says Skoric. "But the readers of messages are always totally anonymous."

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Why the Oxford University censorship of a pro-life debate is a positive development – Video

Posted: November 30, 2014 at 9:42 pm


Why the Oxford University censorship of a pro-life debate is a positive development
In this episode of 3 Minutes or Less we explore why the censorship of a pro-life debate at Oxford University is actually a positive development. Subscribe to...

By: LifeTV2013

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BullSkit!: Skit 1 – Censorship Stupidity: Misapropos – Video

Posted: at 9:42 pm


BullSkit!: Skit 1 - Censorship Stupidity: Misapropos
Sketches and skits nowadays are typically hit and miss. We don #39;t like to disappoint. So, just assume it #39;s crap to begin with, and you #39;ll be surprised if it #39;s good. Until then, this is BullSkit!...

By: Wasted Time Productions

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BullSkit!: Skit 1 - Censorship Stupidity: Misapropos - Video

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Censorship and Blacklisting: Jon Kelly Responds to Examiner.com – Video

Posted: November 28, 2014 at 7:42 pm


Censorship and Blacklisting: Jon Kelly Responds to Examiner.com
Vancouver UFO Examiner author and former CBS Radio feature producer Jon Kelly sets the record straight on censorship at Examiner.com and the termination of h...

By: Jon Kelly

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Censorship distortion of comfort women

Posted: at 7:42 pm

The U.S. Occupation censored Taijiro Tamuras 1947 story The Life of an Alluring Woman (Shunpu den) for describing Korean prostitutes in a war zone. The Civil Information and Education Section with censorship power decided that identifying the nationality of the prostitutes constituted criticism of that nation.

U.S. censors ordered Korean references expunged but not the description of prostitutes in a war zone not initially anyway. They knew soldiers needed sex. Whoring to use the word the New York cultural icon Lincoln Kirstein, for one, employed in one of his poems about his experience in World War II was standard fare for them. The Japanese military at one time had done a study showing that soldiers in a war zone had a particularly high output of adrenalin.

In this regard, the Relaxation and Amusement Association and the network of special comfort stations under it that the Japanese government worked to set up for the occupying soldiers in the very month the nation surrendered, August 1945, which John Dower describes in Embracing Defeat (1999), may elicit a sneer: Look how someone with a bad conscience behaves!

But the Japanese military was starkly aware of the conduct of its soldiers. After all, it issued the Senjinkun (The Code of Conduct on the Battlefield) in January 1941 in the name of the then Army Minister Hideki Tojo because military discipline on the Chinese front had broken down; insubordination, arson, pillage, and, yes, rape had gone out of control.

But in reality the move to set up RAA comfort stations was justifiable. Holly Sanders notes in Prostitution in Postwar Japan (2005), within 10 days after Occupations soldiers started landing in Yokohama on Aug. 28, more than 1,300 rapes were reported in Kanagawa alone.

The RAA brothels were shut down in half a year because of a rampant spread of VD. During that six-month period 70,000 women are estimated to have worked in them, Yukihiro Tsukada, of Kwansei Gakuin University, has written. After they were abolished, most of those sex workers became panpan (a corruption of pompom girls perhaps), as prostitutes catering to the Occupiers were called. By the 1950s their number reached 150,000.

As journalist Soichi Oya put it with a touch of exaggeration in his 1953 book, Japan had become a nation of prostitutes.

In April 1947 NHK did street recordings interviews with men and women on the street. One of them, a panpan named Tokiko Nishida working around the Yamanote Line stations, sighed, in an aside, Whos made me a woman like this? The lament struck such a chord that it turned an existing song with that refrain into a hit. The song itself had been inspired by a former military nurse turned prostitute.

Behind it all was the devastation Japan had brought upon itself. The writer Kafu Nagai pinpointed one pressing problem when he wrote in his diary, on Aug. 25, 1945: food shortages are terrifying. The possibility of 10 million Japanese starving to death was thought serious enough for four years after Japans defeat. U.S. soldiers were a reliable source of money and food.

One reason Taijiro Tamuras story The Gate of Flesh (Nikutai no mon), published just before The Life of an Alluring Woman, became a runaway best-seller then wildly popular as a stage drama and a movie may well have been that it dealt with a small group of prostitutes in Yurakucho who pledged never to have sex with GIs.

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