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Category Archives: Censorship

Censorship can be a quirky business.

Posted: September 3, 2014 at 2:41 pm

Unfold a 1944 map of San Diego County by the Automobile Club of Southern California and look for Lindbergh Field, the port, Point Lomas Naval Training Center or Marine Corps Depot. You wont find them. Nor can you locate Fort Rosecrans, Camp Kearny, Navy Hospital and the Ship Repair Base, Camp Pendleton, or the 29 other military installations in the region nicknamed Defense City No. 1 during World War II.

Now, unfold a second 1944 map of San Diego County by the Auto Club. It has the same cover and legend box as the first, but every airfield, military base and pier is clearly marked and indexed.

Youve stumbled across a little-known relic of World War II on the American home front. In an era when Google Earth and GPS offer instant mapping worldwide, the idea of map censorship in the United States comes off as ludicrous. Yet, 72 years ago, following the December 7, 1941, Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, map masking as the practice was called became official wartime doctrine for road maps and others issued in the U.S. for non-military use.

Under a voluntary code distributed by the Office of Censorship in early 1942, map-makers along with journalists and other purveyors of information were asked to remove details that would disclose locations of ammunition dumps or other restricted Army or Navy areas along with the locations of forts and other fortifications. The code was self-policing: media were to ask themselves, Is this information that I would like to have if I were the enemy? and act accordingly, says historian Michael Sweeney, whose book Secrets of Victory examines the bureau.

For the Auto Club, which worked closely with West Coast defense authorities to craft maps for the military, its cartographers were often able to print two sets of maps: fully detailed renderings of the state, counties, and cities for the armed forces; and censored editions for civilians thus the contrasting 1944 San Diego County versions.

For other map-makers, especially those producing consumer maps for gasoline brands to distribute, masking proved inconsistent, quirky, and even darkly humorous.

Most U.S. oil company road maps were drawn by H.M. Gousha of Chicago/San Jose, by Rand McNally of Chicago, or by General Drafting of New York. These often colorful maps had exploded in popularity during the 1930s with the growth in motoring. Americas December 1941 entry into the war, however, generated wartime paper shortages, gasoline rationing, and a crimped market for tourism. The companies nevertheless issued 1942 maps for most states and cities, as they had already begun production, but not until 1946 did updated maps again appear broadly. (Maps from 1942 were occasionally reprinted during later war years.)

So, while the Auto Club could derive ongoing civilian issues from its military versions, the major map companies had to choose what to eliminate on each of their prewar issues within a one-time span of a few months. Depending on the cartographer, their wartime maps of the same area differed as to which, if any, airfields, ports, dams, oil fields, military bases, and related facilities disappeared. Even among maps drawn by the same company, the level of masking varied based on the gas-brand label.

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WorldViews: LinkedIn thinking twice about its adoption of Chinas aggressive censorship

Posted: at 2:41 pm

An image from LinkedIn's Chinese-language Web site.

After complaints and clear examples of bowing to Chinese censorship diktats, LinkedIn says it may have acted too hastily in friending Chinas government.

LinkedIn executives said Tuesday that they are reconsidering their policies, after seven months of censoring content from China deemed too sensitive.

"We do want to get this right, and we are strongly considering changing our policy so that content from our Chinese members that is not allowed in China will still be viewed globally, Hani Durzy, a spokesman for the Mountain View, Calif.-based company, told Bloomberg.

The professional social networking site is just the latest to wrestle with the moral quandaries that come with doing business in China amid the government's paranoia about the Internet. Facebook, Twitter and Google are largely blocked here.

LinkedIn, however, thought it could make it work. In February, the company launched its Chinese-language Web site and set up operations in China. In return, it promised to follow Chinese government rules and started self-censoring content.

But spokesman Durzy insisted back then that the company would do so only when legally required.

Then, in June, came the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown. The anniversary, a perennial headache for Web users in China, is marked by a clampdown on search terms, Internet speeds and intense government scrutiny.

LinkedIn users reported posts about Tiananmen being blocked even in Hong Kong, which lies outsides Chinas censorship firewall. LinkedIn said at the time that it was an accident.And it said that although such content was self-censored in China, it would remain accessible elsewhere in the world.

But some users said that wasnt true.

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LinkedIn Considers Changes After China Censorship Revealed

Posted: at 2:41 pm

LinkedIns censorship practices in China were brought into the open Monday after a Shanghai-based journalist released an email from the company notifying him that one of his articles would be blocked in the Communist state.

The June email to Rob Schmitz, a reporter for Marketplace.org, showed how LinkedIn is deciding what to censor based on guidelines handed down by Chinese officials.

The email revealed another little-known LinkedIn policy: Content prohibited in China that is posted from within China is censored everywhere in the world not just in China.

A LinkedIn spokesman said the policy was designed to protect people in China from retribution from government officials, who might notice the content outside China.

The spokesman said LinkedIn is considering changing the policy, which has been criticized by human-rights groups.

The incident highlights the challenges for social networks in the worlds most populous country, where media are strictly controlled. Facebook does not offer its main service in China, and maintains only a small ad-sales office there.

When LinkedIn launched its China site in February, CEO Jeff Weiner said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal that some content might be censored, and that he wasnt sure how the censorship would work.

We are strongly in support of freedom of expression and we are opposed to censorship but recognize that in order to obtain a license [in China], there will be requests to filter content and thats going to be necessary for us to achieve the kind of scale that wed like, he said at the time.

The LinkedIn spokesman said the company did not receive a request from China to censor content until June, more than three months after it launched there. The request, which listed several specific areas LinkedIn was instructed to ban from its site in China, coincided with the 25th anniversary of the Chinas bloody suppression of protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989. The LinkedIn spokesman would not specify the taboo subjects.

According to Schmitz, LinkedIn in June blocked an article he posted to the network about the anniversary. He said LinkedIn also blocked another article, by a journalist for The Australian, about Guo Jian, a Tiananmen Square protester and artist detained by Chinese officials shortly before the anniversary.

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LinkedIn Reviewing China Censorship Policy

Posted: September 2, 2014 at 10:41 pm

LinkedIn Corp. (LNKD) expanded into China this year, adopting policies in line with the countrys censorship rules. Now, the worlds largest professional social-networking company is saying it may have gone too far.

When a LinkedIn user in China shares a post deemed to be in conflict with the governments rules, the company blocks the content not only in China but around the world. While LinkedIns goal is to protect members against how their content might be shared and noticed by the government, the practice may end up stifling Chinese users seeking to spread messages outside their country.

We do want to get this right, and we are strongly considering changing our policy so that content from our Chinese members that is not allowed in China will still be viewed globally, Hani Durzy, a spokesman for Mountain View, California-based LinkedIn, said yesterday.

LinkedIns dilemma underscores the difficulty of doing business in a country with stringent censorship rules, where few other U.S. technology companies have succeeded. Twitter Inc. and Facebook Inc. social-networking services are blocked in China, though Facebook is slowly expanding its advertising business there after signing a lease in central Beijing, people familiar with the matter have said.

Other social-media companies have struggled with certain countries seeking to block content on their sites, and sometimes the entire site. Twitter was blocked earlier this year in Turkey in response to leaks targeting Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogans government amid a corruption probe. Twitter has also been blocked at times in North Korea, Pakistan, Iran and Egypt. For most countries, Twitters policy is to remove content only in the country where it is illegal.

LinkedIn is notifying people when content thats deemed inappropriate by the Chinese government is blocked. Marketplace journalist Rob Schmitz wrote a story about the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square uprisings and later got an e-mail from the company saying his story would not be seen by LinkedIn members in China, and that content posted from China will be blocked globally to protect the safety of our members that live in China, Schmitz wrote recently.

The Chinese website for LinkedIn was rolled out in February to provide a localized service after more than a decade of having only an English-language site there.

Jeff Weiner, LinkedIns chief executive officer, said in a blog post in the same month that LinkedIn supports freedom of expression and fundamentally disagrees with government censorship.

At the same time, we also believe that LinkedIns absence in China would deny Chinese professionals a means to connect with others on our global platform, thereby limiting the ability of individual Chinese citizens to pursue and realize the economic opportunities, dreams and rights most important to them, Weiner said in the post.

China is now LinkedIns fastest growing major market for new members, the CEO said on a conference call on July 31. While hes hes pleased with the results thus far, there are certainly going to be challenges ahead, Weiner said.

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'Kingdom' explores dramatic censorship

Posted: at 10:41 pm

Married actors Todd Weeks and Kate Blumberg rehearse a scene from "Kingdom City" at La Jolla Playhouse.

In 1953, Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible a story set amid the 17th-century Salem witch trials as a response to attacks on intellectual freedom under the guise of rooting out Communism.

In 2006, a school district in Fulton, Mo., canceled a planned production of the Miller play which had long since become a classic and a staple of student reading lists because of worries over a plot thread of an extramarital affair.

Sheri Wilner. David Brooks

Controversies over banned school productions, of course, have been around forever, and they continue today, sometimes involving even innocuous-seeming shows: Witness the recent dust-up in Pennsylvania over a canceled staging of the comedy Monty Pythons Spamalot, apparently because of a scene in which two men discover their love for each other.

But the Missouri cancellation, which earned press in The New York Times and elsewhere, felt particularly alarming because it was The Crucible it was the irony of a play that was written to condemn censorship (itself) being censored, says playwright Sheri Wilner.

And because its such an esteemed work, adds Wilner, if a play such as that was up for debate, then really all of literature felt up for debate.

The event prompted Wilner to write her own play one thats about to receive its world premiere at La Jolla Playhouse.

Kingdom City, which begins performances today, was born partly out of anger, but also out of fear, says Wilner, who has been working on the piece for some seven years.

Yet while her play takes a critical look at censorship, Wilner also says its meant to be much more than a polemic.

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Open source tool could sniff out most heavily censored websites

Posted: at 10:41 pm

Your Alpha Doggs editor is Bob Brown, Network World Online Executive Editor, News.

Georgia Tech researchers are seeking the assistance of website operators to help better understand which sites are being censored and then figure out how to get around such restricted access by examining the data collected.

The open source Encore[Enabling Lightweight Measurements of Censorship with Cross-Origin Requests]tool involves website operators installing a single line of code onto their sites, and that in turn will allow the researchers to determine whether visitors to these sites are blocked from visiting other sites around the world known to be censored. The researchers are hoping to enlist a mix of small and big websites, and currently it is running on about 10 of them.

The code works in the background after a page is loaded and Georgia Techs team claims the tool wont slow performance for end users or websites, nor does it track browsing behavior.

+Also on NetworkWorld: 13 of today's Coolest Network Research Projects +

"Web censorship is a growing problem affecting users in an increasing number of countries," said Sam Burnett, the Georgia Tech Ph.D. candidate who leads the project, in a statement. "Collecting accurate data about what sites and services are censored will help educate users about its effects and shape future Internet policy discussions surrounding Internet regulation and control."

(Burnetts adviser is Nick Feamster, whose Internet censorship research weve written about in the past. I exchanged email with Feamster to gain additional insight into this new research.)

End users wont even know the baseline data measurement is taking place, which of course when youre talking about censorship and privacy, can be a sticky subject. Facebook learned that recently when disclosures erupted regarding its controversial secret study of users moods. The Georgia Tech researchers in an FAQ say their tool can indicate to users that their browsers are conducting measurements, and that users can opt out.

"Nothing would pop up [in an end user's browser] but a webmaster has an option to make the measurements known/visible," Feamster says.

"They also assure potential Encore users that the list of censored sites compiled by Herdict does not include pornographic ones, so an end users browser wont be directed to such sites in the name of research.

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Bushwicks Boob-Themed Bar Threatened With Censorship

Posted: at 10:41 pm

In the name of the kids.

Paging #Freethenipple! Boobie Trap, the breast-themed bar the Cut visited last month, is getting complaints from neighbors and local government officials, reports DNAinfo.

Brooklyn AssemblymemberMaritza Davila has raised concerns about the bars proximity to an elementary school, and the large windows that allow passing neighborhood children to revel in the boob-centric decorations, as passing neighborhood children are wont to do.

But remember, the bar sounds racier than it actually it is. Sure, the bar has a huge neon sign that says fuck off, various representations of breasts on the ceiling, bar, tables, and chairs, and boob coloring-book pages but the overall effect is kitschy, not smutty. (Though we can see how the kids might be confused about the coloring books and crayons.)

Owner Kristen North, her business partner, and Davila will meet soon; but until a compromise can be reached, North has covered the neon sign with a curtain. She has no plans to censor the boob dcor just yet.

First Instagram, now a local watering hole. Is nowhere in this world safe for breasts?

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Game of thrones ALL THE SEX SCENES HD no censorship – Video

Posted: September 1, 2014 at 4:42 pm


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Let’s Play GTA4 LAD Part 9 – Censorship! – Video

Posted: at 3:43 am


Let #39;s Play GTA4 LAD Part 9 - Censorship!
Yep... The first clearly seen penis in GTA4...

By: Vlad of Wallachia

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Let's Play GTA4 LAD Part 9 - Censorship! - Video

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CRAZY Youtube Censorship.No TRUTH Allowed.GRAPHIC MURDER Is A-OK Though. – Video

Posted: at 3:43 am


CRAZY Youtube Censorship.No TRUTH Allowed.GRAPHIC MURDER Is A-OK Though.
IMPORTANT INFO DOWN BELOW--- Feel free to share, download and mirror this video to ensure it reaches the largest amount of people as possible. So as it turns out, the people here on Youtube...

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CRAZY Youtube Censorship.No TRUTH Allowed.GRAPHIC MURDER Is A-OK Though. - Video

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