CHINA Y GOOGLE.
Empirical Analysis of Internet
Filtering in China - una introduccion a los peligros de la Search Economia
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Internet Filtering in China in 2004-2005: A Country Study check out the chinese-wikipedia swicki at eurekster.com
"Conclusions From our data, it
appears that the set of sites blocked in China is by no means
static: whoever maintains the lists is actively updating them, and
certain general-interest high-profile sites whose content changes
frequently appear to be blocked and unblocked as those changes are
evaluated. (This is particularly noticeable with news sites such as
CNN and Slashdot.) Some new sites with sensitive content do not
appear to take long to be blocked. However, even some longstanding
sites of apparent sensitivity remain unblocked. This is most easily
noticed in our data with respect to sexually-explicit sites -- we
found blocking of only 13.4% of our sample of well-known
sexually-explicit sites -- but is also anecdotally apparent from our
data, as one notes blocking of some US intelligence sites but not
others, etc. Further data collection will be geared at determining
the extent to which the basket of sites blocked reflects shifting
substantive government policies -- whether, for example, a sea
change in relations with Taiwan, whether positive or negative, is
reflected in blocking, and if so, how quickly. China's Internet
filtering efforts remain opaque, and in the absence of government
cooperation or admission of filtering methods, data probing of the
sort used in our study remains a useful tool in determining the
scope of filtering. The authors have previously studied filtering in
Saudi Arabia and in American public libraries; in these locations,
blockage of a web page leads to an error message clearly explaining
that the requested page is unavailable due to intentional blockage.
In contrast, China's systems make it difficult for a user to
distinguish between an intentional block and a temporary network or
server glitch. This may be intentional or may reflect technical
happenstance -- that this implementation was easier or cheaper,
given the size and design of China's network infrastructure. But
some newer forms of Chinese filtering -- namely, redirection of a
request for a sensitive web site to another web site -- can be
either more or less obvious to the user than an apparent network
glitch, depending on whether the substitution is noticed. The
primary and most longstanding means of blocking is at the router
level, and on the basis of IP address -- the crudity of which means
that those implementing filtering must choose between blocking an
entire site on the basis of a small portion of its content, or
tolerating such content. This would explain why, for example, the www.mit.edu server is sometimes wholly inaccessible even though
Chinese officials likely have no objection to most content on that
server. To the extent that the entirety of that server is
nonetheless inaccessible, China's filtering system is properly
considered to be overblocking, and we believe our data indicates
extensive overblocking of this form. This may account for the rise
of still-rare forms of blocking that allow more refined content
filtering -- such as blocking by keywords or phrases in any
particular HTML page requested by a user, whether or not the site
hosting the page is present on an ex ante block list. Such blocking
is likely far more technology-intensive, in principle even slowing
overall network response time as packets are analyzed by sniffers
and the results passed to filters. Aside from allowing more refined
content filtering, such newer forms of blocking appear to be linked
to disabling Internet access for an arbitrary amount of time for a
user who requested a page with forbidden content -- enabling a
penalty for attempting access to sensitive material beyond simply
denying the very material requested. Other nascent but growing forms
of filtering appear to be targeted to limit the information that can
be gleaned from search engines -- enabling the automated blocking of
search results that may not (yet) have been filtered through human
placement on a "forbidden" list. The Chinese government and
associated network authorities are clearly continuing to experiment
with different forms of blocking, indicating that -- unlike Saudi
Arabia, which appears to have a single, declared method of blocking
and a much more constant (and apparently smaller) list of
non-sexually-explicit blocked sites -- Chinese network filtering is
an important instrument of state Internet policy, and one to which
significant technical and human resources continue to be
devoted."
Gracias.
I THINK GOOGLE.COM
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