China Cracks Down on Internet Cafes 39
China has increased restrictions on internet game cafes. They've clamped down on anti-government slogans or displays and are now barring teenagers from them completely. Gamasutra reports: "'With the development of the Internet, there has been some harmful and illegal content,' said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao. 'The Chinese government has adopted some management measures so as to limit the immoral and harmful content, especially for young people.' Chinese regulation of Internet content has become controversial in recent weeks due to popular search engine Google's acquiescence to Chinese censorship of its results in exchange for official license to operate in the country."
Tied up nicely (Score:2, Funny)
Freedoms of religion, speech, and commerce mean nothing to the common Chinaman. Take away their Starcraft and you'll have instant civil war.
Re:Tied up nicely (Score:3, Informative)
b) "chinaman" ??? the 19th century called. They want their trite racism back.
Re:Tied up nicely (Score:1)
Re:Tied up nicely (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Tied up nicely (Score:1)
Re:Tied up nicely (Score:2)
So how'll this affect the gold farmers? (Score:1)
And, yes, I know they're not all Chinese. Yes, I know not every farmer is an adolescent. Yes, I know a large number of farming outfits are run from private offices. So don't start.
Re:So how'll this affect the gold farmers? (Score:2)
Re:So how'll this affect the gold farmers? (Score:2)
Even if you're just a casual player of MMOs, the farmers have a seriously detrimental effect on your gameplay experience (unless 'u want buy gold'). The more gold they pump into the system, the higher prices go. If prices are higher, they can turn around and take more of that gold they just sold away from you in the form of epic items, and sell it back to you the next time you're hurting for cash. And believe me, they push aggressively for higher prices by buying up whole markets of goods. It seriously cram
Re:So how'll this affect the gold farmers? (Score:2)
Since they're not making any pro-democracy statments, I deduct therefore that Blizzard loves farmers.
Re:So how'll this affect the gold farmers? (Score:1)
Re:So how'll this affect the gold farmers? (Score:1)
Re:So how'll this affect the gold farmers? (Score:2)
Didn't know if someone out there had some more in-depth information on how things are going to be regulated or not, though. Never hurts to ask. Usually.
Re:So how'll this affect the gold farmers? (Score:1)
Help yourself out (Score:2)
With the conditions that:
Well, now we have to play the odds. For this to affect gold farming, there needs to be a good percentage of gold farmers affected by this.
Re:Help yourself out (Score:2)
Just hoping to spark some intelligent conversation on a topic related to this issue that I could actually discuss. I'm hardly a master of international censorship policy and politics, but I've seen firsthand how this particular region's internet users can affect things I do. I tacked that addendum on at the end to ward off the "Not all farmers are C
Breaking Through (Score:2)
This looks like a typical proxy method, but NPR was running a story this morning on Circumventor [peacefire.org] - a way to gain access to blocked content by using an outside proxy.
I wish this were a "solution" but it's just another bathtub distillery.
YRO? (Score:1, Interesting)
It is eerie, blocking content for the purpose of "Protecting the children".... COPA anyone? If the government were censoring our access to information, and doing it well how would we ever know?
Hell, all these stories about the great firewall of china could be government introduced filler to distr
Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:CCP is out of touch (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:CCP is out of touch (Score:2)
Yeah that too.,.. (Score:1)
Re:CCP is out of touch (Score:2, Interesting)
I think you underestimate how much patriotism the Chinese, especial
Re:CCP is out of touch (Score:3, Insightful)
Vast majority of mainland chinese considers Taiwan as a province. Call it brainwashing, call it national pride, call it whatever, just don't go off running your mouth as if it were a fact. Most Taiwan-Taiwanese doesn't like KMT. So here in the US, there's a distinction of "taiwan-taiwan", "mainland-taiwan", and "mainland" chinese. And why did you drag Taiwan into th
Re:CCP is out of touch (Score:1)
The few Chinese people I have met are the most capitalist people around. Their government may be communist but alot of their attitudes, especially regarding money, are as capitalist as anyone in the western world.
Losing the Mandate of Heaven (Score:3, Interesting)
They are trying to keep a tight grip on everything while the world is changing around them. Already their system is more capitalistic than communistic in many respects- but it is a totalitarian capitalism. The Communist party has the power and they are afraid to let the reins of power go. Most Chinese in power have a few skeletons in their closets, and I feel many of them are worried that if they lost control, they would be arrested, tried, and executed.
I'm curious how China will look like in 20 years. I'm thinking they will either become the next United States or be involved in a bloody revolution. Maybe even both.
Re:How can they ban teenagers? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Not likely (Score:1)
Sure, some websites don't work (replaced by advertisements, funny, and says alot about modern China) and they have official licenses posted up, but atleast the internet works. And cheap too. For a few bucks you can surf all day.
My impression from outside of China is of a kind of dystopia where the information police patrol for thougth criminals. However, within China I never had any problem getting
Re:Not likely (Score:1)
I'm visiting China right now and realistically, there's lots of official government edicts, both old and new, that people only pay lip service to or don't bother following at all. Remember the governmental m