Chinese Stranglehold

17 April 2006

Yahoo! employees get chance to see Chinese detainee videos outside company's headquarters

(RSF/IFEX) - A Reporters Without Borders team stationed itself with a video player outside Yahoo!'s California headquarters on 7 April 2006 and stopped employees as they left the building, offering to show them videos filmed in China of people criticising Yahoo!'s cooperation with the Chinese police. The videos, which can be downloaded from the Reporters Without Borders website ( http://www.rsf...

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17 April 2006

WTO members urged to oppose a new wave of Chinese media restrictions

(RSF/IFEX) - Reporters Without Borders has called on World Trade Organisation (WTO) member states to oppose a series of restrictive measures just adopted by the Chinese government which are a complete violation of WTO principles and will jeopardise the liberalisation and development of the Chinese media. China joined the WTO in 2001. "The credibility of China's integration into the WTO requires a...

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12 April 2006

Top Chinese websites back self-censorship

BEIJING, China (UPI) -- Eleven of China`s major news Web sites endorsed a self-censorship proposal Wednesday to block pornographic and violent Internet content. Such sites as Xinhuanet.com, People.com.cn, China.com.cn, Chinadaily.com.cn, and Chinanews.com issued a joint statement saying they would participate in compliance with the 'Eight Honors and Disgraces,' a new concept of socialist morality...

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12 April 2006

Chief says Google won't fight Chinese censorship

BEIJING, April 12 – Google's chief executive, Eric E. Schmidt, whose technology company has been sharply criticized for complying with Chinese censors, said today that Google was not lobbying to change the country's censorship laws and, for now, had no plans to do so. "I think it's arrogant for us to walk into a country where we are just beginning operations and tell that country how to run itself...

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7 April 2006

Beijing jilts foreign publishers as it caps lifestyle magazines

China has placed a moratorium on new foreign magazines on topics other than science and technology, dealing a blow to international media companies looking to tap the nation's booming advertising market. One casualty of the policy, adopted by China's top publishing regulator, is the Chinese edition of the rock and youth-culture magazine Rolling Stone. The magazine had published its first edition...

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29 March 2006

Yahoo founder defends China censorship

Jerry Yang, one of the co-founders of Internet giant Yahoo, defended the Internet search engine's cooperation with the Chinese government's censorship of the Web, saying it was necessary to reach out to new users, an AFP report said. The report said lawmakers had accused tech giants Yahoo, Google and Microsoft of helping sustain the so-called "Great Firewall of China," which blocked searches of...

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27 March 2006

Journalist number doubles in 20 years

The number of journalists in China has doubled compared with 20 years earlier, official statistics show. Figures released by the General Administration of Press and Publication indicated that more than 700,000 people chose journalism as their career last year, 150,000 of them armed with a journalist certificate. According to the administration, Chinese journalists are increasingly entering the...

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27 March 2006

Number of Chinese journalists has doubled in 20 years

The number of journalists in China has doubled compared with 20 years earlier, official statistics show. Figures released by the General Administration of Press and Publication indicated that more than 700,000 people chose journalism as their career last year, 150,000 of them armed with a journalist certificate. According to the administration, Chinese journalists are increasingly entering the...

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17 March 2006

China drops charges against NYT researcher, to be released soon

China has agreed to drop charges against a Chinese journalist who worked as a researcher for the New York Times. Zhao Yan, jailed since October 2004 after his arrest on charges of fraud and illegally releasing state secrets, is likely to be released soon. Zhao’s case was threatening to overshadow Chinese President Hu Jintao’s forthcoming visit to the United States. Hu is expected to make his first...

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9 March 2006

Microsoft denies aiding Chinese case against journalist

Microsoft on Wednesday denied providing Chinese authorities with information that led to the arrest of a Chinese journalist on charges of incitement to subversion. Reports emerged Tuesday that journalist Li Yuanlong was charged last month for using a Hotmail account to post articles on an overseas Web site under a pseudonym. "Microsoft did not assist the Chinese government in this action, nor have...

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