China Now Blocking RSS Feeds 73
Phurge passed us an Ars Technica link covering China's newest internet-based crackdown: RSS feeds. Real Simple Syndication has apparently been a fairly foolproof way to get around Chinese government censors in recent years. As long ago as August, though, access to feeds has been curtailed by the Great Firewall. "More recent reports tell us that the PSB appears to have extended this block to all incoming URLs that begin with 'feeds,' 'rss,' and 'blog,' thus rendering the RSS feeds from many sites — including ones that aren't blocked in China, such as Ars Technica — useless ... there are a few workarounds, some of which may be simpler than others. Some of our readers in China tell us that web-based feed aggregators, such as NewsGator Online, (sort of) help provide access to RSS feeds. One reader says that if he has the aggregator set to display the full post (or however much of the post is made available) and clicks through to read more, everything is just fine."
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If it is just the heading that gets blocked. (Score:5, Funny)
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wow (Score:3, Funny)
Nefarious? (Score:2)
We've heard of other nefarious tricks to get around the firewall, too. One involves an SSH connection to somewhere outside the country, such as the US, in order to have unrestricted access to RSS, the web, you name it. Another involves the popular Firefox extension gladder, which is a proxy tool that advertises itself as a "Great Ladder" to get over the Great Firewall. Finally, the Tor tool is also popular; it allows a client computer to access the Internet anonymously through a network of virtual tunnels--a series of tubes, one might say. This would allow Chinese users to eventually gain access to the Internet through a Tor node that is located outside of the country.
No, there is no ??? or profit step. The Chinese government already has better ways to gain money. </preemptive strike>
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* abominable; atrociously sinful or villainous
* extremely wicked; "nefarious schemes"; "a villainous plot"; "a villainous band of thieves"
Yes
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Wouldn't you be in deep trouble if they caught you using a bypassing method? I wouldn't put it above the government to make you "go missing" after they catch you. SSH, after all, is relatively easy to track.
The chinese government doesn't quite work like that.. They don't care to much about a few people being able to bypass any measures, they care about the huge masses of internet users who just give up immediately if a page is blocked. A few geeks (in addition to most foreigners in china) won't start a revolution..
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No. Our economy would collapse.
Balance (in million USD)
2007 (July)
Export to CHINA: 35,325.6 Import to USA: 176,630.9
LOSS TO USA:-141,305.3
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why not use http? (Score:2)
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I've never heard of feed:// before this point. All my RSS feeds have used http://./ [.]
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The ironic thing (Score:3, Insightful)
Barring that, the internet will simply detect the censorship and route around it, just like it always does...
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I think that's just a little too ironic to be true. Can you give us a case study? I would have thought that deregulation would just open up a flood of negat
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It wouldn't make much difference (Score:1)
block all incoming URLs that begin with 'blog'... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:block all incoming URLs that begin with 'blog'. (Score:2)
I don't use it currently and moved to more specific filters.
this should go to YRO (Score:1)
btw I've been under the shadow of the Great Firewall since China has internet. This is just normal case. Something is not being smart enough in the GFW API the Communist Party bought from you Americans. Perhaps somebody's LAN got trojaned and tried to slashdot a moderately sensitive (pardon me) site and the GFW got soooooo exited by the event
Workarounds are illegal in China... (Score:2, Insightful)
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Re:Workarounds are illegal in China... (Score:4, Funny)
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We don't know who operate and are responsible for the GFW.
There's a lot of info at Wikipedia: Internet censorship in the People's Republic of China [wikipedia.org]. Yeah, it's Wikipedia. Maybe it's a CIA misinformation page. Then again, a lot of it may be true. You live in China, you can verify it better than I.
The GFW works just like the Babylonian Lottery of Jorge L. Borges (at least for me).
I had never heard of that story [wikipedia.org] before. Quite an interesting perspective :) The Wikipedia article talks about some of that:
"Internet censorship in the PRC has been called "a panopticon that encourages self-censorship through the perception that users are being wat
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unfortunately we are not able to read Wikipedia now in China without the 'workarounds'. It has been blocked by the Firewall. Btw, we hear rumors that the Chinese government is running proxy servers outside China in order to find out who (or at least, how many people) are using proxy servers as a Firewall workaround.
As far as I know there hasn't been any lawsuit against the Firewall's operators. So, if I own a site and I lost 1 million Renminbi because of the Firewall's behav
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I've lived there for a few years and I have to say that this is nonsense. The concept of a "great firewall" is pretty misleading to start with, but I digress.
It doesn't need to be illegal to bypass the firewall, and students in the field of computing, I've talked to routinely use proxies, tor and encryption without getting thrown in prison. It doesn't need to be illegal because censorship works so long as most people can't reach most of the information most of the time. It is
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Why does China do this? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Now President Hu Jintao is advocating his 'harmony society' ideas and we have the next saying: let a few people get more harmony first.
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Any system that allows power to concentrate will end up an oligarchy.
Why the trouble? (Score:2)
There is no future for China if they keep this up (Score:5, Interesting)
China will have to choose between having the internet and being a world power using the tools of the 21st century, or becoming isolated from the rest of the world on all levels. The internet is becoming the primary infrastructure for a new future. The idea of becoming or staying economicaly and politically viable without it is naive and foolish. It would be like trying to become a economic and military power in the 20th century without an industrial base to build anything.
Re:There is no future for China if they keep this (Score:1)
There is a huge future for China .... (Score:1)
They are rapidly nearing (or have crossed, I think they have) the point where they won't need US or western europe as customers. Think on the ramifications of that one for a bit. They have their own billion + plus people (an internal mar
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Their own population can only be customers if their population has expendable wealth. You could have a googleplex of destitute dirt farmers and not sell one iPod. The only economic system that has ever produced a large wealthy middle class is capitalism. So long as China continues to allow capitalism to be the dominant mode of production and so long as they are competitive they can use their population as customer
Giving this away? (Score:1)
http://www.cfr.org/publication/9856/us_internet_providers_and_the_great_firewall_of_china.html [cfr.org]
Use Google or Yahoo to display RSS (Score:1)
Ever wonder... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Ever wonder... (Score:5, Insightful)
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I imagine all we hear outside about China and the "firewall" is similar to what "an outsider" might hear about file sharing networks. People are getting sued, omg, and ISPs are throttling torrent traffic, and movie studios are poisoning downloads and tracking and guess what... you can still get anything you want. You can still get movies the night they are released. You can find the latest CD. You can find
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Slashdot isn't blocked (Score:2)
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rss feed websites (Score:1)
Wrong Fact (Score:1)
I think the fact is wrong. China is not blocking all RSS feeds. Some are blocked, though, including the Slashdot RSS. However, the CNET RSS is still accessible.
Also, the phenomenon I observed seems to indicate the IP address of a related site is completely blocked. It is not like keyword filtering at all, which will involve RESET packets and some obvious browser actions.
I have also found that rss.slashdot.org and feeds.arstechnica.com share the same IP address, whose name is feeds.feedburner.com. I
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I do not see anything in your post contradict with mine. What I said was that the IP of the site rss.slashdot.org is blocked from China, and there did not seem to be keyword filtering on "rss". Your report only confirmed this.
Mod Parent UP! On "even banning" (Score:1)
The Party has never favored self-serve information aggregate sites like FeedBurner or LiveJournal, or Wikipedia...
One bad page and the whole server (physical server, not a single virtual site) got censored.