What's new

China’s internet censorship hampering country’s scientific and economic development, warns adviser

F-22Raptor

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Jun 19, 2014
Messages
16,980
Reaction score
3
Country
United States
Location
United States
Internet censorship in China is hampering scientific research and economic development in the country, a senior adviser for the country's government has warned.

In a rare public criticism of the nation's internet restrictions, Luo Fuhe, vice-chairman of the top advisory body to the country's parliament, warned that slow access to overseas academic websites have hindered the work of domestic researchers.

Speaking to reporters in Beijing, Mr Luo said the lengths Chinese researchers had to go to carry out their work was “not normal”, warning that they were often forced to buy software to bypass the country's site-blocking firewall, or even travel overseas in order to conduct research.
China's internet restrictions constitute one of the world’s most sophisticated and far-reaching systems of internet censorship, blocking numerous foreign social media and news websites and routinely repressing discussion of political topics and other sensitive issues such as Tibet and Taiwan.

Mr Luo warned that the same tools also hamper access to large swathes of the internet outside China, including some research and university websites.

Noting that web pages on the UN pages take up to 20 minutes to load, Mr Luo said: “From within China, attempting to visit to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation or a lot of foreign university websites is very slow.

“Opening each page takes at least 10-20 seconds and some foreign university sites need more than half an hour to open. Some researches rely on software to climb over the firewall to complete their own research tasks. This is not normal.”

Mr Luo recommended that the government determine which websites are off-limits with greater “precision” and allow full open access to sites frequented by researchers, particularly if they do not contain political content.

The Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference's comments were a rare condemnation of the nation’s internet restrictions, which have intensified since China's current leader Xi Jinping came into power in 2012.

According to a report by Freedom House, China was “the worst abuser of internet freedom” in 2016, ranking lower than Syria and Iran.

As well as banning websites, the system frequently deletes online comments deemed politically sensitive, while social media posts have been known to lead to jail sentences.

China's authoritarian government has recently renewed a push for a greater role in global internet governance based on restrictions and regulations, rather than the principle of free-flow of information found in democratic societies.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...cial-media-political-xi-junping-a7611686.html
 
. . .
it's true, but over-exaggerating here... lol. China is one of the top contributors in high quality scientific research papers on nature and on many other high impact publishing groups. imagine they open up :D
 
.
Internet censorship these days makes no sense..now a days nothing is secret on the internet...
 
.
That's true !

They lack imagination and innovation ! Feel almost sorry for them !

First quantum satellite in the world (Micius Satellite from China)
The largest quantum communication network (Beijing-Shanghai Quantum Communication Network)
First quantum radar in the world that can reach 100km detection range
Paper that can withstand water and fire.
and many more ......

Yeah, they are so lack of imagination and innovation :enjoy:



I feel sorry for the westerns here. They live in the ocean but have to come to this puddle to float their boat.

They just Envy :D
 
.
Well, the thing I get with the firewall is the censorship sometimes it make me fail to access international market data, and thats quite critical for my trading algorthims.

And this forced me to pay 10x more to buy market data from overpriced bloomberg data feeder, bloomberg is the only option in China to access real time world market data stably.
 
Last edited:
.
Internet censorship in China is hampering scientific research and economic development in the country, a senior adviser for the country's government has warned.

In a rare public criticism of the nation's internet restrictions, Luo Fuhe, vice-chairman of the top advisory body to the country's parliament, warned that slow access to overseas academic websites have hindered the work of domestic researchers.

Speaking to reporters in Beijing, Mr Luo said the lengths Chinese researchers had to go to carry out their work was “not normal”, warning that they were often forced to buy software to bypass the country's site-blocking firewall, or even travel overseas in order to conduct research.
China's internet restrictions constitute one of the world’s most sophisticated and far-reaching systems of internet censorship, blocking numerous foreign social media and news websites and routinely repressing discussion of political topics and other sensitive issues such as Tibet and Taiwan.

Mr Luo warned that the same tools also hamper access to large swathes of the internet outside China, including some research and university websites.

Noting that web pages on the UN pages take up to 20 minutes to load, Mr Luo said: “From within China, attempting to visit to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation or a lot of foreign university websites is very slow.

“Opening each page takes at least 10-20 seconds and some foreign university sites need more than half an hour to open. Some researches rely on software to climb over the firewall to complete their own research tasks. This is not normal.”

Mr Luo recommended that the government determine which websites are off-limits with greater “precision” and allow full open access to sites frequented by researchers, particularly if they do not contain political content.

The Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference's comments were a rare condemnation of the nation’s internet restrictions, which have intensified since China's current leader Xi Jinping came into power in 2012.

According to a report by Freedom House, China was “the worst abuser of internet freedom” in 2016, ranking lower than Syria and Iran.

As well as banning websites, the system frequently deletes online comments deemed politically sensitive, while social media posts have been known to lead to jail sentences.

China's authoritarian government has recently renewed a push for a greater role in global internet governance based on restrictions and regulations, rather than the principle of free-flow of information found in democratic societies.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...cial-media-political-xi-junping-a7611686.html

UK news? I would not be surprised they wrote rubbish like China is a stone age country and can never beat Europe and USA anytime. People who believe such news are western boot licker and Chinese haters.
 
.
Internet industry in China is very healthy, sound and growing.

Unlike many other countries in which foreign (mostly US) internet services and technologies prevail and dominate the market, in China, the domestic market has been almost entirely dominated by national companies.

This allows money to stay at home.
Allow domestic companies to invest, R&D, and generate knowledge and innovation pool.
No wonder China is one of the leading countries in IA, IoT, and mobile finance. These are all connected.

This happened in large part thanks to targeted protectionism. Just like the Europe and US resorted to many times in their histories to prop up and protect their infant industries, China government is too obliged to and responsible for providing the required investment and competition environment for China's own companies.

China does not care if what is good for China is not good for the US/West.
If it is good for both China and the US, we may call it win-win.
If it is only good for China, we call it competition.
If it is bad for China but good for US/West, we call it historical anomaly to be corrected.
 
Last edited:
. .
Back
Top Bottom