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China Orders E-Mail Screening 409

Greyfox writes: "According to this CNN article, China has ordered Internet providers to screen users' E-mails for subversive statements. See how fascist governments control the flow of information? Aren't you glad our government doesn't do this? Oh... Wait..."
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China Orders E-Mail Screening

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  • Devil's Advocate (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Glorat ( 414139 ) on Saturday January 19, 2002 @10:56AM (#2868109)
    Well, at worst it is only consistent with their general policy of internet filtering/censorship. If they have their "Great firewall of China" this is a logical extension of that firewall.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 19, 2002 @11:11AM (#2868152)
    China is a *communist* country, not fascist. Please, try to get it right. The left you love and adore is equally capable of crushing human rights. Numerous examples abound - look at the media's darling Castro - Cubans die of old age and malnutrition in jail for having dared to speak against the socialist regime in place there. Political extremes, right or left, are indistinguishable to the man in the street, both crush all liberty.
  • by Dr Fro ( 169927 ) on Saturday January 19, 2002 @11:25AM (#2868197) Homepage
    Or maybe troll... I know I wouldn't have posted if the submitter hadn't added that last comment.

    No one legitimately gripes about China because they have jails, searches, etc.

    They do it because it can be done without due process. For all your bitching, the fact that you can even complain about the Federal government aloud without fear of being investigated shows how meaningless the statement was.

    Of course our system isn't perfect - but nothing is. But saying if you get pushed and if you get shot in the head is the same thing won't get anywhere.
  • by Alien54 ( 180860 ) on Saturday January 19, 2002 @11:29AM (#2868209) Journal
    Communist countries have for years been looking to incorporate what could be considered the best features of fascist governments, at least in their eyes.

    In Fact, many governments since WWII and before have incorporated features of fascist and communist government into their structure, although this has been done on a much slower time table than a war or revolution. There is much in both of the philosophiea to attract the petty autocract, the aspiring master of men. And over the years, these have been incorporated into laws.

    heck, for decades, you had nazis, for example, acting as advisor to many governments. The most benign of these was a character like Von Braun in the Space Program, former scientist of the V-2 program.

    There were many from many fields who lived and breathed and believed the original fascist philosophy, and who continued on in their fields. Some areas would be more problematic than others. Jobs like farmers and dentisits would be one thing, probably benign. Business managers would be another. Law enforcement, lawyers, doctors, and mental health specialists yet another, because of the influence on society. The vast majority were never arrested or put on trial [haaretzdaily.com].

    The end result is that elements of these philosophies have been incorporated into laws around the world, through the influence of these, their sympathisers, and the children they raised, who probably did not know what the philosophy really meant, and absorbed the ideas under the guise of parental instruction.

    and so the monitoring of private communications like email, while at the same time passing laws that make the majority of citizens criminals is commonplace.

    As a Side Note: Heck you worry about Napster. Did you know that there is a whole online community of older women trading sewing patterns, sewing geeks who trade their files (sewing and knitting patterns) just like any other geeks do? and they are running into the same issues of trading that Napster did, but with the pattern publishers? a much smaller scale issue, of course. But involves people like the fabled Aunt Minnie. Go ahead, piss off grandma. see what happens ;-)

    yet another example of an industry trying to achieve too much control over their customers, with all of the usual arguments in both directions.

  • by dj28 ( 212815 ) on Saturday January 19, 2002 @11:41AM (#2868243)
    Your extremist views pretty much negate any thoughful comment you had in that post, and that's a shame. There is a big difference that I pointed out in my original post. Email sent here in the USA does not have limitations on pornography (look at all the porn email now, although a lot of it constitutes spam), violence (unless it's a threat toward someone specific), or any idealogical/religous/cult thoughts. That isn't so in China. Sending a lot of emails we send here in the states would be illegal in China. Putting China's screening techniques on the same level as the USA's once again shows your liberal bias. Remember, it's easy coming up with complex conspiracy theories. Backing them up isn't so easy when they aren't true. That's the easy way out.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 19, 2002 @11:41AM (#2868245)
    (By the way, I'm not being down on Linux. I'm just dismayed at the irony of a government using one of the most free [as in liberty] operating systems to actually reduce freedom.)

    China is not reducing their citizen's freedoms. They never had the freedom to disagree with their government.

  • this has to stop.. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 19, 2002 @11:42AM (#2868247)
    You know what, I'm really getting sick of the bigotry that I see here on Slashdot. Anytime a story is posted based on our rights, department of justice, business, etc... there always has to be a flame aimed towards the United States of America. I'm assuming most of the readers here have mostly a leftist view on most political issues, and that's absolutely fine.

    But what about the conservatives who read Slashdot? What about us? How do the people who read Slashdot with a right winged attitude feel about biased comments that contain negativity, and to some of us, a fallacy (sp?) towards our government, economy, policies, etc...

    Comments as well (I'm posting this anonymously for a reason). Whenever I post a comment that will go against something I read in an article that will have a conservative view to it, maybe 75-80% of time time it will get modded down to -1 (52 posts, no flames, Karma 2, you do the math). Whatever happened to getting 2, 3, 4, everyone's side of the story?

    The moderation system on slashdot is awful and wrong. Using an analogy of a hostile government. If I say anything remotely conservative, I will get modded down. Hmm... seems fair enough.

    I know the editors will not read this comment, nor will anyone who read this care, but I hope that anyone who does read this post will maybe understand that sometimes you should take into consideration other people's ideas and thoughts and not just have a one track mind and think that whatever Slashdot rights is legitimacy

    --Anon
  • by J'raxis ( 248192 ) on Saturday January 19, 2002 @11:45AM (#2868258) Homepage
    When laws are passed that practically allow the FBI to print their own warrants, the protection that requiring a warrant offers sort of evaporates. The reason that requiring a warrant has (previously) been thought of as sufficient protection is because the cops need quite a bit of evidence to convince a judge to grant them a warrant. If they can get a warrant anytime they want, how is this any better than them legally surveilling you anytime they want or all the time, anyway?
  • by SirSlud ( 67381 ) on Saturday January 19, 2002 @11:55AM (#2868299) Homepage
    A High Ranking Navy Officer was scandalized here in Canada when it was found that he had used a Navy laptop to access porn. It wasn't quite email filtering, but they were monitoring the usage of the computer. I just want to point out that the people of China cannot choose their policies and laws. That we all know. So really, taking the two courses of action upon implementing email filtering, being upfront or not telling people, I think being upfront is cool.

    You are merely complaining about what constitutes subversive material (our countries are notorious [queertheory.com] for turning away erotic lesbian and gay material if its high profile enough in the market, like an artsy book or whatnot) and the more restrictive morals set by the state. Like, sure, we all knew that! but between then government being upfront vs. the government letting 'subversives' get jailed with no warning, I think they did the right thing.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 19, 2002 @12:10PM (#2868376)
    Left- and right-wings apply specifically to economic policy. Fascism and liberalism apply specifically to authoritarian (or "social") policy. The two are orthogonal. It is possible to be a communist fascist (Stalin), capitalist fascist (Pinochet), communist libertarian (Ghandi, Emma Goldman) or capitalist libertarian (Rand). And all have existed (briefly) at one time or another (USSR, Nazi Germany, pre-war Spain, respectively). The libertarian right is harder to track down -- arguably some places in the early Industrial Revolution were this way.

    Anyway, I know I've repeated you a bit, because much of what you say is correct. But calling someone "fascist" is not "leftist name-calling" because fascism has NOTHING to do with leftism nor rightism. You say "China is a communist country, not fascist", which as fallacious. China is communist AND fascist. Perhaps you are the one who should try to get it right.

  • Give me a break! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by anomaly ( 15035 ) <[moc.liamg] [ta] [3repooc.mot]> on Saturday January 19, 2002 @12:11PM (#2868379)
    I can't believe the comment about our opressive government! Obviously you people have not studied oppression in history!

    Clearly we must be vigilant in our maintenance of our freedoms, but to compare China with the US in terms of controlling information is simply demonstrating a lack of education.

    Have you looked into what China did to US reporters during the Tiananmen square uprising? Contrast that with the US media in President Clinton's face demanding to know what exactly he had or had not done with "That woman, Miss Lewinsky."

    The government having the capacity to screen emails at ISPs may be unpleasant to you. If so, encrypt your email. Carnivore _may_ be something that we need to stop, but it is NOTHING like the opression suffered by the people of the PRC.

    Get off your self-righteous horse, and live under martial law at the hands of a despotic dictator for a while. Then come whining to me about "oppression" in the US.
  • by gilroy ( 155262 ) on Saturday January 19, 2002 @12:14PM (#2868389) Homepage Journal
    Blockquoth the poster:

    Very true, anyone who has takein a 12 grade US government should know that republicans (conservatives) are pro 'small government.'

    This is a common misconception, often reinforced by conservatives themselves. Conservatives are "pro small government" if you, bizarrely, redefine government not to include law enforcement or national defense. Those two areas are considered perfectly legitimate and, indeed, generally expand considerably under conservative administrations.


    It's disingenuous to say that conservatives are "freedom lovers" and liberals advocate state control. As far as I can see, the issue is where a person calls for state intervention. Liberals tend to believe that the economy should be regulated by the government and steered toward (what they see as) public goods. Conservatives of course feel that the government should stay out of the economy as far as possible and thus maximize the individual's economic liberty.


    On the other hand, convservatives also tend to call for government oversight of behavior -- morally, sexually, legally, culturally -- and rely on the state to make sure people stay in line with "the norm". Liberals, in counterpoint, want to keep government out of the personal lives of its citizens and evidence a much lower drive to regulate the private actions of the people. In that sense, liberals are trying to maximize personal (or civil) liberty.


    Of course both of these characterizations is overbroad. Virtually no one fits perfectly either label, and in recent years there's been a lot of diffusion back and forth across that divide. But I think it's a useful categorization scheme.


    Also, in a typically American manner, the true way probably lies somewhere in between. The fount of personal liberty is economic liberty -- too much of our lives revolve around earning a living to disentangle choices made in business from choices made at home. Yet economic liberty without a corresponding freedom of conscience is empty and meaningless... such a system is pointless in the extreme. Further, as the Chinese are learning to their dismay -- following in the footsteps of the Soviet Union, which learned this lesson the hard way in the late 1980s -- you cannot have economic liberty (or its attendant efficiency) without creating overwhelming pressure for personal liberty.

  • Re:IIRC... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by gilroy ( 155262 ) on Saturday January 19, 2002 @12:20PM (#2868410) Homepage Journal
    The idea of a single-axis spectrum to describe the wealth of human politics is a silly and outdated concept. It formed during the National Assemblies of the French Revolution -- where one group sat on the left side of the aisle and another on the right -- and we've attached far too much importance to an accidental bit of political geography.



    I really believe that states cannot be reasonably or usefully characterized as "rightist" or "leftist". At a minimum, two axes -- regulation of economic life and of personal life -- is needed.

  • by Gannoc ( 210256 ) on Saturday January 19, 2002 @12:20PM (#2868413)

    Because if I sent an email saying "I think President Bush is doing a bad job." to someone, the secret police are going to bust in and put me in a labor camp.
  • by Lord Ender ( 156273 ) on Saturday January 19, 2002 @12:40PM (#2868474) Homepage
    Threre is a HUGE difference between censoring people's emails (what china will do) and simply reading people's emails. In my opinion, anything sent in plain text over the internet should be considered public anyway!

    I can't believe you got a +5 for say reading email and censoring an entire population are the same thing. My God!
  • by Rogerborg ( 306625 ) on Saturday January 19, 2002 @12:59PM (#2868529) Homepage
    • While I agree that the size and scope of government should be kept to a minimum, we should be able to trust the elected officials in a republican system, since we choose who our representatives will be

    (You vote Libertarian, right?) What if all of the candidates are corrupt? How is that better than the one party system in China? And at least in China they count all the votes, even though they're meaningless.

    • despite what most people think, law enforcement officials are WAY to busy to concern themselves with the details of your private life. They are only concerned for the information that will help them protect the public from criminals

    Examples of criminals under US law (in various states): breaking the speed limit by 1mph. Having sex with a married person to whom you are not married. Same sex sex. Watching a bought DVD on a Linux system.

    The problem with "it's OK, they're only interested in criminals" is that in practical terms everyone is a criminal. What you mean is: chances are they're only interested in other criminals.

    This presumption - or creation - of guilt is the same as at the heart of Chinese censoring. There is a ruling overclass (heridatary and incumbent in both nations). The populace aren't fit to be trusted, and need to be monitored and controlled. But it's all for our own good, so what are we complaining about?

    Sorry, that's not an attitude that I can easily stomach.

  • Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday January 19, 2002 @01:10PM (#2868563)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Greyfox ( 87712 ) on Saturday January 19, 2002 @01:14PM (#2868578) Homepage Journal
    The US has become a country where I can go to jail for writing or talking about a piece of software that lets me access a piece of media I paid for. Simply publishing a math paper now requires consulting with high paid lawyers. Laws are being drawn up that will mandate the control of information on all consumer devices and bypassing those controls will buy you jail time. Foreign nationals are kidnapped on a daily basis both for these crimes and others, and secret courts are being discussed to "Try" them.

    Thus far it's true that for the most part the government doesn't kill its citizens. Well, unless they're black and pulled over by a jumpy cop doing racial profiling or something. Or they live a lifestyle the government doesn't like. But apart from that, the government doesn't kill its own citizens! Truly!

    And it's true that the media will keep them honest! Nevermind that the media is mostly owned by the same corporations which have been steadily lobbying for the removal of your rights for the past several decades.

    But true, we're nothing like the Chinese and we don't really have anything to worry about!

  • by 90XDoubleSide ( 522791 ) <ninetyxdoublesid ... minus herbivore> on Saturday January 19, 2002 @02:26PM (#2868857)
    I can go to jail for writing or talking about a piece of software that lets me access a piece of media I paid for.

    Has it? Last time I checked, when a huge corporation tried to go after someone for practicing free speech there was a huge public outcry and the case was dropped. This is the difference between democracy and totalitarianism, which is what the original poster was trying to point out. In our country, unjust laws like the DCMA are fought tooth and nail, are currently not being enforced very rigidly, and will probably be struck down in court or repealed in congress, or at least amended, in the near future. Want to go over to China and try to get them to change the law to allow freedom of religion?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 19, 2002 @05:46PM (#2869709)

    "In my opinion, anything sent in plain text over the internet should be considered public anyway!"

    Using your logic, all phone calls should be monitored also. Our voices are sent through w/o any encryption scheme.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 19, 2002 @07:11PM (#2870011)
    Regardless of what is 'legal' and 'illegal' its not ok at all. What you are saying is that the end justifies the means ands thats not what my goverment is for. Just because the email is 'illegal' here but maybe not somewhere else or anything like that does NOT amke it ok to be spyed on.
  • by MillionthMonkey ( 240664 ) on Sunday January 20, 2002 @02:28AM (#2871332)
    You know what, I'm really getting sick of the bigotry that I see here on Slashdot. Anytime a story is posted based on our rights, department of justice, business, etc... there always has to be a flame aimed towards the United States of America. I'm assuming most of the readers here have mostly a leftist view on most political issues, and that's absolutely fine.
    But what about the conservatives who read Slashdot? What about us? How do the people who read Slashdot with a right winged attitude feel about biased comments that contain negativity, and to some of us, a fallacy (sp?) towards our government, economy, policies, etc...

    Am I the only one who finds the irony in this post? The story is about how the Chinese government doesn't allow dissent and is telling ISPs to police emails for subversive statements. You then complain that Americans shouldn't dissent so much and should stop criticizing the American government so you don't get offended by people disagreeing with you. It would therefore seem that you would be in favor of the Great Firewall of China, right? I doubt you are, of course, but that's only because your thinking is confused and logically inconsistent.
    Criticism of the country in general (as opposed to the government) is certainly different. Your post draws no distinction. I don't see why you think conservatives should be more offended by that than anyone else- unless you somehow think that conservatism and patriotism are the same thing.
    As far as criticism of the government is concerned- democracy only works when citizens constantly criticize and question those in power. Perhaps you'd rather live in a country where there is no criticism of the government.

    Comments as well (I'm posting this anonymously for a reason). Whenever I post a comment that will go against something I read in an article that will have a conservative view to it, maybe 75-80% of time time it will get modded down to -1 (52 posts, no flames, Karma 2, you do the math). Whatever happened to getting 2, 3, 4, everyone's side of the story?
    Oh please. You sound like the people who write in to talkorigins.org [talkorigins.org] complaining that the creationist side of the issue isn't getting equal treatment on the site. Nobody is obligated to rate your posts up merely so that both sides of every story are presented. Sometimes it's obvious which side is wrong. If fewer than half of the participants in a public forum like /. share your opinions on things, it might reflect on us Slashdotters as a whole, but it's statistically more likely to just reflect on you personally. Either find a forum with people who agree with your opinions already [freerepublic.com] or stop whining in this one.

    The moderation system on slashdot is awful and wrong. Using an analogy of a hostile government. If I say anything remotely conservative, I will get modded down. Hmm... seems fair enough.
    A "hostile government" is modding your posts down?!? I know you're just making a bad analogy, but seems like another case of politically correct whining. You couldn't ask for fairer treatment than you're getting. /. is very democratic. Moderators are chosen at random from people that visit the site.
    What would you replace the current system with? One where YOU or "remotely conservative" minded people like you are the sole moderators? Your definition of "remotely conservative" might be reasonable, but it might very well fit my or other people's definition of "kookily conservative". How are we supposed to know? You posted as an AC so we can only guess.
    As long as we're making questionable analogies between websites and governments, there are many online forums where the people in charge simply delete posts they don't like. Any dissent on those boards is quickly met by people saying creepy things like "soon you and your posts will go away, heh heh." Wouldn't that make a better analogy with a "hostile government"?

    Sucks that you posted anonymously and lost all that karma. Bet you wish you weren't such an anonymous coward now, eh? :)

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