Archives
Categories
- 1510 Digest
- 2008 Beijing Olympic Games
- Advertisement – sponsored content
- Advertising and Marketing
- Airlines
- Announcements
- Architecture
- Art
- Automobiles
- BBS
- Beijing
- Blogs
- Books
- Breaking News
- Bureaucracy
- Business
- Business and Finance
- Business and the Economy
- Censorship
- Charity
- China and Africa
- China and foreign relations
- China Books
- China Information
- China Media Landscape
- China's neighborhood
- Cigarettes
- Comics
- Communist chic
- Computing
- Consumer Culture
- Corruption
- Crime
- Crime and Corruption
- Danwei FM
- Danwei Noon Report
- Danwei Picks
- Danwei TV
- Danwei Week
- Disaster Relief
- Editorial
- Electronic games
- Environmental problems
- Events
- Fashion
- Featured Video
- Festivals
- Film
- Financial crisis
- Food
- Foreign affairs
- Foreign media on China
- Freedom of expression
- From the Web
- Front Page of the Day
- Government
- Great Wall Fresh
- Guest Contributor
- Health and Medicine
- Health care and pharmaceuticals
- Here comes trouble
- History
- Humor
- Information
- Intellectual Property
- Internet
- Internet and Media
- Internet culture
- Internet video
- IP and Law
- Jobs available
- Land rights
- Language
- Law
- Learning Chinese
- Magazines
- Maps
- Media
- Media and Advertising
- Media and business gossip
- Media business
- Media regulation
- Migrant workers
- Milk
- Mobile phone and wireless
- Music
- Music, Books and Art
- Nationalism
- Natural Phenomena
- Net Nanny Follies
- Newspapers
- Oil, Energy and Resources
- Olympic Diary — Beijing 2008
- Olympic Nights
- Opinion
- Panda bears
- Paralympics
- People
- Photography
- Podcasts
- Propaganda
- Protests
- Public Relations
- Public toilets
- Publishing
- Quality control
- Radio
- Real Estate
- Recently on Danwei
- Recession 2009
- Rumors
- Scholarship and education
- School and Education
- Security
- Sex, Drugs and Vice
- Sexuality
- Shanghai
- Sichuan Earthquake
- Sinica Week
- Snark
- Space
- Sports
- State media
- Survey
- The Countryside
- The department of deranged foreigners
- The department of scary Santas
- The Earnshaw Vault
- The passing of the old guard
- The Thomas Crampton Channel
- Theater
- Tourism
- Traditions
- Translation
- Transport
- Trends and Buzz
- TV
- Typography
- Uncategorized
- Urban Culture and Cities
- Video
- Visas
- Wildlife
- Wildlife, Nature and the Environment
- Wireless and mobile Internet
Tags
- @altcat
- @classic
- advertising
- Beijing
- Beijing Times
- blogs
- books
- business
- CCTV
- censorship
- corruption
- crime
- Danwei.com
- earthquake
- education
- environment
- film
- GAPP
- history
- Hu Jintao
- Internet
- journalism
- law
- magazines
- media
- media regulation
- music
- net nanny
- New Express
- newspapers
- Olympics
- Oriental Outlook
- real estate
- SARFT
- Shanghai
- Sichuan
- Southern Metropolis Daily
- The Beijing News
- Tibet
- translation
- video
- Wang Xiaofeng
- Wen Jiabao
- Xinhua
- Yangtse Evening Post
Meta
Tag Archives: GFW
On the other side of the “wall”
Incomplete Mountain uses ironic wit and puts bloggers and Internet activists in a landscape where isn’t censorship of the Great Firewall. The result he draws is that no-one would have their blood boiling at the sense of injustice because there would be no mistreatment and civil cases.
Posted in Internet
Tagged civil events, GFW, my1510, other side, wall
Comments Off on On the other side of the “wall”
The Great Fire Wall of Berlin
Berlin Twitter Wall website overwhelmed by Chinese people complaining about the Great Fire Wall.
Posted in Censorship
Tagged Berlin, GFW, Great Firewall, net nanny
Comments Off on The Great Fire Wall of Berlin
Would you consider leaving China because of Internet blocks?
A casual Internet survey about China Internet blocks.
Posted in Net Nanny Follies
Tagged censorship, GFW, Internet, media regulation
Comments Off on Would you consider leaving China because of Internet blocks?
Youtube not blocked in Beijing
Youtube not blocked in Beijing, March 4 2009.
Posted in Media regulation, Net Nanny Follies
Tagged censorship, GFW, media regulation, net nanny, video, Youtube
Comments Off on Youtube not blocked in Beijing
China’s 50-cent Twitter censors
China’s freelance censors are taking on Twitter.
Posted in Featured Video, The Thomas Crampton Channel
Tagged censorship, GFW, Oiwan Lam, Thomas Crampton, Twitter
Comments Off on China’s 50-cent Twitter censors
Facebook is screwing with your mind
Is Facebooked blocked, or are they just screwing with your head?
Posted in Net Nanny Follies
Tagged Facebook, GFW, Internet, media regulation, net nanny
Comments Off on Facebook is screwing with your mind
Carrefour now a sensitive word
Carrefour not searchable on Baidu.
Posted in Net Nanny Follies
Tagged Baidu, Carrefour, GFW, net nanny, Oh My Media
Comments Off on Carrefour now a sensitive word
Blogspot unblocked again
Blogspot working again in China, but for how long?
Posted in Net Nanny Follies
Tagged blogs, Blogspot, censorship, GFW, Great Firewall, Internet, media regulation, net nanny
Comments Off on Blogspot unblocked again
Blogspot blocked again
Blogspot blocked, again.
Posted in Net Nanny Follies
Tagged censorship, GFW, Great Firewall, Internet, media regulation, net nanny
Comments Off on Blogspot blocked again
BBC website unblocked, mostly
Danwei was first alerted last week to the availabiity of most of the BBC’s website by Zhongguoist (site currently down). While parts of the BBC’s huge network of websites have always been accessible in China, many news pages have been … Continue reading
Posted in Net Nanny Follies
Tagged BBC, censorship, GFW, Great Firewall, Internet, net nanny
Comments Off on BBC website unblocked, mostly