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China: Planes, Trains, Rickshaws, and incomprehensible internet blocks
Had a recent trip to China, my first ever. Gave a university lecture on (what else?) competition for investment between Chinese province and municipalities that was well received.Took a high-speed train the equal of France's TGV, complete with "flight attendants." My actual flight was an ultra-northerly Great Circle that went closer to the North Pole than Alaska. Rode in a rickshaw and got ripped off; stuck with taxi drivers (very inexpensive) thereafter.
The oddest thing about China's internet censorship was that it made no apparent sense. I could access TPM whenever I wanted, same for Daily Kos. But Huffington Post was blocked (did Arianna say something the government didn't like sometime?), as was fivethirtyeight.com (huh?). I have no explanation for the differential access, and would be interested in hearing any theories you may have.
Did all the usual tourist stuff, this being my first trip: Great Wall, Forbidden City, Summer Palace, Bird's Nest, National Center for Performing Arts. The latter was visually stunning inside and out, a very pleasant surprise. Most thing are set up bilingual Chinese/English. The Beijing metro cost 28 cents a ride and is growing rapidly. I wouldn't mind going back again.
The oddest thing about China's internet censorship was that it made no apparent sense. I could access TPM whenever I wanted, same for Daily Kos. But Huffington Post was blocked (did Arianna say something the government didn't like sometime?), as was fivethirtyeight.com (huh?). I have no explanation for the differential access, and would be interested in hearing any theories you may have.
Did all the usual tourist stuff, this being my first trip: Great Wall, Forbidden City, Summer Palace, Bird's Nest, National Center for Performing Arts. The latter was visually stunning inside and out, a very pleasant surprise. Most thing are set up bilingual Chinese/English. The Beijing metro cost 28 cents a ride and is growing rapidly. I wouldn't mind going back again.
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To start with censorship on English language websites is much lighter than Chinese language sites. Also HuffPo includes much more international news than TPM or DailyKos which tend to be focused on American politics. fivethirtyeight.com makes no sense but part of the point is to make no sense. Things change daily and part of the goal is that no one knows what will be blocked at any given time so they don't bother.
June 30, 2009 10:33 AM | Reply | Permalink