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| China Orders Use of Real Names Online | | Print | |
| Written by Steven J. DuBord | ||||
| Wednesday, 09 September 2009 18:00 | ||||
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In the past, users enjoyed more anonymity when posting comments on news stories at sites such as Sina, Netease, and Sohu. The posts still had to be screened by website personnel, and the identity of a user could still be traced through Internet protocol addresses, but a user was not required to supply any information that would directly reveal their true identity. Trackback(0)
Comments (6)
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Bonnie
said:
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Gee, thanks a lot China! You're giving ideas to our beloved "leaders".Government officials maintain that the new rule will cut down on inflammatory attacks, misinformation, and illegal activity that endangers the social order. Of course, these officials consider criticism of the government to be inflammatory, telling the truth about repression to be misinformation, and using the Internet to organize grass-roots resistance to be dangerous to the order they have imposed on society. There are probably people in some CFR discussion group looking at this right now, green with envy, and trying to come up with a plan to do the same here. |
Flu-Bird
said:
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Tyrany of the dragon Oh look how the dragon has become the big bull of the UN and why we should get ourselves out of this wretched UN |





Communist China in August secretly ordered certain Chinese news websites to require new users to log on using their real names and identification numbers, the 

