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Psycho Tienxia, you have been faking abianchen?s a ccount over a year for revenge. You don?t even have balls be yourself. You are a coward and freak!

Von: report2009 (repost2009@yahoo.com) [Profil]
Datum: 29.06.2009 20:48
Message-ID: <a08e2418-b2c8-4950-b6e5-5954b5b0edf4@l28g2000vba.googlegroups.com>
Newsgroup: alt.politics.bush alt.politics.communism alt.internetsoc.culture.taiwan soc.culture.china
Psycho Tienxia, you have been faking abianchen’s account over a year
for revenge. You don’t even have balls be yourself. You are a coward
and freak!

Original abianchen: abianchen@my-deja.com (since May, 2000).

Fake abianchen (psycho Tienxia): abian_chen2@yahoo.com, etc many
various abian*.*com.


On Jun 29, 12:32 pm, "abianc...@my-deja.com" <abian_ch...@yahoo.com>
wrote:
> Blah blah blah! Stupid stuff. Let's have some fun! Call me atwww.thailove
links.com.
> Here are my websites:http://www.flickr.com/photos/64156901@N00/
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/meichi_cunt_aka_abianchen_filthy_smelly_...
>
> You like?
>
> On Jun 29, 9:26 am, John Fartlington Poopnagle
>
>
>
> <perryneh...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> > It's all about the money ... BIG money ... but Google denies any
> > "connection."
>
> > "What, us?"
>
> > Kinda in the spirit of "Google Help."  (No noose is good
noose.)
>
> > -----------------
> > "China's Information Dam"
>
> > "Should Yahoo, Google and Microsoft help the censors?"
>
> > Editorial
> > Monday, June 29, 2009
>
> > "IT IS NOT our job to fix the Chinese government," Yahoo CEO Carol
> > Bartz said last week. Maybe not. But search engines operating in China
> > face a dilemma come July. Starting Wednesday, China is embarking on a
> > broad initiative to clamp down on Web content the government views as
> > obscene, billing these efforts as a fight against pornography. For
> > Chinese officials, there has always been an overlap between
> > pornography and references to politically sensitive topics such as the
> > Falun Gong and Tiananmen Square. June traditionally marks a crackdown
> > in China's Web censorship as the country brings down sites such as You
> > Tube (inaccessible since March) and Twitter for the anniversary of the
> > Tiananmen Square massacre. But more is in the works.
>
> > The plan? Fine and shut down all sites offering unapproved information
> > on sexual health, command Google to close access to foreign Web sites
> > and push for the pre-installation of censorship software called "Green
> > Dam" on all computers. As this list reveals, China's Web censorship
> > efforts go far beyond the stated goal of protecting against
> > pornography.
>
> > Foreign companies are drawn to China's market of more than 200 million
> > Internet users. But the conditions of doing business in China are
> > complicated: Content providers must agree to abide by China's
> > draconian restrictions on the kind of results they can show. Both Bing
> > and Google's sites acknowledge that results have been removed. Their
> > justification is simple: If we don't do it, someone else will.
>
> > But this is not necessarily true. In 1996, state news agency Xinhua
> > tried to place restrictions on breaking financial news, moving to
> > prohibit all stories not vetted by its propaganda machine. A concerted
> > pushback by the international media and other stockholders prevailed
> > against the initiative.
>
> > This time, the State Department and industry groups are pushing back
> > against China's Green Dam censorship software. They must stand firm,
> > and search engines should join them. The industry can offer China
> > better alternatives to meet its avowed aim of limiting access to
> > pornography. But closing access to sexual-health Web sites is both
> > wrong and dangerous. Fining people who fail to meet government
> > criteria for the information they post could have devastating
> > repercussions. And enhancing China's ability to persecute those who
> > seek freedom is not forgivable.
>
> > It may not be companies' job to fix the Chinese government. But if
> > they choose to do business in China, it is their job to serve the
> > Chinese people.
>
> >http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/06/28/AR200...
- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -


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