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posted by martyb on Monday January 07 2019, @02:34PM   Printer-friendly
from the keep-your-friends-close-and-your-enemies-closer dept.

The New York Times has an article about China's online censorship factories and how they operate. Censors are specially educated accurately in history and politics so that they have mastery over how to spot and eliminate references, even indirect ones, to forbidden topics. Potential employees for censorship factories have to cram for two weeks for a comprehensive exam which they must pass in order to begin work. This education is followed by ongoing training which includes regularly visiting and reviewing web sites normally blocked by the Great Firewall of China.

Li Chengzhi had a lot to learn when he first got a job as a professional censor.

Like many young people in China, the 24-year-old recent college graduate knew little about the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown. He had never heard of China’s most famous dissident, Liu Xiaobo, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate who died in custody two years ago.

Now, after training, he knows what to look for — and what to block. He spends his hours scanning online content on behalf of Chinese media companies looking for anything that will provoke the government’s wrath. He knows how to spot code words that obliquely refer to Chinese leaders and scandals, or the memes that touch on subjects the Chinese government doesn’t want people to read about.

Previously:
Censorship a Trojan Horse (2018)
Unpublished Chinese Censorship Document Reveals Effort to Eradicate Online Political Content (2018)
The "Great Cannon" of China (2015)


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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday January 08 2019, @06:37PM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday January 08 2019, @06:37PM (#783781) Journal

    I'm sure someone will tell me, "But look at the iPhone, they can make quality goods!" which is really an argument about the exception more than the general case.

    It's a big enough exception to prove the general case wrong. It's not a few people who happen to be obsessed with quality, but a huge supply chain. And really, pay attention to Arik's reply [soylentnews.org]. You could learn something, if you're not careful.

    But I will give you this: they can make CHEAP stuff, which if you are a business that sells to consumers so you don't care if it breaks (all the better!), you like.

    You might want to think about why most of the developed world has lost its ability to make cheap stuff.