
Internet censorship is control or suppression of the publishing or accessing of information on the Internet. The legal issues are similar to offline censorship. One difference is that national borders are more permeable online: residents of a country that bans certain information can find it on websites hosted outside the country. A government can try to prevent its citizens from viewing these even if it has no control over the websites themselves.
In some cases, Internet censorship may involve deceit. In such cases the censoring authority may block content while leading the public to believe that censorship has not been applied. This may be done by having the ISP provide a fake "Not Found" error message upon the request of an Internet page that is actually found but blocked.
In 2010, the network administrator will enhance the network management and control in China. In China, the socialmedia include QQ, Renren, Kaixin, Weibo, etc. The government will focus on these groups and websites, they will effectively integrate various resources to enhance Internet management and control, the Internet police force to the extension of the public security organs at the county level, will reach to the QQ-line patrol control group, micro-blog and other "weak management space, " extension, raise "online found Detect, control and disposal capacity "to prevent the formation of hidden crime organization.
0 comments:
Post a Comment