Posts Tagged ‘harmonized’

r.i.p. | twitter & flickr blocked in china? ::

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

:: I blame Ai Weiwei, of course. In addition to the ongoing inaccessibility of Blogspot.com and Youtube.com, Twitter.com and Flickr.com now both appear to have been blocked in mainland China. At the time of writing, Twitter was still (sorta) accessible via desktop clients such as Tweetdeck, Twirl, etc., but I think that was because the API URL hadn’t been fully harmonized yet. That being said, these clients were definitely not acting normal – very spotty and unstable. The desktop clients will likely be rendered useless soon enough if this is a real blockage and not just a massive coincidental glitch in the Chinese Internet – highly unlikely. None of the major local Chinese microblogging platforms have been affected: Fanfou.com, Jiwai.de, Zuosa.com, etc., but that’s probably because of internal content monitoring systems that have long been in place. If you are in China, please feel free to comment below about accessibility to these sites (and others) in your locales. Thanks.  // AjS

Also, as always, Danwei.org is following this closely – head over there in case I have missed anything.

[UPDATE 1: Microsoft properties Live.com and Bing.com are also inaccessible in China. MSN instant messenger to follow?]

[UPDATE 2: It appears Twitter is not working via desktop clients, rendering it completely blocked.]

[UPDATE 3: It appears Hotmail.com is also inaccessible. That makes three major Microsoft property down in China.]

[UPDATE 4: It may just be cached files in my browser or something, but it appears 56minus1 is displaying Flickr-embedded images – the site wasn't doing that earlier. Can anyone else in China confirm this? The Flickr domain itself is still inaccessible.]

[UPDATE 5: Chinese microblog service Fanfou.com and P2P download service VeryCD.com will be performing "technical maintenance" until June 6th. H/T Jason Zhan Jia]

[UPDATE 6: Yawn.... Can we move on?]

tudou.com’s content nanny at work ::

Friday, March 13th, 2009

:: today while uploading a video interview I did with with Carol Lin to Tudou.com (arguably China’s leading video sharing site), I was struck by the audacity and real-time efficiency of the site’s content nanny. Tudou had no issues with the video content itself (but who knows, it’s likely to get “harmonized” soon, especially after this post), however, when I tried adding and saving the below video description (apparently “offensive” words / phrases circled, did I miss any?)…

tudou.com naughty words

…I was immediately given a smack-down by the site’s content nanny (see below). At least Tudou uses a cute animated character to deliver its big brother message. That always makes things better.

Tudou Nanny at Work!

Impressive and disappointing at the same time, but a fact-of-life when doing business on the Chinese Internet, so, it’s understandable. No hard feelings Gary / Marc, I still love you guys and what you’re doing.

What surprised me most was that the system so easily took offense to English words. English words are usually not as closely monitored / sanitized on the Chinese Internet at large as the vast majority of Chinese netizens, truth be told, don’t consume English language content. I wonder if Tudou’s content nanny censors offensive words in any other languages, anyone? I wonder if Youku.com does the same, anyone?  // AjS