Can you read Social Edge in China?
Evidently, you can't get to YouTube from China:
Some of the videos on YouTube have been deemed unsuitable for viewing by minors. Because after all, what we do to each other isn't obscene, but watching video or looking at pictures of it is. If we teach our children how horrible war is, how will we convince them to die for us in the next one?
In the last month, China has ranked number six in terms of visits to SocialEdge.org, behind the U.S., India, the UK, Canada, and Australia, with the most visits coming from Beijing. So yes, it seems that you can read Social Edge in China, but you can't watch YouTube videos, so I guess no X-Interviews. Somehow, I don't think the X-Interviews are the most important thing they're missing out on.
Last year the U.S. blocked soldiers in Iraq from YouTube and 11 other sites as well, citing bandwidth concerns. Yay freedom, woo-hoo. There's always a perfectly "legitimate" excuse available when you want to quash dissent and stifle speech, be it in Tibet, Baghdad or your living room.
Some of the videos on YouTube have been deemed unsuitable for viewing by minors. Because after all, what we do to each other isn't obscene, but watching video or looking at pictures of it is. If we teach our children how horrible war is, how will we convince them to die for us in the next one?
In the last month, China has ranked number six in terms of visits to SocialEdge.org, behind the U.S., India, the UK, Canada, and Australia, with the most visits coming from Beijing. So yes, it seems that you can read Social Edge in China, but you can't watch YouTube videos, so I guess no X-Interviews. Somehow, I don't think the X-Interviews are the most important thing they're missing out on.
Last year the U.S. blocked soldiers in Iraq from YouTube and 11 other sites as well, citing bandwidth concerns. Yay freedom, woo-hoo. There's always a perfectly "legitimate" excuse available when you want to quash dissent and stifle speech, be it in Tibet, Baghdad or your living room.







