22 May, 2005

india blog roundup

    Amit Varma hosts  a blog mela at India Uncut.

by @ 4:16 pm. Filed under Blogs, India

india vs. china

India is considering accrediting ‘citizen journalists’ (aka bloggers) (via Preetam):

India is in the process of framing rules for granting
accreditation to Internet journalists and bloggers for the first time,
taking a reality check on an evolving world of net writers who could
shape opinion and who have already been granted access to official
corridors in countries such as the US.

“We are framing the
rules for giving accreditation to dotcom journalists, including
bloggers,” Principle Information Officer Shakuntala Mahawal said.

The always astute Nitin Pai contrasts this move with China’s move to establish government-authorized bloggers:

In sharp contrast, China’s reaction to ‘internet journalism’ has
been along predictable lines. Blogspot and Blogger are locked out
behind the Great Firewall of China. And as CDT reports, the Chinese government ‘has formed a special force of undercover online commentators to try and sway public opinion’.

The best use real
Indian bloggers can make of the opportunity is not much to sway public
opinion — which does not require a government license — but to ask
those questions that the mainstream media is failing to ask. As for
China, it has just become more difficult for real Chinese bloggers to sound convincing when they actually support their government.

Still, Amit Varma doubts that many Indobloggers will be rushing to register:

Most reporting, such as I’d done after the tsunami, does not need
government accreditation, and while I may need it to enter a press
conference by the prime minister, what will I have to do to get it?
Knowing how government works in India, they’ll ask me for a traffic
certificate, and there’ll be a panel of babus to evaluate my blog and see if my content is "serious". Hazaar
questions will be asked. I know how difficult it is to get
accreditation for anything for even a bona-fide print journalist, as I
experienced when covering the recent India-Pakistan cricket series for
the Guardian. (You can read my chronicles of that tour in my March and April archives.) It wasn’t the government giving accreditation then, of course, but I imagine they’d be even worse.

So, um, thanks for the kind words, but I don’t think we’ll be applying to you anytime soon.

 

by @ 4:12 pm. Filed under Blogs, China, India

adopt a chinese blog

Picking up where John at Sinosplice left off, Issac Mao has rekindled the Adopt-a-Blog project.

Introduction

Ever since blog became popular in China, there have been a number of occasions where some blogs were shut down by telecommunications company or internet service providers due to their political speech. These incidents not only brought risks to bloggers themselves but also to blog service providers in China. Many blog service providers had to increase their effort in content filtering. All these brought pressure and helplessness to people who dare to make truthful expressions.

Especially since April 2005, when the law on non-profit website registration became effective, website owners are required to submit their real personal information when they register their websites. The annual registration process as well as hefty penalty for failure in compliance have angered many website owners that use an independent virtual server and domain names.

Therefore, many bloggers in mainland China began to consider moving their blogs outside of China. But because of language barrier, financial, payment and other issues, the cost of moving is rather high and the situation is not optimistic.

It is based on the belief of free speech that we started the Adopt a Chinese blog project. We hope that we and others on the internet who shared the same belief, can share resources and help bloggers who want to freely express themselves and find a safer space for blogging, so that they can continue to blog without worries.

by @ 12:02 pm. Filed under Blogs, China

search engines for censorship

If this is true, I hope Google has the sense to sue:

unverified sources (i.e. rumors) said that chinese search engine
Baidu.com set up a special task force to search politically sensitive
terms in Google.com, therefore making Google unstable or even totally
inaccessable to chinese users, it’s said that baidu even wrote to the
government against Google’s "politically harmful contents" in china.

Baidu is seeking a Nasdaq or overseas listing.

via bingfeng

by @ 9:39 am. Filed under China

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