404 error
Academic freedom
Ad hominem
Age of consent reform
Andrei Sinyavsky
Armenian Genocide
Baathist
Bandwagon effect
Big Lie
Bleep censor
Blood libel
Bombing of Dresden
Book banning
Book burning
British propaganda during World War II
Broadcast delay
Buzzword
Bydgoszcz events
Campaign finance reform
Card stacking
Censored Eleven
Censorship
Censorship by country
Censorship by religion
Censorship in Cuba
Censorship in North Korea
Censorship in the People's Republic of China
Censorship of maps
Censorship of music
Child pornography
Chilling effect (term)
Code word (figure of speech)
Communist Parties
Communist Party
Communist Party of Cuba
Conspiracy of silence (expression)
Content-control software
Copy machine
Corporate censorship
Criminal speech
Cuba
Damnatio memoriae
Data haven
Deceit
Defection
Digital identity
Dog-whistle politics
Doublespeak
East Germany
Eastern Bloc information dissemination
Editing of anime in American distribution
Eduardo Galeano
Espionage
Ethnic stereotype
Euphemism
Expurgation
Fahrenheit 451
Federal Communications Commission
Framing (social sciences)
Free speech
Freedom of speech
Freedom of speech by country
Freedom of the press
Freedom of thought
Freenet
Gag order
Glittering generality
Google
Google maps
Government-organized demonstration
Hate speech
Heckler
Historical revisionism (negationism)
History
Holocaust denial
ISP
Ideograph
Ideological repression
Indoctrination
Internet
Internet censorship
Japanese history textbook controversies
Joseph Stalin
Judith Butler
KGB
Lawfare
Lesser of two evils principle
Limited hangout
List of banned films
List of banned video games
List of books banned by governments
Loaded language
Love
Main Administration for Safeguarding State Secrets in the Press
Main Page
Market for loyalties theory
Mass games
May Day
Media bias
Memory hole
Academic freedom
Ad hominem
Age of consent reform
Andrei Sinyavsky
Armenian Genocide
Baathist
Bandwagon effect
Big Lie
Bleep censor
Blood libel
Bombing of Dresden
Book banning
Book burning
British propaganda during World War II
Broadcast delay
Buzzword
Bydgoszcz events
Campaign finance reform
Card stacking
Censored Eleven
Censorship
Censorship by country
Censorship by religion
Censorship in Cuba
Censorship in North Korea
Censorship in the People's Republic of China
Censorship of maps
Censorship of music
Child pornography
Chilling effect (term)
Code word (figure of speech)
Communist Parties
Communist Party
Communist Party of Cuba
Conspiracy of silence (expression)
Content-control software
Copy machine
Corporate censorship
Criminal speech
Cuba
Damnatio memoriae
Data haven
Deceit
Defection
Digital identity
Dog-whistle politics
Doublespeak
East Germany
Eastern Bloc information dissemination
Editing of anime in American distribution
Eduardo Galeano
Espionage
Ethnic stereotype
Euphemism
Expurgation
Fahrenheit 451
Federal Communications Commission
Framing (social sciences)
Free speech
Freedom of speech
Freedom of speech by country
Freedom of the press
Freedom of thought
Freenet
Gag order
Glittering generality
Google maps
Government-organized demonstration
Hate speech
Heckler
Historical revisionism (negationism)
History
Holocaust denial
ISP
Ideograph
Ideological repression
Indoctrination
Internet
Internet censorship
Japanese history textbook controversies
Joseph Stalin
Judith Butler
KGB
Lawfare
Lesser of two evils principle
Limited hangout
List of banned films
List of banned video games
List of books banned by governments
Loaded language
Love
Main Administration for Safeguarding State Secrets in the Press
Main Page
Market for loyalties theory
Mass games
May Day
Media bias
Memory hole
Part of a series on
Censorship
By media
Banned books · Banned films
Re-edited film · Internet
Motion Picture Production Code
Music · Press · Radio · Thought
Speech and expression
Video games
Anime distribution in America
Methods
Bleeping · Book burning
Broadcast delay · Chilling effect
Conspiracy of silence
Content-control software
Euphemism · Expurgation
Gag order · Heckling
Memory hole · Newspaper theft
Pixelization · Postal · Prior restraint
Propaganda model
Revisionism · Sanitization/Redaction
Self-censorship · Speech code
Strategic lawsuit · Verbal offence
Whitewashing
Contexts
Corporate · Political · Religious
Ideological · Criminal speech
Hate speech · Media bias
Suppression of dissent
By country
Censorship · Freedom of speech
v · d · e
Censorship is suppression of speech or other communication which may be considered objectionable, harmful, sensitive, or inconvenient to the general body of people as determined by a government, media outlet, or other controlling body.
Contents
1 Rationale
2 Types
2.1 Political
2.2 State secrets and prevention of attention
2.3 Educational sources
2.4 Music and popular culture
2.5 Copy, picture, and writer approval
2.6 Maps
2.7 Meta censorship
2.8 Creative censorship
2.9 Internet
3 Implementation
4 Censorship by country
5 See also
6 Citations and notes
7 General information
Rationale
The rationale for censorship is different for various types of information censored:
Moral censorship is the removal of materials that are obscene or otherwise considered morally questionable. Pornography, for example, is often censored under this rationale, especially child pornography, which is illegal and censored in many jurisdictions in the world.12
Military censorship is the process of keeping military intelligence and tactics confidential and away from the enemy. This is used to counter espionage, which is the process of gleaning military information. Very often, militaries will also attempt to suppress politically inconvenient information even if that information has no actual intelligence or combat-tactical value.citation needed
Political censorship occurs when governments hold back information from their citizens. This is often done to exert control over the populace and prevent free expression that might foment rebellion.
Religious censorship is the means by which any material considered objectionable by a certain faith is removed. This often involves a dominant religion forcing limitations on less prevalent ones. Alternatively, one religion may shun the works of another when they believe the content is not appropriate for their faith.
Corporate censorship is the process by which editors in corporate media outlets intervene to disrupt the publishing of information that portrays their business or business partners in a negative light,34 or intervene to prevent alternate offers from reaching public exposure.5
Types
Political
Nikolai Yezhov, standing to the right of Joseph Stalin, was shot in 1940. He was edited out of the photo by Soviet censors after his execution as a form of damnatio memoriae.6 This policy was commonly applied to executed political enemies during Stalin's reign.
Main article: Political censorship
See also: Eastern Bloc information dissemination, Censorship in Cuba, Censorship in the People's Republic of China, and Censorship in North Korea
Barbados lifts ban on Black Swan
A censorship board has reversed a decision to ban theatres in Barbados from showing Black Swan.
censorship: West's Encyclopedia of American Law (Full Article ...
censorship ( ) n. The act, process, or practice of censoring. The office or authority of a Roman censor
Strict censorship existed in the Eastern Bloc.7 Throughout the bloc, the various ministries of culture held a tight rein on their writers.8 Cultural products there reflected the propaganda needs of the state.8 Party-approved censors exercised strict control in the early years.9 In the Stalinist period, even the weather forecasts were changed if they had the temerity to suggest that the sun might not shine on May Day.9 Under Nicolae Ceauşescu in Romania, weather reports were doctored so that the temperatures were not seen to rise above or fall below the levels which dictated that work must stop.9
Independent journalism did not exist in the Soviet Union until Mikhail Gorbachev became its leader; all reporting was directed by the Communist Party or related organizations. Pravda, the predominant newspaper in the Soviet Union, had a monopoly. Foreign newspapers were available only if they were published by Communist Parties sympathetic to the Soviet Union.
Possession and use of copying machines was tightly controlled in order to hinder production and distribution of samizdat, illegal self-published books and magazines. Possession of even a single samizdat manuscript such as a book by Andrei Sinyavsky was a serious crime which might involve a visit from the KGB. Another outlet for works which did not find favor with the authorities was publishing abroad.
The People's Republic of China, which continues Communist rule in politics, if not in the controlled economy, employs some 30,000 'Internet police'citation needed to monitor the internet and popular search engines such as Google and Yahoo.
Iraq under Baathist Saddam Hussein had much the same techniques of press censorship as did Romania under Nicolae Ceauşescu but with greater potential violence.citation needed
Cuban media is operated under the supervision of the Communist Party's Department of Revolutionary Orientation, which "develops and coordinates propaganda strategies".10 Connection to the Internet is restricted and censored.11
Censorship also takes place in capitalist nations. In 1973, a military coup took power in Uruguay, and the State practiced censorship. For example, writer Eduardo Galeano was imprisoned and later was forced to flee. His book Open Veins of Latin America was banned by the right-wing military government, not only in Uruguay, but also in Chile and Argentina.12
Barbados lifts ban on Black Swan
A CENSORSHIP board has reversed a decision to ban theatres in Barbados from showing Black Swan because of its sexual and violent content.
le connaissons Ces menaces ne sont pas plus caches qu elles ne sont difficiles deviner et encore un nombre signifiant d utilisateurs d Internet reste naf quant cette possibilit En dpit de nombreux questionnements sur l authenticit d un rapport qui affirmait que les FAI s taient dcids restreindre l Internet une sorte de modle d abonnement TV o
http://www.mecanopolis.org/?cat=802
Censorship - New World Encyclopedia
Censorship is the editing, removing, or otherwise changing speech and other forms of human expression. ... The visible motive of censorship is often to stabilize, improve, or ...
Critics of the Campaign finance reform in the United States claim that this reform imposes widespread restrictions on political speech.1314
State secrets and prevention of attention
The Rhodesia Herald of September 21, 1966.
Wieczór Wrocławia - Daily newspaper of Wrocław, People's Republic of Poland, March 20–21, 1981, with censor intervention on first and last pages --- under the headlines "Co zdarzyło się w Bydgoszczy?" (What happened in Bydgoszcz?) and "Pogotowie strajkowe w całym kraju" (Country-wide strike alert). The censor had removed a section regarding the strike alert; hence the workers in the printing house blanked out an official propaganda section. The right-hand page also includes a hand-written confirmation of that decision by the local "Solidarność" Trade Union.
In wartime, explicit censorship is carried out with the intent of preventing the release of information that might be useful to an enemy. Typically it involves keeping times or locations secret, or delaying the release of information (e.g., an operational objective) until it is of no possible use to enemy forces. The moral issues here are often seen as somewhat different, as the proponents of this form of censorship argues that release of tactical information usually presents a greater risk of casualties among one's own forces and could possibly lead to loss of the overall conflict.
During World War I letters written by British soldiers would have to go through censorship. This consisted of officers going through letters with a black marker and crossing out anything which might compromise operational secrecy before the letter was sent. The World War II catchphrase "Loose lips sink ships" was used as a common justification to exercise official wartime censorship and encourage individual restraint when sharing potentially sensitive information.
An example of "sanitization" policies comes from the USSR under Joseph Stalin, where publicly used photographs were often altered to remove people whom Stalin had condemned to execution. Though past photographs may have been remembered or kept, this deliberate and systematic alteration to all of history in the public mind is seen as one of the central themes of Stalinism and totalitarianism.
Barbados lifts ban on 'Black Swan' after outcry
A censorship board has reversed a decision to ban theaters in Barbados from showing "Black Swan" because of its sexual and violent content.
Censorship | Define Censorship at Dictionary.com
Censorship definition, the act or practice of censoring. See more.
Censorship is occasionally carried out to aid authorities or to protect an individual, as with some kidnappings when attention and media coverage of the victim can sometimes be seen as unhelpful.1516
Educational sources
A National Geographic Magazine censored by Iranian authorities. The offending cover was about the subject of love, and the picture hidden beneath the white sticker is of an embracing couple.17 February 2006.
The content of school textbooks is often the issue of debate, since their target audience is young people, and the term "whitewashing" is the one commonly used to refer to removal of critical or conflicting events. The reporting of military atrocities in history is extremely controversial, as in the case of The Holocaust (or Holocaust denial), Bombing of Dresden, the Nanking Massacre as found with Japanese history textbook controversies, the Armenian Genocide, the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, and the Winter Soldier Investigation of the Vietnam War.
In the context of secondary school education, the way facts and history are presented greatly influences the interpretation of contemporary thought, opinion and socialization. One argument for censoring the type of information disseminated is based on the inappropriate quality of such material for the young. The use of the "inappropriate" distinction is in itself controversial, as it changed heavily. A Ballantine Books version of the book Fahrenheit 451 which is the version used by most school classes18 contained approximately 75 separate edits, omissions, and changes from the original Bradbury manuscript.
Music and popular culture
See also: Censorship of music
Music censorship has been implemented by states, religions, educational systems, families, retailers and lobbying groups – and in most cases they violate international conventions of human rights.19
Aside from the usual justifications of pornography, language and violence, some movies are censored due to changing racial attitudes or political correctness in order to avoid ethnic stereotyping and/or ethnic offense despite its historical or artistic value. One example is the still withdrawn "Censored Eleven" series of animated cartoons, which may have been innocent then, but are "incorrect" now.
Copy, picture, and writer approval
US Internet censorship fight falling short: report
WASHINGTON, USA - State Department efforts to combat Internet censorship in China and other countries have fallen short and funding for the drive should be shifted to another US agency, a Senate committee report says.
Iranian Government blocking all online activity except for gaming Our second Government censorship story of the day has a slightly different slant as this time games are the exception rather than the victim Since the controversial election results in
http://darkzero.co.uk/game-news/iranian-government-blocking-all-online-activity-except-for-gaming
Censorship - Research and Read Books, Journals, Articles at ...
Censorship - Scholarly books, journals and articles Censorship at Questia, world's largest online library and research service. ...
Copy approval is the right to read and amend an article, usually an interview, before publication. Many publications refuse to give copy approval but it is increasingly becoming common practice when dealing with publicity anxious celebrities.20 Picture approval is the right given to an individual to choose which photos will be published and which will not. Robert Redford is well known for insisting upon picture approval.21 Writer approval is when writers are chosen based on whether they will write flattering articles or not. Hollywood publicist Pat Kingsley is known for banning certain writers who wrote undesirably about one of her clients from interviewing any of her other clients.citation needed
Maps
Main article: Censorship of maps
Censorship of maps is often employed for military purposes. For example, the technique was used in former East Germany, especially for the areas near the border to West Germany in order to make attempts of defection more difficult. Censorship of maps is also applied by Google maps, where certain areas are grayed out or areas are purposely left out-dated with old imagery.22
Meta censorship
In this form of censorship, any information about existence of censorship and the legal basis of the censorship is censored. Rules of censoring were classified. Removed texts or phrases were not marked.
Creative censorship
In this form of censorship, censors rewrite texts, giving these texts secret co-authors. This form of censorship is used in the novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.
Internet
Main article: Internet censorship
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.
Barring total control on Internet-connected computers, such as in North Korea and Cuba, total censorship of information on the Internet is very difficult (or impossible) to achieve due to the underlying distributed technology of the Internet. Pseudonymity and data havens (such as Freenet) allow unconditional free speech, as the technology guarantees that material cannot be removed and the author of any information is impossible to link to a physical identity or organization.
Clinton Says Internet Censorship Harmful to Governments
Internet censorship hurts the governments that use it, the U.S. secretary of state says.
Censorship
Censorship in the U.S.A. and in other countries, with consideration of particular cases of censorship.
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 (see 404 error for details).2324252627
In November 2007, "Father of the Internet" Vint Cerf stated that he sees government control of the Internet failing due to private ownership.28
The Australian government announced in December 2009 that it will introduce internet censorship legislation before the next Australian federal election.29
Implementation
Censored pre-press proof of two articles from "Notícias da Amadora", a Portuguese newspaper, 1970
The former Soviet Union maintained a particularly extensive program of state-imposed censorship. The main organ for official censorship in the Soviet Union was the Chief Agency for Protection of Military and State Secrets generally known as the Glavlit, its Russian acronym. The Glavlit handled censorship matters arising from domestic writings of just about any kind—even beer and vodka labels. Glavlit censorship personnel were present in every large Soviet publishing house or newspaper; the agency employed some 70,000 censors to review information before it was disseminated by publishing houses, editorial offices, and broadcasting studios. No mass medium escaped Glavlit's control. All press agencies and radio and television stations had Glavlit representatives on their editorial staffs.
Sometimes, a specific and unique information whose very existence is barely known to the public, is kept in a subtle, near-censorship situation, being regarded as "subversive" or "inconvenient". Michel Foucault's 1978 text "Sexual Morality and the Law" (later republished as "The Danger of Child Sexuality"), for instance - originally published as La loi de la pudeur [literally, "the law of decency"], defends the decriminalization of statutory rape and the abolition of age of consent laws.
When a publisher comes under pressure to suppress a book, but has already entered into a contract with the author, they will sometimes effectively censor the book by deliberately ordering a small print run and making minimal, if any, attempts to publicize it. This practice became known in the early 2000s as privishing.30
Censorship by country
Main article: Censorship by country
See also
Book banning
Book burning
Chilling Effect
Federal Communications Commission
Market for loyalties theory
Newspeak
Self-censorship
Strategic lawsuit against public participation
Taboo
Video game controversy
Barbados lifts ban on 'Black Swan' after outcry
The Associated Press The Associated Press BRIDGETOWN, Barbados A censorship board has reversed a decision to ban theaters in Barbados from showing "Black Swan" because of its sexual and violent content. The Cinematograph Film Censorship Board reviewed its decision after a theater filed an appeal. The board announced Wednesday the movie would be shown under an "R'' rating. Hundreds of people ...
censorship - Anarchopedia
Censorship is the control of speech and other forms of human expression. ... Censorship can be explicit, as in laws passed to prevent select positions from ...
Freedoms:
Academic freedom
Freedom of the press
Freedom of speech
Freedom of thought
Scientific freedom
Citations and notes
^ http://www.missingkids.com/en_US/documents/CP_Legislation_Report.pdf
^ http://www.csecworldcongress.org/en/index.htm
^ Timothy Jay (2000). Why We Curse: A Neuro-psycho-social Theory of Speech. John Benjamins Publishing Company. pp. 208–209. ISBN 1556197586.
^ David Goldberg, Stefaan G. Verhulst, Tony Prosser (1998). Regulating the Changing Media: A Comparative Study. Oxford University Press. pp. 207. ISBN 0198267819.
^ http://news.cnet.com/2010-1071_3-1021938.html
^ The Commissar vanishes (The Newseum)
^ Major & Mitter 2004, p. 6
^ a b Major & Mitter 2004, p. 15
^ a b c Crampton 1997, p. 247
^ "10 most censored countries". The Committee to Protect Journalists. http://www.cpj.org/censored/censored_06.html.
^ "Going online in Cuba: Internet under surveillance". Reporters Without Borders. 2006. http://www.rsf.org/IMG/pdf/rapport_gb_md_1.pdf.
^ http://www.democracynow.org/2009/5/28/eduardo
^ "The Trick of Campaign Finance Reform". Christian Science Monitor. http://www.giantleap.org/envision/campaign.htm.
^ "Felonious Advocacy". reason. http://www.reason.com/news/show/132594.html.
^ New York Times
^ The Raw Story | Investigative News and Politics
^ Lundqvist, J.. "More pictures of Iranian Censorship". http://jturn.qem.se/2006/more-pictures-of-iranian-censorship/. Retrieved August 2007-01-21.
^ Bradbury, Ray. Fahrenheit 451. Del Rey Books. April 1991.
^ "What is Music Censorship?". Freemuse.org. 1 January 2001. http://www.freemuse.org/sw2338.asp. Retrieved 2008-10-25.
^ Ian Mayes (2005-04-23). "The readers' editor on requests that are always refused". London: The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,1468351,00.html. Retrieved August 2007-01-21.
^ Barber, Lynn (2002-01-27). "Caution: big name ahead". London: The Observer. http://observer.guardian.co.uk/life/story/0,6903,639829,00.html. Retrieved August 2007-01-21.
^ Jenna Johnson (2007-07-22). "Google's View of D.C. Melds New and Sharp, Old and Fuzzy". News (Washington Post). http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/21/AR2007072101296.html. Retrieved 2007-07-22.
^ https://publicaffairs.linx.net/news/?p=154
^ "The Internet Watch Foundation must learn from the Wikipedia debacle". The Daily Telegraph (London). 2008-12-10. http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/technology/shanerichmond/5938187/The_Internet_Watch_Foundation_must_learn_from_the_Wikipedia_debacle/.
^ Fisher, Frank (2008-12-09). "A nasty sting in the censors' tail". The Guardian (London). http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/dec/09/scorpions-virgin-killer-censorship.
^ http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/12/07/brit_isps_censor_wikipedia/
^ Bangkok Post : The old fake '404 Not Found' routine
^ Cerf sees government control of Internet failing
^ abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/12/15/2772467.htm
^ Winkler, David (11 July 2002). "Journalists Thrown 'Into the Buzzsaw'". CommonDreams.org. http://www.commondreams.org/views02/0711-05.htm.
General information
Abbott, Randy. "A Critical Analysis of the Library-Related Literature Concerning Censorship in Public Libraries and Public School Libraries in the United States During the 1980s." Project for degree of Education Specialist, University of South Florida, December 1987. ED 308 864
Burress, Lee. Battle of the Books. Metuchen, NJ: The Scarecrow Press, 1989. ED 308 508
Butler, Judith, "Excitable Speech: A Politics of the Performative"(1997)
Foucault, Michel, edited by Lawrence D. Kritzman. Philosophy, Culture: interviews and other writings 1977–1984 (New York/London: 1988, Routledge, ISBN 0-415-90082-4) (The text Sexual Morality and the Law is Chapter 16 of the book).
O'Reilly, Robert C. & Parker, Larry. "Censorship or Curriculum Modification?" Paper presented at a School Boards Association, 1982, 14 p. ED 226 432
Hansen, Terry. The Missing Times: News media complicity in the UFO cover-up, 2000. ISBN 0-7388-3612-5
Hendrikson, Leslie. "Library Censorship: ERIC Digest No. 23." ERIC Clearinghouse for Social Studies/Social Science Education, Boulder, Colorado, November 1985. ED 264 165
Hoffman, Frank. "Intellectual Freedom and Censorship." Metuchen, NJ: The Scarecrow Press, 1989. ED 307 652
Marek, Kate. "Schoolbook Censorship USA." June 1987. ED 300 018
Mathiesen, Kay Censorship and Access to Information HANDBOOK OF INFORMATION AND COMPUTER ETHICS, Kenneth E. Himma, Herman T. Tavani, eds., John Wiley and Sons, New York, 2008
National Coalition against Censorship (NCAC). "Books on Trial: A Survey of Recent Cases." January 1985. ED 258 597
Ringmar, Erik A Blogger's Manifesto: Free Speech and Censorship in the Age of the Internet (London: Anthem Press, 2007)
Small, Robert C., Jr. "Preparing the New English Teacher to Deal with Censorship, or Will I Have to Face it Alone?" Annual Meeting of the National Council of Teachers of English, 1987, 16 p.
(Arguing that an English teacher should get advice from school librarians in preparing to encounter three levels of censorship:
Rejection of adolescent fiction and popular teen magazines as having low value,
Experienced colleagues discouraging "difficult" lesson plans,
Outside interest groups limiting students' exposure. ED 289 172)
Supreme Court rejects advocates' plea to preserve useful formats
Terry, John David II. "Censorship: Post Pico." In "School Law Update, 1986," edited by Thomas N. Jones and Darel P. Semler. ED 272 994
World Book Encyclopedia, volume 3 (C-Ch), pages 345, 346
Wikibooks has a book on the topic of
Legal and Regulatory Issues in the Information Economy
Look up censorship in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
v · d · ePropaganda techniques
Ad hominem · Bandwagon effect · Big lie · Buzzword · Card stacking · Censorship · Code word · Dog-whistle politics · Doublespeak · Euphemism · Framing · Glittering generality · Government-organized demonstration · Revisionism · Ideograph · Indoctrination · Lawfare · Lesser of two evils principle · Limited hangout · Loaded language · Mass games · Newspeak · Obscurantism · Plain folks · Political correctness · Public relations · Slogan · Spin · Weasel word · Blood libel
censorship - definition of censorship by the Free Online ...
Translations of censorship. censorship synonyms, censorship antonyms. Information about censorship in the free online English dictionary and ...
New Anti-Censorship Tool Has Potential Gaps
A new anti-censorship tool that uses encrypted e-mail messages is under development by the U.S. government. It aims to give access for users in China to break though the ruling regime’s Great Firewall.
National Coalition Against Censorship
Alliance of nonprofit groups defending freedom of thought, inquiry, and expression, and educating about the dangers of censorship.
US pledges $25m to fight internet censorship
The US government is giving $25m this year to help political dissidents 'get around internet censorship in autocratic countries.'
and I mean everything is censored My second favorite band is Snow Patrol and unfortunately the governmental internet websites censoring agency finally laid forces on its Youtube channel I m not living freely I m locked in my country s jail of suppression If I can t even enjoy the freedoms of media what is left for me to enjoy I can t play sports I can t drive I can t
http://coldrevolt.wordpress.com/
Free Speech | Electronic Frontier Foundation
Directory of stories, documents, case studies, and ongoing examples of online censorship in various forms.
Full Text: 'Absurdities of China's Censorship System'
Chinese writer Murong Xucun prepared these remarks on censorship as an acceptance speech for the People's Literature Prize. However, as he approached the platform, he was barred from speaking. He delivered the talk at Hong Kong's Foreign Correspondents Club on February 22, 2011.



















