Is China censoring Facebook?
CNET is reporting that Facebook and Twitter users in China are having difficulties logging into the service, and it could be a direct result of the government "blocking" access to the social networks.Rumors began to surface late on Tuesday that Facebook could no longer get past the Great Firewall of China.
The company has acknowledged the situation but could not confirm a
reason why. "We are disappointed to learn of reports that users in
China are having difficulty getting access to Facebook,"
representatives from the social network said in a statement. "We have
not made any changes to our site that would create access problems and
are looking into the situation."
As early as Tuesday morning, a Wall Street Journal report
suggested that Facebook members in China were having issues accessing
the site, but the story gained little traction and suggested that
technical difficulties may have been to blame.
China-based users of Twitter, many of them expatriates from the U.S. and Europe, painted a more suspicious picture. "Facebook is blocked in China," one said later on Tuesday. "There are going to be a lot of very p***ed off people here. What next, Twitter?"
"I'm on China Netcom and have the same issues with Facebook IP numbers, so it's not just China Telecom," another Twitter user said in response to theories that Facebook downages were related to Internet service providers.
However, Rick Martin, my colleague at CNET China, reports that access
to the social-networking site is "off and on," but it "doesn't look
like a block." Martin pinged the site and got a "unusual result"--30
percent packet loss. "Which kinda reflects the behavior I'm
seeing--sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't," he said.
The story flew under the radar for much of the day; the first I saw of it was a blog post from CollegeHumor
co-founder Ricky Van Veen. "They could have remained on if they had
played by China's rules and allowed the government to censor their
content," Van Veen wrote.
"But unlike Google and Yahoo and everybody else, Mark Zuckerberg
refused to play by their rules and told them to go f*** themselves.
Hats off to you, Mark."
CNET News.com could not immediately confirm that assertion on the part of Facebook.
Posted at 09:13AM Jul 02, 2008
by Kevin P McAuliffe in Inform |