乌镇的“世界互联网大会”闹完了, 一个新词亮瞎了全世界的眼

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浙江乌镇召开的“世界互联网大会”于周五(11月21日)闭幕, 20日半夜11点一封包含“九个要点”的“草案”,被悄悄的塞到与会者所住的酒店的门缝底下。附带的纸条上说
"In light of the views of various sides, we have made this draft declaration,'' the explanatory note read. "If you want to make revisions to it, please contact the organizing committee before 8 a.m. on 21 November 2014.''
如果与会者不同意这个“宣言”,则必须连夜不睡进行反馈,如果任何人对“宣言”有其他建议,必须在凌晨8点之前向组织方反馈。 当然, 你有整整9个小时,应该够了


1. Enhanced cyberspace connectivity.
2. Respect for Internet sovereignty of all countries.
3. Joint efforts on cyber security.
4. Joint efforts to fight cyber terrorism.
5. Advanced development of Internet technology.
6. Vigorous development of the Internet economy.
7. Widely spread the positive energy. (这个词的中文原版 我们真的很熟悉)
8. Dedication to healthy growth of young people by cracking down on pornography and violence, so that the Internet "does not damage the future of mankind.''
9. Work for a cyberspace shared and governed by all.

跟着“宣言”一起被塞进与会者酒店房间内的,还有一张纸条,邀请与会者参加周五的闭幕式,并提醒他们“戴上纪念围巾”。那是一条蓝白相间的民间艺术围巾,被服务员放在客人的欢迎袋子里面的。但是或许组织者又进行了一番思索,过了一会又塞进来一张纸条,表示不需要大家佩戴这条围巾了。
 
为期三天的世界互联网大会全球瞩目,好评如潮。它不仅搭建了两个平台:中国与世界互联互通的国际平台、国际互联网共享共治的中国平;取得了四大成果:发挥 了中国作为互联网大国应有的责任和担当;凝聚了共识,推动了合作;让各国增进了了解与互信,促进了共享共治;吸引了全球目光,国内外舆论高度关注;
发出了 九点倡议:
促进网络空间互联互通、
尊重各国网络主权、
共同维护网络安全、
联合开展网络反恐、
推动网络技术发展、
大力发展互联网经济、
广泛传播正能量、
关爱 青少年健康成长
以及推动网络空间共享共治,而且将浙江乌镇作为世界互联网大会的永久会址,每年举办一届,具有深厚的现实意义和历史意义。除了这一系列会议 成果,首届世界互联网大会更标志着我国对互联网的发展与管理已由过去的被动接招转变为如今的主动出击。
 
世界局域网大会
 
http://techcrunch.com/2014/11/20/worldinternetconference-declaration/
China Tried To Get World Internet Conference Attendees To Ratify This Ridiculous Draft Declaration

This week, China hosted its first World Internet Conference in Wuzhen. The irony of a country with some of the strictest online censorship laws in the world holding an event with the theme “interconnected world, shared and governed by all” was underscored yesterday, when the events’ organizers made a pro-forma attempt to get attendees to approve a draft declaration by slipping it under their hotel room doors late at night.

TechCrunch has obtained a copy of the document, which is supposed to represent the consensus views of conference participants. A PDF is embedded at the bottom of this post.

Among other things, the draft declaration calls for countries to respect each other’s “Internet sovereignty,” impose stricter restrictions on online pornography, and “destroy all dissemination channels of information of violent terrorism.”

The document is both hilariously farcical and unsettling in light of China’s crackdowns on Internet freedom and its cyberattacks on media outlets and government organizations in other countries.

Our source says that the draft was put under hotel room doors around 11PM, giving attendees until only 8AM the next morning to make revisions before it’s planned release at today’s closing ceremony [UPDATE: the declaration was not released after all].

Furthermore, attendees began checking out last night since the conference’s main events took place on Wednesday and Thursday.

Top executives from Chinese tech firms, including Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent, as well as representatives from Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, Samsung, LinkedIn, and non-profit organization ICANN attended the conference.

The World Internet Conference, which started on Wednesday and ends today, was organized by the State Internet Information Office (SIIO). The SIIO was set up in 2011 to coordinate various agencies after then-president Hu Jintao called for the government to ramp up its oversight of online content and activity.

Here are the choicest excerpts from the draft.

It opened with a cover letter, signed by the World Internet Conference’s organizing committee:
“Thank you for your participation in the First World Internet Conference and your contribution to its success. During the Conference, many speakers and participants suggest [SIC] that a Wuzhen declaration be released at the closing ceremony. In light of the views of various sides, we have made this draft declaration. If you want to make revisions to it, please contact the organizing committee before 8 a.m. on 21 November 2014. (email: info@wicwuzhen.cn).”

The draft declaration starts off by stating:
“Participants in the Conference acknowledge that the Internet is increasingly becoming a leading force of innovation-driven development and is powering economic and social progress. The Internet has turned the world into a global village and made the international community a highly interdependent community of common destiny. While enjoying rapid development, the Internet has posed new challenges to national sovereignty, security and development interests, which requires the international community to meet urgently and seriously expand consensus and strengthen cooperation.
We call on the international community to work together to build an international Internet governance system of multilateralism, democracy and transparency and a cyberspace of peace, security, openness and cooperation.”

It then went on to list nine suggestions. The most ridiculous and mealy-mouthed are below.
“Second, respect Internet sovereignty of all countries. We should respect each country’s rights to the development, use and governance of the Internet, refrain from abusing resources and technological strengths to violate other countries’ Internet sovereignty, and build an Internet order to equality and mutual benefit.”
Translation? “Hands off our Great Firewall.”

“Third, jointly safeguard cyber security. We should actively cope with challenges to cyberspace security and reject all forms of cyber attacks and Internet theft. We should work together to fight cyber crimes, protect individual privacy and information security, and safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of citizens.”
This item is especially egregious considering China’s well-documented history of launching cyberattacks against international media outlets, military, and government organizations. The director of the U.S. National Security Agency (admittedly not itself a glowing example of good behavior), Admiral Mike Rogers, recently said that China, along with “probably one or two” other countries, has the power to possibly shutdown the U.S.’s Internet infrastructure, including the computer systems of public utilities, aviation networks, and financial companies.
Media outlets China has spied on recently include the New York Times and Next Media. Next Media, one of Hong Kong’s largest media companies, has long been a target of the Chinese government, but attacks on its computer systems have increased since the start of pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, which Next Media founder Jimmy Lai has openly supported.

“Fourth, jointly fight cyber terrorism. We should work for the establishment of an international cooperation mechanism against cyber terrorism to fight cyber terrorism together and destroy all dissemination channels of information of violent terrorism.”
China has arguably used terrorism prevention as an excuse to exercise even tighter control on its residents’ access to online information and services. For example, in August the Chinese government blocked several messaging apps, including Line, KakaoTalk, Talkbox, Vower, and Didi, claiming that the services were being used to spread terrorism-related information. But Line’s blockage may have in fact have been triggered by the pro-democracy demonstrations in Hong Kong.
As Qiao Mu, a professor journalism at Beijing Foreign Studies University, told the Financial Times: “This alleged link between terrorism and these messaging apps is pretty far-fetched. On the whole, it sounds like they are using antiterrorism as an excuse to ban foreign apps, which are harder for the government to control.”
It’s not just foreign Internet services and apps being targeted under the guise of counter-terrorism. The Chinese government also launched a campaign against popular microblogging platform Weibo (formerly Sina Weibo) last year, citing similar reasons.
Last year, Weibo’s user base fell 9 percent to 280.8 million from 308.6 million the year before. This is partly because many users are shifting to more private messaging apps like Tencent’s WeChat, but also because of stricter laws like one that threatens social media users with three years in jail if a message that the government deems to be an “online rumor” is shared more than 500 times or seen by more than 5,000 users.

“Seventh, widely spread the positive energy. We should carry forward and promote fine cultures and produce more digital cultural products of high quality, in order to meet people’s cultural needs and give a sense of belonging to mankind in cyberspace.”
It must be a bit difficult to feel a “sense of belonging to mankind in cyberspace” when you are trapped behind the Great Firewall and have to rely on VPN services to access sites like Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Gmail, Amnesty International, Reporters Without Borders, Next Media, the BBC or the New York Times.

“Eighth, dedicate to the healthy growth of young people. We should strengthen the protection of minors online, crack down on the spread of pornography and violence, and make sure that the Internet does not damage the future of mankind.”
China’s regulations against online pornography have been particularly severe. In 2009, more than 15,000 sites with pornographic content were shutdown. The crackdown intensified this year. In the spring, China’s internet regulator launched a sweep called the “Clean Internet Campaign” that included the closure of three online literature sites that it claimed hosted obscene content. Penalties for posting pornographic content online for profit include sentences of up to three years in jail.

This isn’t just about the “healthy growth of young people.” Anti-pornography laws make it even harder to share information on the Internet by giving the Chinese government more leeway in the kinds of sites it is allowed to target and shutdown. The “Clean Internet Campaign” came soon after the banning of messaging apps mentioned above, as well as the Weibo crackdown.

We’ve emailed the World Internet Conference at info@wicwuzhen.cn and will update this post if we hear back from them.
 
http://techcrunch.com/2014/11/20/worldinternetconference-declaration/
China Tried To Get World Internet Conference Attendees To Ratify This Ridiculous Draft Declaration

This week, China hosted its first World Internet Conference in Wuzhen. The irony of a country with some of the strictest online censorship laws in the world holding an event with the theme “interconnected world, shared and governed by all” was underscored yesterday, when the events’ organizers made a pro-forma attempt to get attendees to approve a draft declaration by slipping it under their hotel room doors late at night.

TechCrunch has obtained a copy of the document, which is supposed to represent the consensus views of conference participants. A PDF is embedded at the bottom of this post.

Among other things, the draft declaration calls for countries to respect each other’s “Internet sovereignty,” impose stricter restrictions on online pornography, and “destroy all dissemination channels of information of violent terrorism.”

The document is both hilariously farcical and unsettling in light of China’s crackdowns on Internet freedom and its cyberattacks on media outlets and government organizations in other countries.

Our source says that the draft was put under hotel room doors around 11PM, giving attendees until only 8AM the next morning to make revisions before it’s planned release at today’s closing ceremony [UPDATE: the declaration was not released after all].

Furthermore, attendees began checking out last night since the conference’s main events took place on Wednesday and Thursday.

Top executives from Chinese tech firms, including Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent, as well as representatives from Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, Samsung, LinkedIn, and non-profit organization ICANN attended the conference.

The World Internet Conference, which started on Wednesday and ends today, was organized by the State Internet Information Office (SIIO). The SIIO was set up in 2011 to coordinate various agencies after then-president Hu Jintao called for the government to ramp up its oversight of online content and activity.

Here are the choicest excerpts from the draft.

It opened with a cover letter, signed by the World Internet Conference’s organizing committee:
“Thank you for your participation in the First World Internet Conference and your contribution to its success. During the Conference, many speakers and participants suggest [SIC] that a Wuzhen declaration be released at the closing ceremony. In light of the views of various sides, we have made this draft declaration. If you want to make revisions to it, please contact the organizing committee before 8 a.m. on 21 November 2014. (email: info@wicwuzhen.cn).”

The draft declaration starts off by stating:
“Participants in the Conference acknowledge that the Internet is increasingly becoming a leading force of innovation-driven development and is powering economic and social progress. The Internet has turned the world into a global village and made the international community a highly interdependent community of common destiny. While enjoying rapid development, the Internet has posed new challenges to national sovereignty, security and development interests, which requires the international community to meet urgently and seriously expand consensus and strengthen cooperation.
We call on the international community to work together to build an international Internet governance system of multilateralism, democracy and transparency and a cyberspace of peace, security, openness and cooperation.”

It then went on to list nine suggestions. The most ridiculous and mealy-mouthed are below.
“Second, respect Internet sovereignty of all countries. We should respect each country’s rights to the development, use and governance of the Internet, refrain from abusing resources and technological strengths to violate other countries’ Internet sovereignty, and build an Internet order to equality and mutual benefit.”
Translation? “Hands off our Great Firewall.”

“Third, jointly safeguard cyber security. We should actively cope with challenges to cyberspace security and reject all forms of cyber attacks and Internet theft. We should work together to fight cyber crimes, protect individual privacy and information security, and safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of citizens.”
This item is especially egregious considering China’s well-documented history of launching cyberattacks against international media outlets, military, and government organizations. The director of the U.S. National Security Agency (admittedly not itself a glowing example of good behavior), Admiral Mike Rogers, recently said that China, along with “probably one or two” other countries, has the power to possibly shutdown the U.S.’s Internet infrastructure, including the computer systems of public utilities, aviation networks, and financial companies.
Media outlets China has spied on recently include the New York Times and Next Media. Next Media, one of Hong Kong’s largest media companies, has long been a target of the Chinese government, but attacks on its computer systems have increased since the start of pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, which Next Media founder Jimmy Lai has openly supported.

“Fourth, jointly fight cyber terrorism. We should work for the establishment of an international cooperation mechanism against cyber terrorism to fight cyber terrorism together and destroy all dissemination channels of information of violent terrorism.”
China has arguably used terrorism prevention as an excuse to exercise even tighter control on its residents’ access to online information and services. For example, in August the Chinese government blocked several messaging apps, including Line, KakaoTalk, Talkbox, Vower, and Didi, claiming that the services were being used to spread terrorism-related information. But Line’s blockage may have in fact have been triggered by the pro-democracy demonstrations in Hong Kong.
As Qiao Mu, a professor journalism at Beijing Foreign Studies University, told the Financial Times: “This alleged link between terrorism and these messaging apps is pretty far-fetched. On the whole, it sounds like they are using antiterrorism as an excuse to ban foreign apps, which are harder for the government to control.”
It’s not just foreign Internet services and apps being targeted under the guise of counter-terrorism. The Chinese government also launched a campaign against popular microblogging platform Weibo (formerly Sina Weibo) last year, citing similar reasons.
Last year, Weibo’s user base fell 9 percent to 280.8 million from 308.6 million the year before. This is partly because many users are shifting to more private messaging apps like Tencent’s WeChat, but also because of stricter laws like one that threatens social media users with three years in jail if a message that the government deems to be an “online rumor” is shared more than 500 times or seen by more than 5,000 users.

“Seventh, widely spread the positive energy. We should carry forward and promote fine cultures and produce more digital cultural products of high quality, in order to meet people’s cultural needs and give a sense of belonging to mankind in cyberspace.”
It must be a bit difficult to feel a “sense of belonging to mankind in cyberspace” when you are trapped behind the Great Firewall and have to rely on VPN services to access sites like Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Gmail, Amnesty International, Reporters Without Borders, Next Media, the BBC or the New York Times.

“Eighth, dedicate to the healthy growth of young people. We should strengthen the protection of minors online, crack down on the spread of pornography and violence, and make sure that the Internet does not damage the future of mankind.”
China’s regulations against online pornography have been particularly severe. In 2009, more than 15,000 sites with pornographic content were shutdown. The crackdown intensified this year. In the spring, China’s internet regulator launched a sweep called the “Clean Internet Campaign” that included the closure of three online literature sites that it claimed hosted obscene content. Penalties for posting pornographic content online for profit include sentences of up to three years in jail.

This isn’t just about the “healthy growth of young people.” Anti-pornography laws make it even harder to share information on the Internet by giving the Chinese government more leeway in the kinds of sites it is allowed to target and shutdown. The “Clean Internet Campaign” came soon after the banning of messaging apps mentioned above, as well as the Weibo crackdown.

We’ve emailed the World Internet Conference at info@wicwuzhen.cn and will update this post if we hear back from them.



这个办法是《南方周末》发明的。:monster:

“韩寒及其支持者(包括南方报系的媒体人)喜欢说我对韩寒代笔的论证是在“构陷”韩寒,其实他们自己才是构陷的高手,本期《南方周末》(2012年6月21日)以头版头条和四个整版的篇幅发的两篇关于我的报道,正是构陷的杰作。

在该期《南方周末》出版的前一天晚上7点39分,《南方周末》记者陈鸣(微博上ID为@拨惹尘)给我发了封私信,说是《南方周末》第二天要发一组关于我的报道,希望能采访我。我看到这封私信时已是深夜,当时看了只觉得可笑。我知道他们为了这组报道已准备了两个多月,怎么到最后一刻才想起要直接联系我做采访了?早干嘛了?即使我愿意接受采访也来不及了嘛,就为了表示已尽到了试图采访我的义务,可以在报道中写上“发稿前南方周末记者又通过邮件、微博联系他,最终没有任何回应。”?当然,他早点联系我,我也会置之不理。此前他们就通过《凤凰周刊》黄章晋询问过是否能采访我,被我断然拒绝。自从《南方周末》发表《差生韩寒》(记者也是陈鸣)力挺韩寒后,我就很清楚他们的立场和伎俩,不会再跟他们打任何交道。”

http://bbs.comefromchina.com/threads/1399822/page-2#post-9046354
 
这个办法是《南方周末》发明的。:monster:

“韩寒及其支持者(包括南方报系的媒体人)喜欢说我对韩寒代笔的论证是在“构陷”韩寒,其实他们自己才是构陷的高手,本期《南方周末》(2012年6月21日)以头版头条和四个整版的篇幅发的两篇关于我的报道,正是构陷的杰作。

在该期《南方周末》出版的前一天晚上7点39分,《南方周末》记者陈鸣(微博上ID为@拨惹尘)给我发了封私信,说是《南方周末》第二天要发一组关于我的报道,希望能采访我。我看到这封私信时已是深夜,当时看了只觉得可笑。我知道他们为了这组报道已准备了两个多月,怎么到最后一刻才想起要直接联系我做采访了?早干嘛了?即使我愿意接受采访也来不及了嘛,就为了表示已尽到了试图采访我的义务,可以在报道中写上“发稿前南方周末记者又通过邮件、微博联系他,最终没有任何回应。”?当然,他早点联系我,我也会置之不理。此前他们就通过《凤凰周刊》黄章晋询问过是否能采访我,被我断然拒绝。自从《南方周末》发表《差生韩寒》(记者也是陈鸣)力挺韩寒后,我就很清楚他们的立场和伎俩,不会再跟他们打任何交道。”

http://bbs.comefromchina.com/threads/1399822/page-2#post-9046354
BTW现在大陆政府还封舟子吗?TMD手段太狠太LOW了点吧
 
BTW现在大陆政府还封舟子吗?TMD手段太狠太LOW了点吧
方舟子有众多仇人想置他于死地,又得罪了官方及其宠爱的文痞,好在能够洁身自好,否则就不只是封杀的问题了。
 
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