Archive for the ‘Censorship’ Category

GoogleTube CENSORSHIP Conspiracy (is REAL) – Video


GoogleTube CENSORSHIP Conspiracy (is REAL)
It has begun..... UPDATE!! No kidding....AS SOON AS I POSTED THIS VIDEO....My comments and thumbs showed back up on my videos.....Weird timing to say the least.

By: TheScariestMovieEver

See the article here:
GoogleTube CENSORSHIP Conspiracy (is REAL) - Video

Blackbar review: An iPhone game about censorship that… No wait, come back! It's really good!

Blackbar is a simple, elegant and witty word game for the iPhone. It's also a dystopian sci-fi adventure storyabout the cruelty of censorship. Yeah, now you're interested! Read on for our Blackbar review.

The best puzzle games for iPad & iPhone

A politically literate tirade against censorship; an Orwellian adventure story told through one half of an increasingly mangled email exchange; a puzzle game based entirely around decoding blocks of text. None of these things might sound like your idea of a merry time, but Blackbar is odd like that.

Playing the part of a downtrodden citizen of a dimly sketched dystopia, you receive a series of messages with parts blacked out by censors, and have to work out what the missing words are. It's easy at first, as these things generally are; but the game takes the idea and runs with it, tangling and weaving its internal logic until your head hurts.

You start off with this...

...and start filling in the blanks like this

It can be a frustrating game, in truth: we found ourselves head-scratching over a single word needed to unlock the next screen for days at a time. And the actual substance of the puzzles, when you remove this non-playing thinking time, is relatively thin. But Blackbar makes up for this by having a rather wonderful story - a story that's barely there, whispered to you in code and reassembled piece by piece.

Blackbar is often funny, particularly when the censors grow suspicious and start sending out entertainingly euphemistic threats; it's also a little bit politically charged. Every now and then it will catch you off guard and be rather moving. The writers, likethe US author Mark Z. Danielewski, are aware that piecing together the story yourself makes it that much more affecting.

Visit link:
Blackbar review: An iPhone game about censorship that... No wait, come back! It's really good!

Google Whipped by Censorship Ruling in Max Mosley S&M Case

After a lengthy battle in a French court over unwanted S&M pictures showing in Google search results, former president of Formula One racing Max Mosley beat Google in a ruling that said the search engine was to "remove and cease, for a period of five years beginning two months after this decision, the appearance of nine images,Reuters reported.

The images in question depict Mosley engaged in an S&M party with multiple prostitutes back in 2008. Rumors surfaced it was Nazi themed, but Mosley fiercely denied that aspect of the event; the costumes worn were prison garb.

Google said the ruling would require a new algorithm built specifically for this case in order to keep up with anyone who is reposting the images.

"Even though we already provide a fast and effective way of removing unlawful material from our search index, the French court has instructed us to build what we believe amounts to a censorship machine," Google counsel Daphne Keller said in a statement.

Prior to the ruling, Google said it had already removed hundreds of pages for Mosley and would be willing to remove more. But this ruling, said Google, has serious consequences for free expression.

TechDirt.com reported Mosley's take on censorship and Google's role:

"The fundamental point is that Google could stop this material appearing, but they don't, or they won't as a matter of principle. My position is that if the search engines -- if somebody were to stop the search engines producing the material, the actual sites don't really matter because without a search engine, nobody will find it, it would be just a few friends of the person who posts it. The really dangerous thing are the search engines."

Google was ordered to pay 1 euro in damages as well as 5,000 euros of Mosley's court costs. Google said it would appeal the ruling.

Bringing Together Paid, Owned and Earned Media Feb. 10-13, 2014: This year's SES London agenda focuses on aligning paid, owned and earned media to help you drive quality traffic and increase conversions. Register early and save! *Saver Rate ends Dec 13.

Read more from the original source:
Google Whipped by Censorship Ruling in Max Mosley S&M Case

China Discusses Twitter IPO Online: Netizens Crack Jokes About Censorship And Social Media

Even though the Twitter website itself has been blocked on mainland China since 2009, news of Twitters successful IPO was still widely covered by Chinese national media. While Chinas ban on Twitter left room for social media successes like Sina Weibo, Chinas version of the microblogging platform and the countrys most popular social media site, it doesnt mean they dont know it exists.

Still that didnt stop people from making jokes about it online. While chatter on the IPO lit up Twitter itself, people in China took to their Weibo accounts to crack jokes about the multi-billion dollar invisible website.

A website that cant even open is now worth $24 billion? Its a crazy world were living in! one blogger posted, according to the South China Morning Post. Twitter is like a ghost, because youve only heard about it, but no one has ever seen it, another joked.

While there were jokes aplenty, the conversation unsurprisingly turned into a debate on censorship. Another blogger pointed out that the jokes about Twitters non-existence says a lot about Chinas immense censorship power. This is the moment you realize that China is so apart from the rest of the world, one New-York based Weibo blogger wrote. The post, which was commented on over 3,000 times after it was posted, became a point of argument. Considering the average American knows very little about the world outside their country, who is really apart? one blogger wrote in response. We have our own, better version [of the platform], how are we set apart?

The blogger responded that it doesnt matter if Weibo is better, when you are limited of having basic choices. Those who say they dont even like using Twitter are missing the point, the blogger retorted. How can you be glad when you are deprived of the right in the first place?

Even with the inability to tweet, many Chinese netizens addressed the censorship with a dose of laughter. Here are more jokes about Twitters IPO found on Chinese social media:

I am calling the police they are letting a fake website go public.

I am worried about the bubbles in the US stock market -- how come a non-existent website walked away with that kind of money?

Wow, do you think I can also make money selling shares in my blank error page?

On Thursday, the San Francisco-based social media platform saw its stock soar from an IPO price of $26 to $44.90, a 73 percent increase, by the end of its first day on the New York Stock Exchange.

Follow this link:
China Discusses Twitter IPO Online: Netizens Crack Jokes About Censorship And Social Media

A Message to Facebook (and Facebook users) On Facebook Censorship – Video


A Message to Facebook (and Facebook users) On Facebook Censorship
Is Facebook censorship getting out of hand? What can be done to remedy it? http://www.metaphormedia-kc.com.

By: MetaphorMedia

See the article here:
A Message to Facebook (and Facebook users) On Facebook Censorship - Video