Archive for the ‘Censorship’ Category

Sensible Censorship? on BrandX Episode 210 – Video


Sensible Censorship? on BrandX Episode 210
Can #39;t say the F-word on TV, but you can show THESE things? Watch BrandX LIVE Thursdays at 11p only on FX. Subscribe to Russell Brand on YouTube: http://goo.g...

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Sensible Censorship? on BrandX Episode 210 - Video

Family Guy, the Boston Marathon, Humor, and Censorship – Video


Family Guy, the Boston Marathon, Humor, and Censorship
MundaneMatt here... Just my thoughts on the Family Guy connection to the Boston Marathon, humor, censorship, and how people cope with tragedy..and how humor...

By: MundaneMatt

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Family Guy, the Boston Marathon, Humor, and Censorship - Video

China censorship, Syria weapons blogger – Video


China censorship, Syria weapons blogger
Follow The Stream on Al Jazeera: YOUTUBE: http://www.youtube.com/show/thestream TWITTER: https://twitter.com/AJStream INSTAGRAM: http://www.instagram.com/ajs...

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China censorship, Syria weapons blogger - Video

Julian Assange, Eric Schmidt Discuss Censorship, Bitcoin And The Internet In Recently Published Conversation

Its been a while since weve heard anything about Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks founder thats still hiding out in the Ecuadorian embassy in London after the UK approved his extradition to Sweden. During that time, he has entertained a number of guests, including Google CEO Eric Schmidt.

WikiLeaks shared a verbatim transcript of a five-hour conversation between Google CEO Eric Schmidt, Julian Assange, Jared Cohen, former Secretary of State advisor to Hillary Clinton, and Lisa Shields, a member of the Council for Foreign Relations. The meeting was arranged so Schmidt and Cohen could speak with Assange about their new book The New Digital Age.

A lot of the conversation comes from Assange as he discusses his motivations for starting WikiLeaks. Many people may already know his motivation to make information free but his conversation with Schmidt provided a few more details. Assange thinks that the current system of sharing information is broken because it has to go through three or four different channels before it reaches the average citizen. He said that WikiLeaks is an attempt at a total system that collects, curates and disseminates primary sources without any of the self or government mandated censorship that crops up in traditional news publishing.

Much of the conversation after that is Assange continuing to discuss state and economic censorship, which the latter he claims is the more prevalent of the two. After a bit of that, however, Assange starts to discuss Bitcoin. He voices full support for the digital currency and advises people to jump in early because he assume that its value is going to skyrocket:

The Bitcoin actually has the balance and incentives right, and that is why it is starting to take off. The different combination of these things. No central nodes. It is all point to point. One does not need to trust any central mint. The problems with traditional digital currencies on the internet is that you have to trust the mint not to print too much of it. And the incentives for the mint to keep printing are pretty high actually, because you can print free money. That means you need some kind of regulation. Bitcoin instead has an algorithm where the anyone can create, anyone can be their own mint. Theyre basically just searching for collisions with hashes.. A simple way is they are searching for a sequence of zero bits on the beginning of the thing. And you have to randomly search for, in order to do this. So there is a lot of computational work in order to do this. And each Bitcoin software that is distributed.. That work algorithmically increases as time goes by. So the difficulty in producing Bitcoins becomes harder and harder and harder as time goes by and it is built into the system.

It should be noted that this conversation took place before recent Bitcoin boom and the subsequent crash.

Assange also touched upon how the Internet is inspiring revolution today, particularly in countries with oppressive governments:

The radicalization of internet educated youth. People who are receiving their values from the internet and then as they find them to be compatible echoing them back. The echo back is now so strong that it drowns the original statements. Completely. The people Ive dealt with from the 1960s radicals who helped liberate Greece and.. Salazar. They are saying that this moment in time is the most similar to what happened in this period of liberation movements in the 1960s, that they have seen.

He also says that the Internet is turning the youth of the Western world, who are typically a-political, into political activists thanks to the information they are able to receive on events that they would have otherwise not been exposed to in traditional media.

You can check out the rest of the transcript here. Its incredibly fascinating and definitely worth your time.

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Julian Assange, Eric Schmidt Discuss Censorship, Bitcoin And The Internet In Recently Published Conversation

3 Companies That Lost to Chinese Censorship

By Kevin Chen | More Articles April 16, 2013 |

Investors in China know that Beijing holds relatively tight controls over commerce in its country, but few understand the extent to which China will help domestic companies succeed. In the following video, Fool contributor Kevin reveals just how important Beijing's blessing is to your investments.

When looking at the history of Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) and Facebook (NASDAQ: FB) in China, we see what The Economist has called political protectionism. While Google -- in a sense -- voluntarily shut down its service in China, Facebook was blocked. Whatever the political reasons behind these actions, it's clear that the winners have beenBaidu (NASDAQ: BIDU) and Renren (NYSE: RENN) .

Even when foreign companies like Yahoo!have been forthcoming in self-censoring themselves, Beijing seems to put up obstacles to favor its domestic companies like SINA (NASDAQ: SINA) , which ultimate profit.

To learn more about the effect Chinese censorship has had on these public companies, watch the video now.

It's incredible to think just how much of our digital and technological lives are almost entirely shaped and molded by just a handful of companies. Find out "Who Will Win the War Between the 5 Biggest Tech Stocks?" in The Motley Fool's latest free report, which details the knock-down, drag-out battle being waged by the five kings of tech.Click hereto keep reading.

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3 Companies That Lost to Chinese Censorship