Censorship – The New York Times

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The British monarchs sharp words resonated online, and journalists asked a spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for a response.

By EDWARD WONG

Mr. Ren had questioned a major announcement by President Xi Jinping that Chinese news organizations must serve the Communist Party.

By EDWARD WONG

The dispute stems from a rejection by the American Bar Association of a potentially incendiary book being written by a Chinese human rights lawyer.

By EDWARD WONG

Restricting what search results users can see undermines the Internets promise of global access to information.

By DAPHNE KELLER and BRUCE D. BROWN

Kathy Chen served a stint in the Chinese military and was involved in a venture that was partly owned by the countrys domestic security ministry.

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

The political costs of doing business with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, are becoming clearer by the week for the German chancellor.

By ALISON SMALE

In an era of easy access to global news, Beijing is going after critics outside its borders.

The Najib administrations assault on free expression is unprecedented.

By JAHABAR SADIQ

The magazines published reports this week examining the tightening control Mr. Xi has exerted over Chinese politics and the cult of personality he has built around himself.

By EMILY FENG

American officials cite blocked websites and other limits on information as bad for foreign companies doing business in the vast market.

By PAUL MOZUR

Leaked documents about offshore companies name family members of the countrys president, propaganda chief and vice premier.

By MICHAEL FORSYTHE

During a presentation on digital security, the architect, Fang Binxing, was forced to use location-masking software to reach websites in South Korea.

By AUSTIN RAMZY

The top censored phrases monitored on Weibo all appeared to be related to the leaks: tax evasion, file, leaked, Putin and company.

By MICHAEL FORSYTHE and AUSTIN RAMZY

The mainland state news media omitted mention of the film, which depicts a dystopian future for Hong Kong under Chinese rule.

By ALAN WONG

A draft law posted by a technology regulator said sites in the country would have to register domain names with local service providers.

By PAUL MOZUR

An activist is killed on-air while hosting a radio show for fellow displaced residents of a rural town in Mexico.

By BETZAB GARCA

Asesinan a un activista mientras estaba al aire conduciendo un programa de radio dirigido a residentes desplazados de un pequeo pueblo en Mxico.

Por BETZAB GARCA

The founder of the social networking service has learned Mandarin and charmed audiences. But with a public presence in China comes official scrutiny.

By PAUL MOZUR

A reader writes, Americans in 2016 could perhaps take a lesson from it.

Three novels that have been censored in China.

By JESS ROW

The British monarchs sharp words resonated online, and journalists asked a spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for a response.

By EDWARD WONG

Mr. Ren had questioned a major announcement by President Xi Jinping that Chinese news organizations must serve the Communist Party.

By EDWARD WONG

The dispute stems from a rejection by the American Bar Association of a potentially incendiary book being written by a Chinese human rights lawyer.

By EDWARD WONG

Restricting what search results users can see undermines the Internets promise of global access to information.

By DAPHNE KELLER and BRUCE D. BROWN

Kathy Chen served a stint in the Chinese military and was involved in a venture that was partly owned by the countrys domestic security ministry.

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

The political costs of doing business with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, are becoming clearer by the week for the German chancellor.

By ALISON SMALE

In an era of easy access to global news, Beijing is going after critics outside its borders.

The Najib administrations assault on free expression is unprecedented.

By JAHABAR SADIQ

The magazines published reports this week examining the tightening control Mr. Xi has exerted over Chinese politics and the cult of personality he has built around himself.

By EMILY FENG

American officials cite blocked websites and other limits on information as bad for foreign companies doing business in the vast market.

By PAUL MOZUR

Leaked documents about offshore companies name family members of the countrys president, propaganda chief and vice premier.

By MICHAEL FORSYTHE

During a presentation on digital security, the architect, Fang Binxing, was forced to use location-masking software to reach websites in South Korea.

By AUSTIN RAMZY

The top censored phrases monitored on Weibo all appeared to be related to the leaks: tax evasion, file, leaked, Putin and company.

By MICHAEL FORSYTHE and AUSTIN RAMZY

The mainland state news media omitted mention of the film, which depicts a dystopian future for Hong Kong under Chinese rule.

By ALAN WONG

A draft law posted by a technology regulator said sites in the country would have to register domain names with local service providers.

By PAUL MOZUR

An activist is killed on-air while hosting a radio show for fellow displaced residents of a rural town in Mexico.

By BETZAB GARCA

Asesinan a un activista mientras estaba al aire conduciendo un programa de radio dirigido a residentes desplazados de un pequeo pueblo en Mxico.

Por BETZAB GARCA

The founder of the social networking service has learned Mandarin and charmed audiences. But with a public presence in China comes official scrutiny.

By PAUL MOZUR

A reader writes, Americans in 2016 could perhaps take a lesson from it.

Three novels that have been censored in China.

By JESS ROW

Excerpt from:
Censorship - The New York Times

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