阅读:2621回复:5
大家google.com能打开吗?
我只能打开google.cn
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1楼#
发布于:2006-03-14 13:25
打不开
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2楼#
发布于:2006-03-14 13:25
5555被封了,看来是
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3楼#
发布于:2006-03-14 13:25
我可以打开下面这个,不知道是不是正常的。
http://www.google.com/webhp?hl=zh-CN&newwindow=1&btnG=%E6%90%9C%E7%B4%A2&lr= |
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4楼#
发布于:2006-03-14 13:25
前两天打不开,不过今天可以打开了
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5楼#
发布于:2006-03-14 13:25
法新社报道,温家宝总理在美国全国广播公司记者关于因特网进行的内容审查问题时回答,自由意味着责任,中国对互联网是依法管理,同时倡导互联网业界行业自律,实行自我管理。网站要传播正确的信息,不要误导群众,更不能对社会秩序造成不良的影响。这些规范作为职业道德,应该得到遵守。
估计是它不自律的结果…… ![]() ![]() ![]() China's Wen urges media and Internet to exercise 'self-discipline' Tue Mar 14, 2:31 AM ET BEIJING (AFP) - Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has cautioned operators of the Internet and other media to exercise restraint, saying the national interest comes before freedom of speech. "Every citizen has the freedom of speech and publishing, (but) every citizen need to abide by law, safeguard national interest and society's interest," he told reporters at the end of parliament's annual session. Wen said Internet companies and website operators in particular should adopt a "code of conduct." "We maintain that the (Internet) industry should exercise self-discipline and self-management," he said. "Websites should convey right messages and information and should refrain from misleading the general public or exerting an adverse impact on social and public order." Analysts say that instead of liberalizing the media to address social ills, China's official censor is stepping up control, including resorting to high-tech measures to police the Internet. During the past year, outspoken media organizations have been silenced one after another as more publications and Internet websites are closed, and editors and journalists sacked or jailed. Several cases have also emerged recently of Chinese citizens being jailed for their online activities, with US Internet firms becoming embroiled in the controversies after helping the Chinese authorities. In one example journalist Shi Tao, who circulated a government order to suppress media commemorations of the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown, was jailed last year for 10 years after Yahoo handed over his e-mail records. According to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, China was the world's leading jailer of journalists in 2005 for the seventh consecutive year, with 32 imprisoned -- of whom 15 were Internet writers. Paris-based Reporters Without Borders ranks China 159th on a list of 167 countries in its global press freedom index. |
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