Welcome to Source Notes, a Future Tense column about the internet’s information ecosystem. It’s fair to say Beijing is on icy terms with Wikipedia. Back in 2015, Beijing deployed its Great Firewall to ...
China is planning an ambitious online resource to rival Wikipedia. The inaugural digital version of the Chinese Encyclopaedia will, in effect, be the country's first online book of "everything." But ...
Wikipedia is now completely inaccessible in China. The Chinese version of the online encyclopedia has been blocked in the country since 2015, but the BBC reported (and the Wikimedia Foundation ...
The Chinese government has now blocked Wikipedia in all languages inside the country, the BBC reports. The total block of one of the world’s most popular websites has been ongoing since April.
Wikipedia is no longer welcome in China. On May 4, an internet censorship initiative called the Open Observatory of Network Interference reported that China had extended its ban of the free online ...
China has expanded its ban on Wikipedia to block the community-edited online encyclopedia in all available languages, the BBC reports. An earlier enforced ban barred Internet users from viewing the ...
Thirteen years after blocking internet users in the country from accessing large parts of Wikipedia, China has plans to create its own online encyclopedia that its creators claim will be a "Great Wall ...
Will Clayton The Chinese government has strict censorship on the Internet, such as restricting access to Google, Facebook, etc., and obliging real-name registration for writing on Internet bulletin ...
The Chinese government has long been suspicious of Wikipedia. It’s been blocked in China intermittently since 2004, and the Chinese-language version has been blocked since June 2015. Now the ...
China is known for its censorship of certain websites. The country went the extra mile by blocking Wikipedia in April. Multiple reports confirm China blocked Wikipedia across all language URLs ...
It'll be free. It'll be uniquely Chinese. It'll be an online encyclopaedia to rival Wikipedia — but without the participation of the public. And don't expect entries on “Tiananmen Square 1989” or ...