I was surprised to find that Vietnam, Australia, and America all have the same level of Internet censorship. From discussions that I had with people, it seemed a lot different when I was there. I didn't have any problems though. These thoughts were all from something I read in the Economist (although belated - I am so behind) about censorship.
WHAT you see—or rather, what you don't see—on the internet may be determined by your government. The attitude of officialdom varies when it comes to filtering content of a social nature. In many places agreements are set with service providers to block nasty stuff such as child pornography. In a few countries intervention is stronger, up to the level of pervasive censorship. This week Pakistan's block on YouTube accidentally caused an international outage for that website. Iran and Saudi Arabia have also prevented their citizens from accessing the video-sharing site.
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Have they found any evidence for this in our respective countries? I mean, where are they getting these statistics?
Hey dude, I just checked and discovered that The Donnas will be coming to Oz soon. I'd advise checking them out for kicks. Even if you don't like their music, the lead singer is hella cute.
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