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Dukasaur wrote:Russian should therefore suffer much less impact than from the internet censorship than China does.
He said that while the Chinese do censor things, they are careful not to be so heavy-handed that they would stifle economic growth. Putin, on the other hand, is an old-fashioned dictator who cares primarily about power and doesn't really give a shit which way the economy goes, so he's not above crushing the flow of information entirely if he feels it's necessary to preserve power.
2dimes wrote:You're ready to go to war with Russia or China? Seems pretty bold.
2dimes wrote:You're ready to go to war with Russia or China? Seems pretty bold.
2dimes wrote:I think I am loosely following.
If Google can not get in cyber attacks should not be able to get out.
However if they block Google yet allow the attack to occur, you would like to punish them to encourage them to execute those responsible for the attacks, which would probably reduce the amount of attacks. Close?
I kind of agree until you compare shutting down conquer club with shooting a ship. I personally might be more upset about conquer club, but it is still much less significant than physically attacking something.
Fair enough you want something that they will respond to since they don't seem to care enough to prevent the problem to begin with.
mrswdk wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Russian should therefore suffer much less impact than from the internet censorship than China does.
What impact does internet censorship have in China? Pretty much all the blocked websites are foreign news or English-language sites that almost no one in China is trying to use anyway, so the only censorship of any note is that discussion around some sensitive topics gets censored and some terms/events turn up zero hits if you Baidu (Chinese Google) them.
mrswdk wrote:I thought this thread was going to be about whether it's more dangerous to censor that sort of content or to let people post and share whatever they like (i.e. a 'free' internet). Given the amount of completely insane fake news and lies that companies like Facebook are happy to let circulate on their platforms, and the real world impacts that has in shaping elections or stoking unrest, it's hard to argue that a totally unconstrained internet is much healthier for a functioning society than a censored internet.
jimboston wrote:All I know is that if China (and now Russia) has these ‘Firewalls’ then they essentially control the flow of data in and out of their country.
Therefore if we determine that cyber attacks originate from either country it is be default that these attacks are blessed by the country.
So essentially any cyber attack emanating from Russia or China is really ‘blessed’ by that country nd should be considered an act of war.
It’s no different than a Privateer.
tzor wrote:especially the future 5G network system to provide a 24/7 spying network on the people in China
The EU cited the reliance on suppliers, particularly a limited number of them, as a definite point of vulnerability: "The risk profile of individual suppliers will become particularly important, including the likelihood of the supplier being subject to interference from a non-EU country," it said. The U.S. is facing the lack of robust U.S. competition to Chinese telecom tech suppliers.
2dimes wrote:I think I am loosely following.
If Google can not get in cyber attacks should not be able to get out.
However if they block Google yet allow the attack to occur, you would like to punish them to encourage them to execute those responsible for the attacks, which would probably reduce the amount of attacks. Close?
I kind of agree until you compare shutting down conquer club with shooting a ship. I personally might be more upset about conquer club, but it is still much less significant than physically attacking something.
Fair enough you want something that they will respond to since they don't seem to care enough to prevent the problem to begin with.
nietzsche wrote:jimboston wrote:All I know is that if China (and now Russia) has these ‘Firewalls’ then they essentially control the flow of data in and out of their country.
Therefore if we determine that cyber attacks originate from either country it is be default that these attacks are blessed by the country.
So essentially any cyber attack emanating from Russia or China is really ‘blessed’ by that country nd should be considered an act of war.
It’s no different than a Privateer.
I'm going to try to not be aggressive jimboston.
nietzsche wrote:You cannot really control the flow of internet data out of a country. The information travels encrypted, if you were to try to decrypt every single data package to analyse it you would need more cpu-time that what already exists, and possibly more man-time than the entire population of the world. What you can control is destination/source. Or do you think internet packets travel with a little flag that says either "safe" or "hacking" ? Hackers in China, Russia, America and even Timbuktu are even better at this, they can hide information in normal stuff, then encrypt it, and then use the standard mainstream encryption. Not only that, they use compromised systems for their hacking. For instance, hackers in China (or Russia, or America or even Timbuktu) can compromise a corporate system, then use that system in a vpn to go out to America (or China, or Russia, or even Timbuktu) into another compromised system from which they do an attack. That is just a basic example.[/end]
nietzsche wrote:What these countries are trying to do is basically prevent the common person from accessing Fox news or NPR or FB news or whatever source of information they consider dangerous to their purposes. They can do some other stuff, depending on their interests, but that's it.
nietzsche wrote:
This is the second or third time you make the same mistake, which simply suggests that there's a will to see the world with America as the good guy, and the Chinese and Russians as the bad guys. With cyber attacks, I'd bet both my nuts that the first cyber attack was done by Americans. Of course, it can't be proven.
nietzsche wrote:And I bet that as I type, there are hundreds of people employed by the American government working out ways to attack international targets, but they label it as preemtive something
nietzsche wrote:and they guy who directs is wearing a clean white shirt with a tie and a nice suit, and he looks a lot like the guy you would find very interesting if you happened to coincide at a restaurant and strike a small conversation with him. Unlike the stinky chinese that prepares your chow mein or the rude Russian that [don't know what the stereotype for Russian is].
nietzsche wrote:If you're going to be reasonable and try to pass your posts as those of a person who really thinks about it, I think you need to do a zoom out and see the mistake you keep making. If you're gonna root blindly for the US you're just going to start looking like NP or Hitred or someone like that. If you continue to find reasonable excuses for what America does, you're just doing mental masturbation, but hey, if that's what you enjoy..
nietzsche wrote:Again, I only answer to you in this way because you always try to be reasonable.
nietzsche wrote:tzor wrote:especially the future 5G network system to provide a 24/7 spying network on the people in China
keep repeating it.
And some elements are indeed worthy of dystopian fiction. In certain areas of China, call a blacklisted person on the phone and you will hear a siren and recorded message saying: “Warning, this person is on the blacklist. Be careful and urge them to repay their debts.” When a blacklisted person crosses certain intersections in Beijing, facial-recognition technology projects their face and ID number on massive electronic billboards. Beijing-based lawyer Li Xiaolin was blacklisted after a court apology he gave was deemed “insincere.” Unable to buy tickets, he was stranded 1,200 miles from home.
China also plans to introduce a social credit system in the future that assigns a score to citizens depending on their online and real life behaviors. The DCEP could be intertwined with the country’s social credit system, and internet censorship, and the country could theoretically penalize behaviors through their finances as a result.
jimboston wrote:2dimes wrote:You're ready to go to war with Russia or China? Seems pretty bold.
Countries wouldn’t go to war over a few attacks by Privateers with Letters of Marque from a rival country.
jimboston wrote:
Countries wouldn’t go to war over a few attacks by Privateers with Letters of Marque from a rival country.
mrswdk wrote:The US invaded Afghanistan because the militia who attacked the World Trade Center had a base there and were affiliated with (even though not part of) its government.
mrswdk wrote:Also you did say that cyber attacks should be treated as an act of war.
tzor wrote: especially the future 5G network system to provide a 24/7 spying network on the people in China.
Dukasaur wrote:These types of websites are pretty new -- FB and YT are both only 15 years old and have really impacted society for 10 or less -- and mankind is just learning how to deal with them. Soon enough people will develop new tools for separating truth from fiction and the pendulum will swing back again.
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