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Rethinking Chinese Modes of Social Control and Cybercrime Prevention/李兴安法律论文网


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ial opening of the official China Human Rights web site. Within a day of the government's announcement, Bronc Buster, from the cracker group Legions of the Underground, hacked his way into the site, leaving this message in place of the original site contents, saying that: "Chinas people have no rights at all, never mind human rights. I really can't believe our government deals with them. They censor, murder, torture, maim, and do everything we take for granite left the earth with the middle ages. The Chinese communist government is made out a gang of 100+ year old thugs and bullies who hide in seclusion. This pitiful effort of trying to change the hearts and minds of the world is a joke!"

The hacked site was, surprisingly, left online for nearly 36 hours and then replaced without comment from the China Human Rights site or any other official state spokesperson.

This is only one of the incidents by the hackers, who used the Network as a tool to commit their attack.

ii. Network as a medium

As a form of media, network has its advantages that the press and broadcasting do not. It surpasses the limits of time and space, languages and traffic, and law. Various of political incite, libel, rumour and superstition rush up in a crowd, mislead the public, go even farther than traditional media. Especially in countries that the images of the governments are vulnerable, usually will suffer severe setbacks from the propaganda, which that China is confronted with reveal as the websites managed by those who advocate the independence of Taiwan, Tibet, East Turkistan and Southern Mongolia; by Falungong, exiles of June 4 Tiananmen incident, human rights groups, members of democratic movements, and other dissidents; by international anti-China forces. These websites are always publish their opinion, put forward proofs that are harmful to the government but beneficial to them.

Someone said that the "Fast-growing Internet is China's new 'Democracy Wall' ".20 The development of the network is testing Chinese politics.

A survey on impact of Internet on value orientations revealed that Communism has become the least popular value orientation among Chinese audiences, whereas Post-materialism has already been adopted by a significant portion (about a quarter) of the populace. Compared with similar surveys in the 1980s, this represents both a sharp departures from the past and an unfolding path into the future. Although Materialism has become the prevalent value orientation among the Chinese populace, there is reason to believe that it will gradually fade out from its dominance and shift to Post-materialism. For example, there is an almost imperceptible decline in Post-materialism and increase in Materialism along the age dimension, with Post-materialism being more popular than Materialism among the youngest cohort. All things considered, there are at least three areas that can be pursued along this line o

f research in the future: (a) cross-validating the measurement of the three value orientations, (b) monitoring the dynamic process of the rise and fall among the value orientations, and (c) exploring the consequences of the value orientations.21

The Internet poses more serious problem to the Chinese government that: 1) While the government can exert some control over the in

Rethinking Chinese Modes of Social Control and Cybercrime Prevention/李兴安法律论文网(第8页)
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