The new normal: China blocks YouTube over Tibet

It's becoming every authoritarian government's first response to internal strife: Block the Web so the world can't see what's going on.

Last year the junta in Burma cut off Internet access as it cracked down on protests. Now the Chinese government, which is fighting protests in Tibet, has blocked YouTube after people posted videos showing protests in Lhasa, Tibet's capital. The government also blocked Google News, apparently in an effort to close down access to international news reports on Tibet.

China, which has more than a hundred million Web users, regularly censors the Internet. The Associated Press reports that folks in China trying to log on to YouTube on Sunday were presented with a blank screen.

The Shanghaiist blog says that people can still get YouTube through a VPN service.

Here's a non-YouTube link for a phone-cam video capture of the protests. Find more media, and comments from folks in China, at Boing Boing.

Posted in: Politics

About Machinist

Cyrus Farivar is a freelance technology journalist who regularly reports for National Public Radio, PRI's The World, The Economist and others. His forthcoming book is "The Internet of Elsewhere."

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