FUCK THE POLICE
911 EVERY DAY
Three Chinese provinces, an indisputable piece of China's sovereign territory (part of Taiwan province), and a city square in Beijing with an otherwise unnoteworthy history, unworthy of deeper investigation.
What's the number they use to reference Tianamen in China to skate around the online censors?
No, I saw on Jeopardy recently that there is a number that is loosely based upon the date of the incident that was being used to get past filters.
True, it's probably already obsolete. That said, it could be difficult to block a random number, because it could potentially cause a lot of problems for other online traffic. Imagine the volume of business and scientific related searches which could get blocked simply by banning a number.
Edit: I looked it up, and apparently it was "535" (May 35th, denoting June 4th with excess days). Chinese censors have previously blocked "64" and all of the combinations of roman numberals. They have already caught up with 535, so the ongoing war of new memes continues to something new...
What's the number they use to reference Tianamen in China to skate around the online censors?
Are you thinking of 'big yellow duck'
?http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ster-substitutes-ducks-tanks-viral-image.html
True, it's probably already obsolete. That said, it could be difficult to block a random number, because it could potentially cause a lot of problems for other online traffic. Imagine the volume of business and scientific related searches which could get blocked simply by banning a number.
Edit: I looked it up, and apparently it was "535" (May 35th, denoting June 4th with excess days). Chinese censors have previously blocked "64" and all of the combinations of roman numberals. They have already caught up with 535, so the ongoing war of new memes continues to something new...
God, it's like living in North Korea. I wonder if they'll think to adopt the names of American attrocities as their Chinese memes.![]()
North Korea is actually only allocated roughly 1000 IPv4 addresses, so only about that many people and institutions are even capable of accessing the internet.
Actually it is a block of 1024 contiguous addresses from 175.45.176.0 to 175.45.179.255. They also have a block of 256 China Netcom addresses from 210.52.109.0 to 210.52.109.255.
Yep, I read wikipedia too. It's where I got that from. I said "roughly" because I was being lazy. I didn't bother with the 256 China Netcom addresses, sure, but 1260 is still "roughly" 1000. Point is, it's not a lot.