A unique facility, as explained on OpenNet Initiative, allows the user to see what censorship on the web, a la as in China, like:
"Anyone who has followed OpenNet Initiative's research or even the mainstream media knows it's no secret that China filters the Internet. China has made headlines time and again for its pervasive policies toward censorship.
In 2006, Nart Villeneuve of ONI partner institution Citizen Lab (at the Munk Centre of University of Toronto) created a side by side comparison of Google.com and Google.cn. This comparison allows users to see the differences in a basic search on Google's US and China servers. In the image below, one can view the differences in a search for "falun," a popular spiritual practice in China, the practitioners of which face persecution. The Chinese government has admitted to filtering this search term".
"Anyone who has followed OpenNet Initiative's research or even the mainstream media knows it's no secret that China filters the Internet. China has made headlines time and again for its pervasive policies toward censorship.
In 2006, Nart Villeneuve of ONI partner institution Citizen Lab (at the Munk Centre of University of Toronto) created a side by side comparison of Google.com and Google.cn. This comparison allows users to see the differences in a basic search on Google's US and China servers. In the image below, one can view the differences in a search for "falun," a popular spiritual practice in China, the practitioners of which face persecution. The Chinese government has admitted to filtering this search term".
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