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Author Topic: Will China ever ban email?  (Read 3418 times)
payb.tc
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January 03, 2013, 03:30:38 AM
 #21

including melamine

Indeed - food is something you need to be a little careful about in China (something that all those "rules" and "regulations" does help with in western countries).


i once bought some cheap peanut butter that i (after i'd used it a couple of times), discovered was made in china . the rest went straight in the bin... not worth the risk.

unfortunately for australians, the kiwis seem to be less stringent about letting in chinese vegetables, and then half of them end up being sent here and passed off as "product of new zealand".

i can only imagine what kind of chemicals are in those frozen peas.
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January 03, 2013, 03:34:53 AM
 #22

i can only imagine what kind of chemicals are in those frozen peas.

By the same token I would never eat any of those "huge" western chickens that have been fed hormones to make them so big (and interestingly you don't see those for sale in most of the supermarkets in China).

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January 03, 2013, 06:04:20 AM
 #23

SIMs are cheap, or IDs are cheap? (or both?)

Probably both (haven't bought the latter though). Cheesy

You can also openly buy things like "mosquito rackets" (electrified mozzie zappers that look like a tennis racket) which are *banned* in many western countries.

I didn't know these were banned - reasoning? We've always had a couple of them around the house here (in Thailand). Sounds like many things are the same here. Sim cards easy to get without ID anywhere, even 7-11, and food - you never know where it came from but luckily most of what we eat is local from village neighbours.

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January 03, 2013, 06:12:54 AM
 #24

I didn't know these were banned - reasoning? We've always had a couple of them around the house here (in Thailand). Sounds like many things are the same here. Sim cards easy to get without ID anywhere, even 7-11, and food - you never know where it came from but luckily most of what we eat is local from village neighbours.

They certainly are in Australia (got two of them confiscated in customs) and being battery operated ones (using I think 4 D cells) I find it hard to believe that they could hurt anything much bigger than a mozzie.

Smiley

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January 03, 2013, 08:48:24 AM
 #25

I believe Chinese people will have more freedom than Americans, in 2 or 3 decades.

Certainly, but not through any merit of their own.

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January 03, 2013, 10:35:29 AM
 #26

I believe Chinese people will have more freedom than Americans, in 2 or 3 decades.

Certainly, but not through any merit of their own.

Chinese people all hate government and socialist, but Americans love them, so they elected Obama Smiley again

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January 03, 2013, 10:44:10 AM
 #27

No.

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January 03, 2013, 10:49:27 AM
 #28

I believe Chinese people will have more freedom than Americans, in 2 or 3 decades.

Certainly, but not through any merit of their own.

Chinese people all hate government and socialist, but Americans love them, so they elected Obama Smiley again

Those in China are pseudo-socialists.

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payb.tc
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January 03, 2013, 09:51:26 PM
 #29

related article in the herald today:

http://www.smh.com.au/technology/technology-news/cheap-meth-cheap-guns-click-here-20130103-2c6v3.html

talks about tight chinese laws but no enforcement.
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January 04, 2013, 03:55:19 AM
 #30

What I was thinking is that someone living in a country that doesn't allow bitcoin (doing deep packet inspection or something) could travel to a country where it is allowed and issue loads of addresses with small amounts of bitcoin, and then come back and use email to send the coins, sending a list of private keys that would make the total amount in the correspondent bitcoin addresses, the desired value to send.
To receive coins, ask the payer to send them also in "bitcoin quanta", let's call it like that, using email and PGP, sending for that matter a list of private keys that would sum to the total value of that payment.
Am I making sense?
Is that sending the private key to an address with a lot of money is risky. And having them 'quantized' makes it less risky; and seems to work well for sending and receiving the coins with email and PGP.


AS YOU SAY
 I was thinking is that someone living in a country that doesn't allow bitcoin (doing deep packet inspection or something) could travel to a country where it is allowed and issue loads of addresses with small amounts of bitcoin, and then come back and use email to send the coins, sending a list of private keys that would make the total amount in the correspondent bitcoin addresses, the desired value to send.
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January 05, 2013, 12:00:58 AM
 #31


That's really interesting. Thanks for the note...
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January 05, 2013, 02:51:11 AM
 #32

They would never ban email.
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January 05, 2013, 09:55:12 PM
 #33

Quote
Will China ever ban email?
E-mail is trivially easy to gather for surveillance. State will never step against it because more secure and hidden means of internet communication will replace it.

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January 05, 2013, 10:25:05 PM
 #34

SIMs are cheap, or IDs are cheap? (or both?)

Probably both (haven't bought the latter though). Cheesy

You can also openly buy things like "mosquito rackets" (electrified mozzie zappers that look like a tennis racket) which are *banned* in many western countries.

It is legal in Italy  Cheesy

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January 05, 2013, 11:17:47 PM
 #35

I wouldnt be surprised if the Chinese have surveillance systems of chinese mail after all they are communists and have every right to.
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January 05, 2013, 11:28:58 PM
 #36

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I wouldnt be surprised if the Chinese have surveillance systems of chinese mail after all they are communists and have every right to.
I did not know that americans and europeans are communists too! In USA and EU e-mail is monitored as well and it is perfectly legal to do and required by law.

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January 06, 2013, 03:35:04 AM
 #37

SIMs are cheap, or IDs are cheap? (or both?)

Probably both (haven't bought the latter though). Cheesy

You can also openly buy things like "mosquito rackets" (electrified mozzie zappers that look like a tennis racket) which are *banned* in many western countries.

i can buy them in canada, from a dollar store, just fine

It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.

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January 06, 2013, 10:59:52 PM
 #38


[...]


Hi there, payb.tc.

How are things going with Your Pirate Pass Through Scam?

Oh? You've stopped responding to your scam thread and changed your handle?

How much money did you steal? How much money do you owe? What do you know about pirate?

*processing payment* *error 404 : funds not found*
Do you want to complain on the forum just to fall for another scam a few days later?
| YES       |        YES |
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January 08, 2013, 12:55:05 AM
 #39

I didn't know these were banned - reasoning? We've always had a couple of them around the house here (in Thailand). Sounds like many things are the same here. Sim cards easy to get without ID anywhere, even 7-11, and food - you never know where it came from but luckily most of what we eat is local from village neighbours.

They certainly are in Australia (got two of them confiscated in customs) and being battery operated ones (using I think 4 D cells) I find it hard to believe that they could hurt anything much bigger than a mozzie.

Smiley


Oooh..  I love my mozzie bat!  The handle unscrews and I plug it into the wall to recharge.  A friend of the family was importing them here into Australia - I had no idea they were banned. 
It gives a nice little nip when you push your finger into it. Enough to scare .. but hard to see how it could be dangerous.

I expect the ban comes under the same law that restricts tazers and any tazer like device. They probably think people will modify them and beef them up into weapons.

@electricwings   BM-GtyD5exuDJ2kvEbr41XchkC8x9hPxdFd
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January 08, 2013, 01:11:49 AM
 #40

Quote
I expect the ban comes under the same law that restricts tazers and any tazer like device.
No, I seriously think they are banned because it is cruelty against animals lol

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