SOFTWARE GIANT Microsoft has bowed to the whims of the Chinese government and banned the words 'democracy','freedom' from parts of its Chinese website.
According to the Financial Times, the move is designed to avoid offending Beijing's political censors who apparently don’t like such words.
Users of MSN have been blocked from using a range of potentially sensitive words to label personal websites they create using online blogs.
If you try to label blogs with words in Chinese such as 'democracy' you will get an error message from the site which kindly tells you that 'This item contains forbidden speech. Please delete the forbidden speech from this item.'
Apparently other non-words that Vole has kindly removed include the Chinese for 'demonstration', 'democratic movement' and 'Taiwan independence'. You can use such words within blogs created using MSN Spaces, just not in the titles, so it is not a total ban yet.
I just can't understand the minds for the chinese politicians. What do they find so offensive about these words or ideas. Retards IMHO.
According to the Financial Times, the move is designed to avoid offending Beijing's political censors who apparently don’t like such words.
Users of MSN have been blocked from using a range of potentially sensitive words to label personal websites they create using online blogs.
If you try to label blogs with words in Chinese such as 'democracy' you will get an error message from the site which kindly tells you that 'This item contains forbidden speech. Please delete the forbidden speech from this item.'
Apparently other non-words that Vole has kindly removed include the Chinese for 'demonstration', 'democratic movement' and 'Taiwan independence'. You can use such words within blogs created using MSN Spaces, just not in the titles, so it is not a total ban yet.
I just can't understand the minds for the chinese politicians. What do they find so offensive about these words or ideas. Retards IMHO.