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windsclouds2030

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Exclusive video: Chairman Xi Jinping visits grassroots officials and people in Shanxi ahead of Spring Festival

On the eve of the Spring Festival, General Secretary Xi Jinping visited Shanxi. On the afternoon of January 26, he visited villagers' homes in Fengnanyuan Village of Shizhuang Township in Huozhou city and and Duan Village of Sengnian Town of Fenxi County. He visited villagers' homes to learn about Shanxi's post-disaster recovery and reconstruction, replanting in autumn and winter, ensuring people's safety and warm winter, consolidating and expanding poverty alleviation efforts, and continuing rural revitalization efforts.

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央视girls一曲《望飞花》串起人类非物质文化遗产,歌词信息量好大!「2022央视网络春晚」| CCTV春晚

The song “Looking at flying flowers” by CCTV Girls is a Chinese intangible cultural heritage. The lyrics contain a lot of information! 2022 CCTV Spring Festival Gala (20220125)


COOL SINGING, CUTE SONG, PRETTY GIRLS

Song Lyrics:
望飞花歌词_望飞花LRC歌词_刘敏 - 歌词131
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ARTICLE:
这首歌望飞花,一句歌词就是一个非遗,信息量实在是太大了吧……
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Topazchen

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Whoever made the decision to block those American firms and prop up local alternatives is a genius. They have now become behemoths in their own right and can now go toe to toe with US firms and some are even more innovative than them.
China unlike the rest of the world avoided American digital colonization.
 

supersnoop

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Leader Latta: E&C Republicans are Leading to Hold Big Tech Accountable for Censorship

1. Big tech is too much freedom for the Chinese market
2. Big tech is censoring too much
3. ????
4. FREEDOM

Whoever made the decision to block those American firms and prop up local alternatives is a genius. They have now become behemoths in their own right and can now go toe to toe with US firms and some are even more innovative than them.
China unlike the rest of the world avoided American digital colonization.

They actually didn't actively block the American firms.
Many American firms took themselves out (with much self applause and back patting)

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Selected quotes:
"We want as many people in the world as possible to have access to our services, including users in mainland China, yet the Chinese government has been crystal clear throughout our discussions that self-censorship is a non-negotiable legal requirement," said Senior Vice President David Drummond, Google's chief legal officer, on the blog.

"It's become unsustainable for Google to operate in this environment," he said. "They've made a decision that the risks are too great for them, so they're going to pull out."

Advocates of Internet freedoms cheered Google's move Monday.

This writer had a different take
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Google fumbled with an initially inferior Chinese search engine launched in 2000, while Baidu grabbed the lead in China--and kept it--with several innovative search features customized for local tastes.

One other key factor put Baidu in the lead: Its search technology was considered superior to Google's in the Mandarin language

"The net is about culture. You can't have expats running it."
 

windsclouds2030

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US lawmakers urge Joe Biden to fight China over censorship affecting Google and Apple​


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Tips: If you register at SCMP (free of charge) then you can read freely, it is not actual paywall, just pushes visitor to register there. I did long ago, still valid until now.
 

Bellum_Romanum

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US lawmakers urge Joe Biden to fight China over censorship affecting Google and Apple​


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In their BLEEPING Dreams!! You don't like China's DOMESTIC LAWS too freaking bad. No one is forcing them to operate in China. Apple phones are already the best selling smartphone in China and yet that's not enough? these folks are just being greedy and assume that they own Chinese market.
 

Appix

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Part 1:​

Will China dominate the world of semiconductors?​

America and its allies are crafting rules to try to prevent it​

During donald trump’s presidency many people looked afresh at China’s technological prowess. Some concluded that it posed a threat to Western economies, and perhaps even to global security. In news headlines Huawei, a brilliantly successful manufacturer of telecoms equipment, became the face of that threat. America accused the firm of acting as a conduit for Chinese government surveillance and control. In 2018 America clobbered Huawei. It banned the export to the Chinese firm of American microchips essential for its products. This seems to have had the desired effect. Last year Huawei’s revenues shrank for the first time in a decade, by almost a third.

It was unprecedented for a state to stymie so huge a tech company. Huawei’s revenues were about as big as Microsoft’s. But the feat was not without costs. Because the Trump administration acted without co-operating closely with America’s friends, it prompted investors from far and wide to add missing links to parts of the semiconductor supply chain that are beyond the reach of American law.

Japanese firms, among others, have started quietly marketing their products in such a way as to evade America’s Export Administration Regulations, qualifying them as “ ear-free”. American firms, many of which sell billions of dollars of equipment to China every year, began looking for neutral territory from which they might continue to export supplies. Singapore and Malaysia led the way. “Who would willingly sign up to be restricted by the us government?” chuckles a lawyer in Washington, who has been navigating tech clients around the new restrictions.

Meanwhile, Chinese firms, spurred on by billions of dollars of investment by the state, have redoubled their efforts to develop their own versions of chip technologies they had previously imported along supply chains linked to firms in America. The way things began to go, it looked as if the American government would steadily lose its grip over the chip supply chain. To avoid that outcome, and to keep a modicum of control over what technology flows into China, it must build a consensus with friendly countries.

Since Joe Biden took office a year ago, his officials have been raising the issue of chip controls whenever they talk to foreign allies. A lobbyist in Washington says that in 25 years he has never seen semiconductors so consistently top the diplomatic agenda. Governments and companies have been setting up forums to align policy over the trade in chips and the equipment and material used to make them.

Some see a parallel with the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, better known as opec. For decades its members, all oil exporters, have clubbed together to try to control how much oil reaches the world market, in order to influence prices. Today’s new forums mark the first steps towards creating a similar set-up to control the export of semiconductors, in the hope of retaining a technological edge over China. It could be called the Organisation of the Semiconductor Exporting Countries: osec.

Diplomatic bodies dedicated to forging multilateral agreements over the export of technology already exist. But they are poor at governing the trade in semiconductors. In 1996 the Wassenaar Arrangement was created, among other things to oversee trade that may have a military use. It is the successor to the Co-ordinating Committee for Multilateral Export Controls, known as cocom, the cold-war body that in effect kept a Western embargo on trade with the Soviet bloc. Officials pay lip service to the idea of updating Wassenaar so that it might help control the trade in semiconductors. But few expect it to play that role, not least because Russia is a member.

So newer forums are springing up. The most formal is the eu-us Trade and Technology Council, set up last June with a working group dedicated to export controls. Semiconductors are on the agenda. A joint statement after the council’s first meeting in Pittsburgh in September declared its intention to co-operate in “rebalancing” global chip supply chains. That was diplomatic language for keeping them away from China. The chip industry in the West and parts of Asia that are wary of China has welcomed the discussion, at least officially. It hopes that clearer export rules, applied globally, will reduce uncertainty.

But global chip diplomacy is still weak. When semiconductor trade is discussed, it tends to be tacked onto the agenda of other world forums. Export-control lawyers and government officials huddle, often virtually, in the corridors of meetings of the Quad, a club of countries that embraces America, Australia, India and Japan. In September it announced that one of its goals was to secure the supply chains in semiconductors.

Chips have also come up in the sidelines of meetings to discuss sanctions that might be put on Russia if it were to invade Ukraine (see Briefing). The American administration has briefed the Semiconductor Industry Association on how the sort of export controls used against Huawei could be part of a sanctions package against Russia, to cut off its access to Western technology. Unlike China, Russia has no electronics industry to speak of, so such controls would not hurt it as badly. But it might make it harder for Russia to carry out cyber-attacks on its enemies.

Agreements forged between the governments of the leading countries in the chip supply chain—America, Japan and the Netherlands—still matter more than any talking shop. That trio produces the lion’s share of the machinery used to make chips. A consensus between them over trade in chips marked the first step towards constraining China towards the end of Mr Trump’s presidency. A big Dutch company, asml (originally standing for Advanced Semiconductor Materials Lithography), had been poised to sell its most sophisticated tools to smic, China’s biggest and beefiest chipmaker. Japanese and American officials rounded on the Dutch government, which duly refused to give asml a licence to export its cutting-edge machines to smic.

American officials with a more hawkish stance on China who want a clean break in the supply chains favour this narrower coalition-of-the-willing approach to diplomacy. Its small number of members planning discreetly makes it easier to move quickly against perceived threats. It also gives America the main say, echoing Mr Trump’s go-it-alone attitude to China, rather than taking the time to cajole partners and find ways to write a book of clear rules for trading in chips. The Europeans and the Japanese both want a more formal multilateral approach. But America reckons its ability to react fast to a Chinese threat would inevitably be curbed.

No stake, no chips​

The snag, as a former official in Barack Obama’s export team argues, is that the more robustly America wants to respond to China, the harder it is to get America’s Western and Asian allies to come along. Without America’s friends on board America’s hard line on exports threatens to weaken its own companies. That is because it could steer investment to places outside America’s reach but which still suit Chinese chipmakers. America is caught between choosing a softer set of controls which may work better in the long run, or a harsher set that could hurt Chinese technology more in the short run but might harm American industry overall. Worse, it might ruin the prospect of American-Chinese chip trade ever reviving in the event that better relations one day resume.

For the moment the administration is seeking a compromise by cutting off Chinese access to chips and chipmaking tools above a certain level of sophistication. For example, it completely blocks Huawei from getting chips that run whizzy 5g networking equipment but lets it have older technologies. Likewise smic can get older chipmaking tools but not the latest versions that can be used for chips that go into iPhones and self-driving cars. America’s friends, however, have yet to agree to this compromise, which is still being imposed unilaterally through the American government’s export-control rules.
 
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