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Lenovo, které nedávno koupilo od IBM

Lenovo, které nedávno koupilo od IBM divizi pro PC, se sbratřilo s Guangdong Linux technology a budou společně vyvíjet linuxová řešení. No, tak se nám to líbí.

9.12.2004 09:22 | Petr Krčmář | IT novinky


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elviin avatar 10.12.2004 10:46 elviin | skóre: 29 | blog: elviin | Plzeň-Praha
Rozbalit Rozbalit vše No, tak se nám to líbí. ????????????????
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Komentar "No, tak se nám to líbí" je trefny, ale jen z jednoho pohledu. Predstavoval bych si Linux, ktery slouzi k jinym ucelum. Tohle neni absolutne dovod k radosti. V podstate se zneuziva dovednosti lidi. Jak jsme byli vdecni za kazde pochopeni projevene v dobe sametove revoluce. A ted se naopak radujeme, kdyz kdosi pouzije silny nastroj jeste k silnejsi perzekuci, cenzure. Obavam se generace zabednenych "ajtiku", kteri si neuvedomuji, kde ziji. Kdyz uz se lide zajimaji o Matrix, Orwella a softwarove patenty (jak vidim na abc), tak by mohli pobrat i nasledujici souvislosti:

http://www.hrw.org/backgrounder/asia/china-bck-0701.htm

[...]Since 1995, when Chinese authorities began permitting commercial Internet accounts, at least sixty sets of regulations have been issued aimed at controlling Internet content. The broadly-worded regulations represent a clear violation of the right to freedom of expression, and the government is devoting considerable time and resources to trying to implement them.[...]

http://www.hrw.org/wr2k1/asia/china.html

[...]The government systematically suppressed independent political activities. From October 25, 1999 through July 2000, courts in four cities sentenced ten leaders of the dissident-led China Democracy Party (CDP) to heavy prison terms, primarily on subversion charges. Wu Yilong, who helped set up CDP provincial preparatory committees, received eleven years.[...]

http://www.hrw.org/wr2k3/asia4.html

As Chinese media outlets continued to proliferate and increasingly to challenge government guidelines, propaganda authorities responded by obstructing the free flow of information. They blocked major Internet search engines, closed publications, harassed foreign and domestic journalists, tightened controls on satellite transmission, and hampered the work of academics and activists. For two weeks in September, officials blocked access to Google, a major search engine, and diverted traffic to sites providing officially approved content. When access was restored, users reported selective blocking. Chinese authorities appeared to be using packet sniffers--devices that scan Internet transactions, including e-mail, to block text with sensitive word combinations.

http://www.hrw.org/wr2k3/asia4.html

[...]A second search engine, Altavista.com, was shut down for a day, but Yahoo's China site escaped blockage. Earlier in the year, along with some three hundred other Internet companies, Yahoo had voluntarily signed a trade-association-sponsored "Public Pledge on Self-Discipline for China Internet Industry," committing itself to removing any information that the government claimed could jeopardize security, disrupt stability, break laws, or spread superstition.[...]

.... ... .. .

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