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The Chinese Wikipedia has been blocked in mainland China since May 2015. [2] Nonetheless, the Chinese Wikipedia is still one of the top ten most active versions of Wikipedia by number of edits and number of editors, due to contributions from users from Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore, Malaysia, and the Chinese diaspora.
A majority of apps and websites blocked are the result of the companies not willing to follow the Chinese government's internet regulations on data collection and privacy, user-safety, guidelines and the type of content being shared, posted or hosted. This is a list of the most notable such blocked websites in the country (except Autonomous area).
Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; Wikidata item; ... Pages in category "Chinese websites" The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 ...
China's Wikipedia may refer to: Chinese Wikipedia, the Chinese-language version of Wikipedia; Baidu Baike, a "wiki-like" Chinese-language online encyclopedia; Hudong, another "wiki-like" Chinese-language online encyclopedia; Blocking of Wikipedia in mainland China, China's policy of preventing access to Wikipedia from within the country
Each Wikipedia project has a code, which is used as a subdomain of wikipedia.org. The codes mostly conform to ISO 639-1 two-letter codes or ISO 639-3 three-letter codes, with preference given to a two-letter code if available. [14] For example, en stands for English in ISO 639-1, so the English Wikipedia is at en.wikipedia.org.
As of April 2019, all versions of Wikipedia are blocked in mainland China under the Great Firewall. [8] [9] [10] The Chinese Wikipedia was launched in May 2001. [11] Wikipedia received positive coverage in China's state press in early 2004 but was blocked on 3 June 2004, ahead of the 15th anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and ...
The Chinese government has cut off access to the Chinese Wikipedia for residents of mainland China since 2019. [ 14 ] [ 15 ] In March 2021, Chinese netizens claimed that South Korean netizens changed their entries related to Chinese history on a large scale through the historical version comparison function of Baidu Baike.
China's first foray into the global cyberspace was an email (not TCP/IP based and thus technically not internet) sent on 20 September 1987 to the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, reading, "Across the Great Wall, towards the rest of the world" (simplified Chinese: 越过长城,走向世界; traditional Chinese: 越過長城,走向世界 ...