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Thread: Joshua Wong.

  1. #451
    Better New Year ốc's Avatar
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    Canada ngừng xuất cảng hàng quân sự, ngừng giao ước với Hồng kông về việc dẫn độ người bị truy nã:

    Canada Suspends Extradition Treaty With Hong Kong: Trudeau



    Tru đô này chống Tàu mạnh thiệt, chắc người Việt ở Canada sẽ ủng hộ hết mình.

  2. #452
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    Khẩu hiệu "Liberate Hong Kong" bị cấm thì không cần xài chữ mọi người vẫn hiểu: vô ngôn thắng hữu ngôn mượn từ Độc cô kiếm pháp.



    "How to protest under National Security Law?" (from Tuýt tờ.)

    Ngôn ngữ đạt đến mức vô hình là ngôn ngữ thượng thừa. Tàu chỉ còn một cách là cấm hết giấy trắng.

  3. #453
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    Tàng ngôn ẩn ngữ (Crouching slogans hidden meanings):

    'Hidden language': Hongkongers get creative against security law
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...dents-wordplay

    Chinese characters themselves also provide ample room for linguistic subversion. One phrase people have started adopting online is “seize back banana”, a play on the similar characters in traditional Chinese for Hong Kong and banana.

    Others have gone for English slogans that appear positive but are a clear dig at Beijing – for example the Trumpian phrase “Make Hong Kong great”.

    The first arrest made under the new security law involved a deliberate linguistic challenge. During protests a day after the law was enacted, police announced they had arrested a man with a flag that read “Hong Kong independence”, posting a picture.

    But attentive web users zoomed in on the flag and spotted that a man had written a small “No” before his much larger phrase.
    Tiếng Quảng gọi trái chuối là "hương tiêu" (香蕉) và "công tiêu" (公蕉). Hương tức là "Hương cảng" còn "công" thì đồng âm với Hồng kông.

  4. #454
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    Hong Kong: For those who stay, the fight is on as threats lurk

    Critics say China's new national security law is a death sentence to city's autonomy but young Hong Kongers press on.


  5. #455
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    Thủ tài như thủ tặc:

    HSBC and Standard Chartered caught between US and China
    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2020/jul/02/hong-kong-hsbc-and-standard-chartered-caught-between-us-and-china

    Banks who do business with officials involved in the security law could face sanctions, amid concerns the security law could be used to crack down on dissent in Hong Kong.

    The US legislation passed unanimously. Under congressional rules the bill must return to the senate and be passed there before being sent to the White House for the president, Donald Trump, to sign into law or veto.

    Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said in Beijing on Thursday that the US “must stop advancing the bill, let alone sign it or implement” it.
    Tập Thủy hoàng ra chiếu chỉ cho Trâm sai đại thần.

  6. #456
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    FaceBook or MugShotBook?

    Facebook and WhatsApp pause Hong Kong user data requests
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...-data-requests

    Facebook and WhatsApp have said they have “paused” the processing of government requests for user data in Hong Kong. The encrypted messenger Telegram has also halted cooperation with law enforcement.

    WhatsApp said it was pausing such reviews “pending further assessment of the impact of the national security law, including formal human rights due diligence and consultations with human rights experts”.

    Its parent company, Facebook, followed soon afterwards. “We believe freedom of expression is a fundamental human right and support the right of people to express themselves without fear for their safety or other repercussions,” a spokesperson said.

    “We have a global process for government requests, and in reviewing each individual request, we consider Facebook’s policies, local laws and international human rights standards.”


    Hong Kong has enjoyed unrestricted internet access, unlike mainland China, where the likes of Google, Twitter and Facebook are blocked.


    The decision by the social networks to suspend law enforcement cooperation suggests they see themselves on a collision course with the Chinese state following the passage of the national security law.


    Telegram said it would not process “any data requests related to its Hong Kong users until an international consensus is reached in relation to the ongoing political changes in the city”.


    Some Hong Kong residents said they were reviewing their previous posts on social media related to pro-democracy protests and the security law, and deleting ones they thought would be viewed as sensitive.


    Apple is one company on the other side of the trend. Unlike Facebook and Google, the company has a large customer base in mainland China, as well as substantial manufacturing operations, and has had to tread carefully in its relationship with Beijing as a result.


    Don't use Facebook. Don't trust Yuckybird.

  7. #457
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    China warns UK over 'interference' in Hong Kong

    UK rejects allegations of 'gross interference' over response to China's imposition of new security law in Hong Kong.


  8. #458
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    Social media firms worried about China's Hong Kong security law

    Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam called the law 'mild' compared with those in other countries, but tech giants and social media companies are not convinced.

    04:35



  9. #459
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    Mạng lý trường thành:

    Great Firewall descends on Hong Kong internet users
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...internet-users

    At midnight on Tuesday, the Great Firewall of China, the vast apparatus that limits the country’s internet, appeared to descend on Hong Kong.

    Unveiling expanded police powers as part of a contentious new national security law, the Hong Kong government enabled police to censor online speech and force internet service providers to hand over user information and shut down platforms.

    Many residents, already anxious since the law took effect last week, rushed to erase their digital footprint of any signs of dissent or support for the last year of protests.

    Charles Mok, a pro-democracy lawmaker who represents the technology sector, tweeted: “We are already behind the de facto firewall.”


    Hong Kong is facing a dramatic decline of one of its most important advantages – a free and open internet – a defining trait that sets it apart from mainland China where Facebook, Twitter, Google and most major foreign news sites are blocked.


    The prospect of Beijing-style internet controls – where residents are not just restricted but monitored and punished for what they post online while companies are forced to censor their platforms – is worrying for citizens, activists and businesses in Hong Kong.

    The law gives authorities the power to demand individuals and service providers remove content, or access to content deemed threatening to national security. Noncompliance can result in fines and imprisonment for company staff or individuals. Police investigating national security cases can surveil communications and confiscate electronic devices.


    “The law seems to be building up the Great Firewall locally in Hong Kong. Personal freedom on the internet will be eliminated,” said Charles Low, the chairman of the Hong Kong chapter of the Internet Society. “If you say something wrong they can request the service provider to give your IP address or mobile number so they can grab you.”


    “We used to be an internet and telecom hub in the region. Companies moved services from the mainland to Hong Kong and now Hong Kong has become like China, so they will leave,” said Mok.

    Protesters who have relied on digital tools over the last year to mobilise demonstrations now find those same platforms could be used against them. Political groups have already disbanded and formerly outspoken activists have quietly left social media, while others have deleted old comments.


    “We had freedom before and now it is being taken away. It is extremely painful for me to experience that,” said Glacier Kwong, a digital rights activist. “There will be a loss of information available to the public because people are afraid to speak up. They are controlling the discourse, how people can think about things and what they can think about. It’s very dangerous.”


    Experts say it is precisely because Hongkongers used digital tools so effectively against the Beijing-backed government that authorities are now targeting the online space. The movement that erupted last year managed to mobilise itself without leaders through platforms such as the LIHKG forum and messaging app Telegram – with a level of organisation that Beijing has tried to point to as evidence to claim the demonstrations are coordinated by foreign forces.


    Experts point out that China’s Great Firewall – which allows the government to inspect data as well as block IP addresses and domain names – could not be immediately replicated in Hong Kong, home to several private internet service providers and internet exchanges.


    “It will take at least a few years to build up the wall,” said Low, adding that what is more likely is a partial blackout, cutting off access to certain sites such as LIHKG or Telegram.


    But Hongkongers, accustomed to decades of unrestricted access to information, may not be so easily deterred. Since Beijing announced its plan in late May to enforce the security law, searches and purchases of virtual private networks (VPNs) and proxies to hide IP addresses have soared.

    Many have migrated from Telegram to the encrypted messaging app Signal, and some residents have turned to sim cards from providers in other countries. Kwong says it is not just young protesters who are taking action – her parents recently moved their family group chat to Signal.


    “People are indeed kind of panicked and trying to install VPNs and have no idea what it can and cannot help,” said Low, noting that volunteers have been holding workshops to teach residents how to use such tools and how to better protect themselves.

    “I have faith in Hong Kong people. They will not forget about the freedom we once had.”
    Foreign forces: ông kẹ của của những đầu óc trẻ thơ non nớt.

  10. #460
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    Australia steps up Hong Kong action in wake of China security law

    Prime Minister Scott Morrison suspends extradition pact with territory and extends visas for Hong Kong people already in Australia.

    02:40



 

 

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