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Turkey blocks Google services
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Kenan Atalay Турция Local time: 01:41 английский => турецкий + ...
They banned youtube. AFAIK Google changed its IP address blocks for some of its services recently and those services are now in the same IP range of youtube. So they are being banned too because of youtube's ban.
BTW most importantly google analytics is one of those banned services and it's crippling e-commerce.
[Edited at 2010-06-06 23:31 GMT] | | |
I am just interested
What kind of info do you get when you try to open www.google.com? Page not found?? | | |
Pera-Tercüme Турция Local time: 01:41 английский => турецкий + ... Google search works fine | Jun 7, 2010 |
However we've been unable to use Google translate for several days now... It just doesn't load. | | |
Selcuk Akyuz Турция Local time: 01:41 английский => турецкий + ...
Pera-Tercüme wrote:
However we've been unable to use Google translate for several days now... It just doesn't load.
Well, this is good news for the translators | |
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Shouguang Cao Китай Local time: 06:41 английский => китайский + ...
I thought only we had the privilege to get banned! Isn't Turkey a free nation? Will this affect Turkey's quest to join the EU?
In China, Youtube, Picassa, Facebook, blogger, Twitter, Friendfeed... (the list goes on and on...) and believe it or not, proz.com kudoz is also blocked!
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Kjersti Farrier Великобритания Local time: 22:41 английский => норвежский (букмол) + ... Amazing what the world has become... | Jun 7, 2010 |
How do you know, for example in China, that a website is banned due to country policies and not just that there is a problem with the website? | | |
Is it possible to get around this using a commercial VPN with a tunnel to a "free" country?
Right here in Belize, the country's monopolist ISP Belize Telemedia blocks VoIP-applications like Skype, but with a VPN, it mostly works just fine.
But in fact: What kind of a world is that where you have to look foor loopholes like this? | | |
Krzysztof Kajetanowicz (X) Польша Local time: 23:41 английский => польский + ... can't believe it. | Jun 7, 2010 |
Has the Turkish government decided to commit political suicide? | |
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Tim Drayton Кипр Local time: 00:41 турецкий => английский + ...
Karletto wrote:
I am just interested
What kind of info do you get when you try to open www.google.com? Page not found??
I don't know about Turkey, but I know from experience that five years ago (and this is probably still true today) if you entered "www.google.com" into the address bar in Libya, you were automatically directed to:
http://www.google.com.ly/ | | |
A violation of human rights | Jun 7, 2010 |
Kjersti Farrier wrote:
How do you know, for example in China, that a website is banned due to country policies and not just that there is a problem with the website?
This is a very bland way of saying "restriction of the right to information".
This is Article 19 of The Universal Declaration of Human Rights:
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers. | | |
More votes now! | Jun 7, 2010 |
Krzysztof Kajetanowicz wrote:
Has the Turkish government decided to commit political suicide?
On the contrary. They might receive more votes now from the people who elected them! | | |
John Rawlins Испания Local time: 23:41 испанский => английский + ...
I am surprised that Turkey has banned Youtube. I have visited Turkey several times and always believed it to be a free and democratic country. | |
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l Gaston l Local time: 19:41 африкаанс => древнееврейский + ... Regarding the use of VPNs | Jun 7, 2010 |
Wolfgang Jörissen wrote:
Is it possible to get around this using a commercial VPN with a tunnel to a "free" country? Right here in Belize, the country's monopolist ISP Belize Telemedia blocks VoIP-applications like Skype, but with a VPN, it mostly works just fine.
But in fact: What kind of a world is that where you have to look foor loopholes like this?
I bet that using a commercial VPN would do the work (unless the block the port used for the VPN), otherwise, there is no way to stop VPN users from requesting any content. (VPN communication is encrypted between client and gateway and they happen in only one port).
My question is, if the government blocks a range of IPs, wouldn't be illegal to use a VPN (or any other thing) to access those banned IPs? What happen if the government detect that? Is that something they actually care about? or they just block IPs but don't care if someone bypass it?
Best, Gastón | | |
Niraja Nanjundan (X) Local time: 04:11 немецкий => английский
According to a BBC documentary, the government in North Korea actually selects specific items and articles from the Internet and puts them on their own Intra-net for people in that country to view. They don't have access to the World Wide Web at all.
When the BBC reporter asked some North Korean school children which world politicians they admired most, they answered Stalin and Mao. I suppose that's the consequence of so much censorship!
[Edited at 2010-06-07 15:17 GMT] | | |
Laurent KRAULAND (X) Франция Local time: 23:41 французский => немецкий + ... This at least tells us... | Jun 7, 2010 |
that the Internet is not "a different place" or "a virtual world" as some would like to (make us) believe it. | | |
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