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Did Microsoft China Copy Plurk?Plurk, a Taiwan based micro-blogging site claims that Microsoft China has stolen its codes, design and user interface. Based on the screenshots provided by Plurk (see below), theft is probably the right word to use.
Willis Wee
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2 weeks ago
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60th National Day: China Blocks Twitter, FacebookThis coming October 1st is China’s 60th National day. If the nation’s age happens to be a multiple of 5, celebration tends to be of a larger scale, which includes a military inspection at Tiananmen square. Security in the capital has been unusually tight with submachine gun-toting SWAT units ...
Willis Wee
added
3 months ago
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Internet, Twitter blocked in China city after ethnic riot | The Industry Standard | #China, #Twitter, #CensorshipChina appeared to block Twitter across the country and Internet access in a western province on Monday, after ethnic riots killed at least 140 people in the remote region. The moves were an apparent bid to stanch the flow of information out of Xinjiang province and to prevent further rioting ...
shal
added
5 months ago
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Twitter blocked in ChinaBy the way, I want to point out that the Chinese Twitterland is funnier than the English one, for a Chinese tweet can have three times the volume of an English tweet, thanks to the high information intensity of the Chinese language. 140 Chinese characters can make up all the full elements of a ...
shal
added
7 months ago
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2"Motrin moms," a-<i>Twitter</i> over ad, take on Big Pharma--And win: Scientific American BlogUnless (until?) the power of blogging and social networking are curtailed (see China), the "power of the people" (in this case mothers) can and will occasionally produce David and Goliath results.JDP added to Microblogging Guide 13 months ago
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the new web era « Atif UnaldiWhat Web applications and trends will make it big in 2008? In this post the RWW authors ruminate on the current trends in Web technology and look forward to what 2008 might bring us. Topics include Google, semantic web, online advertising, recommendation systems, Facebook, digg, open standards, ...Twine added 16 months ago
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China allows bloggers to spread quake newsBEIJING - Almost nonstop, the uncensored opinions of Chinese citizens are popping up online, sent by text and instant message across a country shaken by its worst earthquake in three decades.
Shaun Morton
added
19 months ago
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