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Crack For Communist Firewall: Free Access Twitter In China
bochiman
By bochiman
15 months ago
Read more: Facebook, Twitter, Social Networking News
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This article was first published on Downloadtube.com Blog
Crack For Communist Firewall: Free Access Twitter In China
Various Internet press articles published last year inform about the existence of a “Great Firewall” in China, which permits to the government to monitor or block connections to popular web sites and services existing outside of China. Right now, Chinese Internet users cannot access Twitter, Bing search engine from Microsoft, Blogger, Flickr, Hotmail, YouTube, WordPress.com and other important web services, because they are blocked by the existence of the communist barrier defined as “Great Firewall”. But as we are living in a free world, there are rapid methods to easily connect in China to any of the web sites blocked by the Chinese government.
The most common way to disguise your Internet presence is represented by the connections through proxy servers. A proxy will hide your IP address, allowing anonymous surfing and you should search one that encrypts the Internet connections in order to ensure protection against the Chinese government surveillance.
For a comprehensive list of proxies, as well as proxy software check out Proxy.org website (of course if it is not blocked in China). As an alternative, you may try to perform a Google search for the available proxy services.
Another method to crack the “Great Firewall” implemented by the Chinese communist government is provided by Virtual Private Networks (VPN). A secure VPN uses cryptographic tunneling protocols capable to ensure the confidentiality of your actions while you are crawling the Internet, therefore any spider monitoring the Internet activity cannot “see” nothing. A recommended free Virtual Private Network is Hotspot Shield. A commercial, but faster VPN is provided by WiTopia.Net.
With the methods presented in this article, you should also be able to access over 6000 universities and colleges forums, also blocked by the Chinese communist firewall.
Chinese government should never forget the main Internet driving concept: information freedom. We hope that in the near future this freedom will exist in China too. |
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