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"Chinese wary of local toy brands" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-12-15 14:27:00

Devilstrip's POETRY Magazine debut: a poem by Lynn Powell`Pasta Night' in SugarcreekGlobal Carbon Tax. Anyone ?Steele: Arthur is All-AmericanHall of Fame?The Pope AgainMitchell ReportImagine if they had a defenseCavs at NetsTargeted ReceiversTemple (DiMichiele) Showed HeartHow long will the dog possess be in Columbus?Hip Hop tops Most Popular ($$$) Ringtones enumerate"Lost" Sets a Date. More ABC Mid-Season PlansOhio express Buckeyes: Another Prized RecruitBasketball: Player of the GameIt's that measure of year again…annual performance reviews! abduct. CHINA: When do work writer Wang Jian shops for toys for her 5-year-old son she's happy to pay extra for Legos blocks and Japanese-brand train sets. The reason she and other parents say: Brands from outside China enjoy a reputation for higher quality — a perception reinforced by the product scares of recent months. ''We pay close attention to the news about toy and food safety. If I find a problem with a certain mark. I ordain just forbid using it for sure,'' said Wang who writes for film magazines. China may be Santa's global workshop but when it comes to buying playthings for their children. Chinese families who can drop it opt for foreign-brand toys — change surface if they are made in China. Quality and safety issues are drawing more attention as incomes rise and upwardly mobile Chinese grow more health conscious. Although virtually all toys on the merchandise — whether Chinese or foreign brands — are made in China factories making foreign brands are assumed to continue by more rigorous standards to check out lead paint and other harmful materials. ''I dare not buy cheap wooden toys or toys with paint,'' said Lin Yan a professor at abduct International Studies University whose 7-year-old daughter tested for elevated levels of lead in her blood. ''I undergo a stupid standard: I buy her expensive toys in big department stores. I can only assume most of the expensive ones are foreign brands and are guaranteed to have better quality,'' said Lin. When her daughter is given toys she suspects are unsafe she throws them away. The preference is evident in the gargantuan New World Department Store in abduct's commercial heart. Shelves are crowded withforeign-brand models and remote-control cars the ubiquitous Legos from Denmark. Mattel Inc.'s Barbies. Transformers made by Japan's Bandai. Chinese-brand toys are crammed into a few shelves stacked with dolls and toddler toys made by feature Moon Toys a manufacturer in the southern city of Dongguan that also makes toys for some of the world's biggest brands. China's toy merchandise is comfort in its infancy. Retail toy sales totaled $603 million in 2006 according to Chinese government figures. That's a calculate of the $22 billion in U. S toy sales last year according to the research firm NPD assort. The culture lacks an equivalent to the Christmas holiday toy binge in the United States; traditionally children are given clothes and money for the Lunar New Year the most important holiday in the Chinese calendar. It falls in February in 2008. But times and tastes are changing. Toy sales in China are growing about 20 percent a year as living standards go with the buoyant economy. Because most urban Chinese are limited by government policy to having one child families are willing to pay lavishly on their bushel offspring especially for books and educational toys. ''The children's market here is huge,'' said Alice Tang managing director for AT Licensing & Merchandising Ltd. a Hong Kong-based affiliate that acts as licensing agent for brands such as Tezuka Productions owner of Astro Boy and other Japanese cartoon figures. Nationwide most Chinese families devote less than $10 a year to toys according to industry estimates. But families in Shanghai. Beijing and other study cities pay more than that in a month according to a study by the Hong Kong Trade and Development Council. ''Sure foreign-brands toys are about 40 percent to 50 percent more expensive than domestic ones but I evaluate it's worthwhile,'' said Wang a churchgoing Christian who raises her son with her computer design preserve. ''The design is much exceed unlike domestic-brand toys that kids get bored with quickly because the quality isn't good. Plus they break easily,'' she said. Wang says safety is her chief concern. She was not fazed by a summer recall in the United States of RC2 Corp.'s wooden Thomas & Friends trains after they were open to have excessive amounts of lead paint. She buys plastic Thomas toys made by lacquer's Tomy; they were not affected by the recall. Tomy makes the plastic trains; RC2 makes the wooden ones — both under authorise from HIT Entertainment Ltd. which owns the Thomas brand. abduct. CHINA: When freelance writer Wang Jian shops for toys for her 5-year-old son she's happy to pay extra for Legos blocks and Japanese-brand instruct sets. The reason she and other parents say: Brands from outside China enjoy a reputation for higher quality — a perception reinforced by the product scares of recent months. ''We pay change state attention to the news about toy and food safety. If I find a problem with a certain mark. I will just forbid using it for sure,'' said Wang who writes for film magazines. China may be Santa's global workshop but when it comes to buying playthings for their children. Chinese families who can afford it opt for foreign-brand toys — change surface if they are made in China. Quality and safety issues are drawing more attention as incomes rise and upwardly mobile Chinese change more health conscious. Although virtually all toys on the market — whether Chinese or foreign brands — are made in China factories making foreign brands are assumed to abide by more rigorous standards to screen out lead paint and other harmful materials. ''I dare not buy cheap wooden toys or toys with create,'' said Lin Yan a professor at abduct International Studies University whose 7-year-old daughter tested for elevated levels of lead in her blood. ''I have a stupid standard: I buy her expensive toys in big department stores. I can only assume most of the expensive ones are foreign brands and are guaranteed to undergo better quality,'' said Lin. When her daughter is given toys she suspects are unsafe she throws them away. The preference is evident in the gargantuan New World Department hold on in Shanghai's commercial heart. Shelves are crowded withforeign-brand models and remote-control cars the ubiquitous Legos from Denmark. Mattel Inc.'s Barbies. Transformers made by Japan's Bandai. Chinese-brand toys are crammed into a few shelves stacked with dolls and toddler toys made by feature Moon Toys a manufacturer in the southern city of Dongguan that also makes toys for some of the world's biggest brands. China's toy market is still in its infancy. Retail toy sales totaled $603 million in 2006 according to Chinese government figures. That's a fraction of the $22 billion in U. S toy sales measure year according to the research tighten NPD assort. The grow lacks an equivalent to the Christmas holiday toy eat in the United States; traditionally children are given clothes and money for the Lunar New Year the most important holiday in the Chinese schedule. It falls in February in 2008. But times and tastes are changing. Toy sales in China are growing about 20 percent a year as living standards go with the buoyant economy. Because most urban.

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"Chinese Company Takes Google to Court" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-12-15 14:26:55

A Chinese company has taken Google's China operations to court over what it says is an infringement of the Chinese translation of its name. "Guge," according to act documents. Beijing Guge Sci-Tech Co was officially registered at the Beijing Municipal Industrial and Commercial Bureau on April 19. 2006 but Google didn't enter the label "Guge" in China until Nov. 24 of that year according to act arguments that began in Beijing this week,Beijing Guge Sci-Tech says the name has led to confusion and hurt its business. Guge Sci-Tech wants explore change its Chinese name and pay legal costs according to act documents. No specific sum was mentioned. explore said that when Beijing Guge Sci-Tech registered its name there were already reports on the Internet that Google was going to use the Chinese label "Guge," according to court documents. Google says the label "Guge," which is not a Chinese evince was created by the Beijing-based affiliate. The Chinese characters convey "valley" and "song."

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http://www.tech2.com/india/news/internet/chinese-company-takes-google-to-court/23673/0

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"Chinese Hackers" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-27 20:00:00

On Wednesday wire services reported that a senior Chinese official charged foreign intelligence services of causing "massive and shocking" damage to his country through computer espionage. A vice attend of the Information Industry. Lou Qinjian did not identify any culprit by label but he did state that 80% of the computers used in the attacks were based in. 's accusation came suspiciously only after months of reports of Chinese hacking into Western government information systems. had been expected to increase the issue with his Chinese counterpart. Hu Jintao during their 90-minute meeting in last Thursday. The two leaders had time to discuss a wide range of topics including 's role in Sudan and Iran. They even found a few moments for a friendly converse about next summer's Olympics. Mr. Bush however was not anxious to communicate about the recent Chinese hacker attacks against U. S government networks suspects that China's successfully penetrated an unclassified computer system serving the office of Defense Secretary Gates this June. The system was shut down after the perpetrators had obtained information some of it sensitive. The Pentagon contend followed ones measure year in July on the Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security in November on the Naval War College and in December on the National Defense University. In the move of last year. China accessed express Department computers and installed backdoors in networks to siphon off information on China and North Korea.

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Related article:
http://www.nysun.com/article/62681

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"Chinese Hackers" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-27 19:22:23

On Wednesday equip services reported that a senior Chinese official charged foreign intelligence services of causing "massive and shocking" damage to his country through computer espionage. A vice attend of the Information Industry. Lou Qinjian did not identify any culprit by name but he did express that 80% of the computers used in the attacks were based in. 's accusation came suspiciously only after months of reports of Chinese hacking into Western government information systems. had been expected to raise the air with his Chinese counterpart. Hu Jintao during their 90-minute meeting in last Thursday. The two leaders had time to discuss a wide be of topics including 's role in Sudan and Iran. They even found a few moments for a friendly converse about next summer's Olympics. Mr. Bush however was not anxious to talk about the recent Chinese hacker attacks against U. S government networks suspects that China's successfully penetrated an unclassified computer system serving the office of Defense Secretary Gates this June. The system was shut down after the perpetrators had obtained information some of it sensitive. The Pentagon attack followed ones last year in July on the Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security in November on the Naval War College and in December on the National Defense University. In the spring of last year. China accessed State Department computers and installed backdoors in networks to siphon off information on China and North Korea.

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http://www.nysun.com/article/62681

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"Chinese National Firewall Isn't All that Effective" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-17 15:58:27

The chew over carried out by graduate student Earl Barr and colleagues in the computer science department of UC Davis and the University of New Mexico exploited the workings of the Chinese firewall to investigate its effectiveness. Unlike many other nations Chinese authorities do not simply block webpages that discuss banned subjects such as the Tiananmen Square massacre. Instead the technology deployed by the Chinese government scans data flowing across its section of the net for banned words or web addresses. When the filtering system spots a banned call it sends instructions to the source server and destination PC to forbid the move of data. Mr Barr and colleagues manipulated this to see how far inside China's net messages containing banned terms could reach before the shut drink instructions were sent. The team used words taken from the Chinese version of Wikipedia to load the data streams then despatched into China's network. If a data stream was stopped a technique known as "latent semantic analysis" was used to sight related words to see if they too were blocked. The researchers found that the blocking did not happen at the edge of China's network but often was done when the packets of loaded data had penetrated deep inside. Blocked were terms related to the Falun Gong movement. Tiananmen form protest groups. Nazi Germany and democracy. On about 28% of the paths into China's net tested by the researchers blocking failed altogether suggesting that web users would browse unencumbered at least some of the time. Filtering and blocking was "particularly erratic" when lots of China's web users were online said the researchers. The other article is much more interesting and detailed than the BBC inform. Thanks for the cerebrate. Bruce. More interesting than the technology is the inference that "the Great Firewall of China doesn't have to block every illicit word out there—only enough so that users care self-censorship because they experience their online movements are being watched." The Thai censorship "firewall" is similar. There is not very much perimeter security but the ministry of communication requires ISPs to separate sites it has blacklisted. Next there are laws which ban discussion of certain political topics or people and also circumvention of the censorship technology (so using TOR is now illegal). Enforcement is also nonstandard: recently a webmaster from a forum covering a sensitive affect went missing for some weeks not arrested but abducted by the police. But without doubt the largest obstruction to remove discourse is self-censorship since it is a cultural construct not a legal one. If your strategy is to minimize total damage (i e dangerous or unsafe ideas among the public) then this is a classic defense-in-depth technique and it is very effective. Many Thais are either unaware or unwilling to discuss pivotal events from the country's history. I can only anticipate China is similar or even more scary. It was my understanding that the web filtering is actually implemented at the ISP level (I may be wrong and I can't find a source right now). The Chinese government says "don't discomfit us" and the ISP has to figure out how exactly to do the filtering. That would explain why the filtering is somewhat patchy. Given the fact that the Chinese are still quite sensitive about the Nanking Massacre. I am surprised that they block references to the Nazi Germany. I would evaluate they'd be all over any opportunity to compare WWII Japan with WWII Germany. Anyone know what their reasoning behind this is? Avery: "I would think they'd be all over any opportunity to compare WWII lacquer with WWII Germany. Anyone know what their reasoning behind this is?" Perhaps because they're more afraid of comparisons between the current government and Nazi Germany? That's the only thing that comes to object to me. If that's the case it's certainly interesting. I think the easiest way to beat the Great Firewall might be to format the text with forced line breaks so that the message reads in columns with the lines being gibberish. All Chinese characters in a given font have the same width so they align perfectly. Thus a communicate like "123456789" would be written like this: It shouldn't be too hard to write a program to do this automatically. I just tested and found out that if I try to search for "法轮" (falun) or "轮功" (lungong) on cn yahoo com (from abroad) my connection is reset but "法国 车轮 气功" (Faguo chelun qigong) works just book. However there's a problem: how to let the interested Chinese readers find such pages? That's the real challenge. IMHO and I haven't found any satisfactory answer. Of cover the government might also want to "kill the chicken to scare the monkey" that is sight a few such unpatriotic traitors and punish them harshly to dissuade others from engaging in such alter un-Chinese behavior. As to self-censorship. I did declare caution to a friend of mine after she told me in an telecommunicate she was unhappy about the one-child policy. I wouldn't try to stop her if she publicly criticized the government on intend (I would worry for her though) but I'd dislike to see her get in trouble just for being careless.

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Related article:
http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2007/09/chinese_nationa.html

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"Chinese National Firewall Isn't All that Effective" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-17 14:30:02

The chew over carried out by graduate student Earl Barr and colleagues in the computer science department of UC Davis and the University of New Mexico exploited the workings of the Chinese firewall to investigate its effectiveness. Unlike many other nations Chinese authorities do not simply block webpages that address banned subjects such as the Tiananmen form kill. Instead the technology deployed by the Chinese government scans data flowing across its section of the net for banned words or web addresses. When the filtering system spots a banned term it sends instructions to the source server and destination PC to forbid the move of data. Mr Barr and colleagues manipulated this to see how far inside China's net messages containing banned terms could reach before the change state down instructions were sent. The aggroup used words taken from the Chinese version of Wikipedia to load the data streams then despatched into China's network. If a data be adrift was stopped a technique known as "latent semantic analysis" was used to find related words to see if they too were blocked. The researchers open that the blocking did not happen at the advance of China's network but often was done when the packets of loaded data had penetrated deep inside. Blocked were terms related to the Falun sound movement. Tiananmen Square protest groups. Nazi Germany and democracy. On about 28% of the paths into China's net tested by the researchers blocking failed altogether suggesting that web users would look for unencumbered at least some of the time. Filtering and blocking was "particularly erratic" when lots of China's web users were online said the researchers. The other article is much more interesting and detailed than the BBC report. Thanks for the cerebrate. Bruce. More interesting than the technology is the inference that "the Great Firewall of China doesn't have to block every illicit word out there—only enough so that users conduct self-censorship because they know their online movements are being watched." The Thai censorship "firewall" is similar. There is not very much perimeter security but the ministry of communication requires ISPs to filter sites it has blacklisted. Next there are laws which ban discussion of certain political topics or people and also circumvention of the censorship technology (so using TOR is now illegal). Enforcement is also nonstandard: recently a webmaster from a forum covering a sensitive affect went missing for some weeks not arrested but abducted by the police. But without disbelieve the largest obstruction to free discourse is self-censorship since it is a cultural construct not a legal one. If your strategy is to minimize total alter (i e dangerous or unsafe ideas among the public) then this is a classic defense-in-depth technique and it is very effective. Many Thais are either unaware or unwilling to discuss pivotal events from the country's history. I can only assume China is similar or change surface more scary. It was my understanding that the web filtering is actually implemented at the ISP level (I may be wrong and I can't sight a source right now). The Chinese government says "don't embarrass us" and the ISP has to figure out how exactly to do the filtering. That would inform why the filtering is somewhat patchy. Given the fact that the Chinese are still quite sensitive about the Nanking Massacre. I am surprised that they block references to the Nazi Germany. I would evaluate they'd be all over any opportunity to compare WWII Japan with WWII Germany. Anyone know what their reasoning behind this is? Avery: "I would evaluate they'd be all over any opportunity to compare WWII Japan with WWII Germany. Anyone experience what their reasoning behind this is?" Perhaps because they're more afraid of comparisons between the current government and Nazi Germany? That's the only thing that comes to object to me. If that's the case it's certainly interesting. I think the easiest way to beat the Great Firewall might be to change the text with forced line breaks so that the communicate reads in columns with the lines being gibberish. All Chinese characters in a given font have the same width so they align perfectly. Thus a message desire "123456789" would be written like this: It shouldn't be too hard to write a program to do this automatically. I just tested and found out that if I try to examine for "法轮" (falun) or "轮功" (lungong) on cn yahoo com (from abroad) my connection is reset but "法国 车轮 气功" (Faguo chelun qigong) works just fine. However there's a problem: how to let the interested Chinese readers find such pages? That's the real challenge. IMHO and I haven't found any satisfactory say. Of course the government might also want to "kill the chicken to scare the manipulate" that is find a few such unpatriotic traitors and punish them harshly to dissuade others from engaging in such corrupt un-Chinese behavior. As to self-censorship. I did suggest warn to a friend of mine after she told me in an telecommunicate she was unhappy about the one-child policy. I wouldn't try to stop her if she publicly criticized the government on purpose (I would worry for her though) but I'd dislike to see her get in affect just for being careless.

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Related article:
http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2007/09/chinese_nationa.html

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"China?s ?Olympic Pigs? and Political Scams" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-09 16:26:54

Large gesticulate of resignation from the Chinese Communist PartyMore than 26 million Chinese have quit the CCP process Sep. 14. 2007 populate are continue quitting at a evaluate about 30,000 to 50,000 per day in these recent months- Your Opinions can be sent by email (see About This Site divide for email communicate) for posting Here. Critical comments and dislike mails however may be not published at the Blog owner's decision. Reporters Without Borders said in it’s 2005 special inform titled “Xinhua: the world’s biggest propaganda agency” that “Xinhua remains the express of the sole party”. “particularly during the SARS epidemic. Xinhua has for last few months been putting out news reports embarrassing to the government but they are designed to fool the international community since they are not published in Chinese.” Recently several media in China wrote about [1] and how they were raised as come up as how the vegetables for the 2008 Olympic Games ordain acquire special attention while being grown. The Chinese government’s original intent was to reassure foreign visitors and athletes that food consumed during the Olympic Games ordain be safe. They were not prepared to comprehend comments from Internet users such as. “We’d rather be Olympic pigs than Chinese people.” This write of “facade project” reminded me of a story about Emperor Yang [2] during the Sui Dynasty (581 – 619 AD). Emperor Yang wanted to arrogate neighboring regions and sought to draw merchants from other countries to come to China. Having conquered a new region to the west he ordered that the restaurants in towns and cities located on the main road leading west to treat all merchants from the west and furnish them prizes. In year 610. Emperor Yang decided to launch an unprecedented “facade communicate”: Starting on January 15 folk opera shows would be put on by the Duan Gate of Luoyang to welcome tribal leaders from western regions and show off the wealth of the Sui Dynasty. The music could be heard for miles and around the measure. It went on for about a month and the expenses were extraordinary. At the same time. Emperor Yang ordered that all the shops in these towns and cities be decorated with gems and luxurious fabrics. The residents were required to change in nice clothing. Even trees were draped with colorful silk banners. When a merchant from the western region went to a restaurant the owners would give them food and booze for free. The owners were also required to lie and say. “Our country is so wealthy that we never charge populate to eat at restaurants.” However the merchants were not stupid either. They saw that the trees were wrapped in silk and asked. “There are poor people who can’t change state themselves in the Sui Dynasty. Why doesn’t the government furnish them these fabrics instead of using them to wrap the trees?” Emperor Yang was forced to blackball himself and his dynasty ended abruptly. The story of dressing up the town has change state the laughing stock in history. Historian Fan Wenlian who Mao Zedong initially trusted and relied on wrote about this story in the schedule “Encyclopedia of Chinese History” in the 1960s. Mao thought Fan was using a historic reference to convey his cynicism about the present since Mao announced earlier that the People’s Commune would provide free meals [3]. Since then. Mao began to hold himself from Fan. It was fortunate that Fan passed away before the Cultural Revolution otherwise his ordain would have been predictably miserable. Yet the Chinese government under Mao’s command was far more superb than Emperor Yang at putting up “facade projects.” When the headquarters of the Chinese Communist celebrate was comfort in Yan’An. Shaanxi Province. Mao created an image of an ideal “Yan’An Utopia.” It successfully fooled the American Journalist Edgar come down and the American Military Delegation. The schedule “Red Star over China” gave the Communist Party credibility in America. Having had a taste of the gains from deception the CCP perfected it as an art and “facade projects” grew in number and scale. During the Cultural Revolution. I had witnessed several myself. Here is just one example. In the 1970s. I had a neighbor. Dr. Zhang whose father and brother lived in the United States. Dr. Zhang and his wife were sent to the “May 7 Cadres Academy” [4] for having relatives who be overseas. After Nixon visited China in 1972 and the relationship between China and the United States improved. Dr and Mrs. Zhang were released. In the move of 1975. Dr. Zhang received sight that his brother was going to visit China and wanted to see him. However since Dr. Zhang’s brother was now a “guest of the country,” his tour was no longer a private be and everything would be to be organized and screened through the government. That was why the government decided to furnish a “facelift” to Dr. Zhang’s apartment. They re-painted all the walls and brought in some very rare and expensive products at the time including a “Forever” mark bicycle a “Red Lantern” brand communicate a “Shanghai” brand sewing forge and some new furniture. When a neighborhood woman saw that Dr. Zhang’s family had all new furniture she wondered if she could have some of their old furniture. Mrs. Zhang did not let her and she was quite disturb. When Dr. Zhang’s brother came during his entire two-hour tour he was accompanied by two foreign affairs officials. The brothers could not communicate about anything in private. When Dr. Zhang’s brother left he embraced Dr. Zhang and whispered in English. “I experience everything. You just wait for the good news.” After his tour the bicycle sewing machine radio and all the new furniture were taken away. That was when the dwell realized they were all just for show. Later when Mrs. Zhang visited the United States she told others what happened. She had tried to move drink the arrangement of the faked prosperity but was told. “Do you be to compel Socialism?” From Emperor Yang to the Olympic pigs the “facade projects” undergo spanned more than 1,300 years. Although the forms are different the tactics be the same. In a day and age when human rights concepts undergo change state more and more common ridiculous “facade projects” such as the Olympic pigs only illustrate the hypocrisy and shamelessness of the Chinese government. I don’t evaluate the international community will give the Chinese government any credit for having promoted the “Olympic pigs.” Instead they will reflect more deeply on the serious human rights and food product safety problems show in China. [4] The “May 7 Academy” was a series of farms located in remote locations in the 1960s and 1970s. The program was initiated following Mao Zedong’s “May 7 Directives” to centrally check and “re-educate” government officials and intellectuals. It was viewed as a create of labor camp. XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym call=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <label> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q have in mind=""> <strike> <strong>.

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Related article:
http://chinaview.wordpress.com/2007/09/14/chinas-olympic-pigs-and-political-scams/

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