Bing went down in China on Wednesday in what appears to be a DNS corruption, a censoring system under the Great Firewall. It can still be accessed, though, by visiting its IP address directly.
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LinkedIn's Chinese website appears to have begun requiring new and existing users to link a mobile phone number to their account as part of an effort to comply with internet regulations in China.
The Chinese President, Xi Jinping, has expressed his desire for the internet in the country to open up and that it won't move to an intranet network. The country plans to push its cyber sovereignty.
China has decided to block access to the ZeroNet website in the run-up to the 19th Chinese Communist Party Congress. Users with the software may also have difficulty connecting to the network.
Facebook for Android will be gaining new functionality in the next few days which will allow users to connect to the social network using a Tor connection provided by the Tor Project's Orbot app.
The Chinese government is once again trying to get its citizens to only use their real names online. After a similar law failed to have a noticeable effect earlier, the authorities are trying again.
Less than a month after Gmail was banned in China, Microsoft's Outlook email service has found itself under attack with users unable to access the company's servers.
South Korea has been found to be controlling its internet more than you might realise, ensuring you don't say anything that could be inflammatory towards the government.
It seems that the United States has been trying to find ways to get current news through the censors of various countries including China, and according to Fox News they have been successful with a...