Why are Chinese websites so busy?

Why are Chinese websites so busy?

As Chinese has no equivalent, their sites can look full of very similar, and busy, characters. There are no spaces between characters. Western languages use space to delineate words and this, too, has no equivalent in Chinese language.

Does China block certain websites?

China blocks thousands of websites (more than 8,000 websites to date) using its notorious filtering system, “The Great Firewall”. The reason for China’s aggressive take on the Internet is to allegedly protect its citizens from outside influence and “harmful information”.

Why is internet slow in China?

Various reasons exist, but one main reason is that there are so many users at one time. With a country of 1.4 billion people and roughly 75\% of those with some type of internet device on at any given time it is no wonder the internet slow. Another reason is the lack of infrastructure technology in China.

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Why can’t I access the ChinaNet?

Reason: The Great Firewall and geographic restrictions (copyright laws) The best way to resolve this: A VPN with servers in China What VPN do we recommend: Transocks, VPN Area and Hide My Ass are to date the best VPNs that we have found for accessing the Chinanet.

How many people in China have been cut off from the Internet?

The March 31 ban cut off the “global” internet for millions in China, the VPN review website Top10VPN.com says. China has at least 751 million internet users. It also has the highest number of VPN users “thanks to strict censorship,” Top10VPN.com adds.

How to get around China’s Internet ban?

Foreign news websites that cover topics that make China squirm, for example Tibet and Taiwan, are often blocked, too. Ban aside, you can still get a VPN, which means an internet-based secure tunnel between devices that lets users see any website without interference. The best way to get one is through a foreign company with China offices.

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Why do Chinese netizens migrate to blocked websites?

A lot of Chinese netizens have migrated to the local equivalents of blocked websites, for example Beijing-based Baidu.com instead of Google for searches, as the domestic internet economy expands. The local services work with authorities to keep banned content out of sight.