MachineMachine /stream - tagged with china https://machinemachine.net/stream/feed en-us http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss LifePress therourke@gmail.com <![CDATA[BBC - Future - The world's most prolific writer is a Chinese algorithm]]> http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20180829-the-worlds-most-prolific-writer-is-a-chinese-algorithm

“Inflatable duck baby pool with canopy.” “Hot selling colourful temporary full arm tattoo for men.” “Splendid reusable dog pee pad (minimum order: 500).

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Tue, 09 Oct 2018 09:50:50 -0700 http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20180829-the-worlds-most-prolific-writer-is-a-chinese-algorithm
<![CDATA[People Are Making And Selling Counterfeit Jellyfish In China | Popular Science]]> http://www.popsci.com/people-are-making-and-selling-counterfeit-jellyfish-in-china?src=SOC&dom=tw

There are all sorts of food scams perpetrated every day here in America. The whole farm-to-table trend, for example — a lot of that is probably just marketing bullshit, according to a recent excellent investigation published by the Tampa Bay Times.

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Wed, 15 Jun 2016 17:00:06 -0700 http://www.popsci.com/people-are-making-and-selling-counterfeit-jellyfish-in-china?src=SOC&dom=tw
<![CDATA[Common Western Classifications of Suiseki | The Art of Stone Appreciation - Stones Shaped by Nature, Suiseki.com]]> http://www.suiseki.com/classifications/index.html

| | | Among the four languages covered in this section, the most common terminology in use today is Japanese. This page contains English terminology with Japanese in parenthesis (where applicable).

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Wed, 14 May 2014 15:19:48 -0700 http://www.suiseki.com/classifications/index.html
<![CDATA[Is Democracy Chinese?]]> http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2012/jan/27/is-democracy-chinese-chang-ping-interview/

Chang Ping is one of China’s best-known commentators on contemporary affairs. Chang, whose real name is Zhang Ping, first established himself in the late 1990s in Guangzhou, where his hard-hitting stories exposed scandals and championed freedom of expression. As censorship has tightened in recent years, Chang’s pleas for openness and accountability have put him under pressure. The 43-year-old is currently living with his wife and daughter in Germany at the former country home of the Nobel Prize winner Heinrich Böll, which has been converted into a refuge for persecuted writers.

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Sat, 28 Jan 2012 12:06:32 -0800 http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2012/jan/27/is-democracy-chinese-chang-ping-interview/
<![CDATA[This is an 808 Keychain Camera]]> http://journal.benbashford.com/post/3029509797

Shanzai is the name used for a huge black market industry that (currently) specialises in making fake mobile phones in small factories. Basements. We’re not talking about a few phones either. The volume is terrifying. According to CCID Consulting in 2007 an estimated 150 million phones - 20% of the 750 million devices produced in China - were counterfeit or off brand.

Initially carbon copies of the genuine article, more recent shanzai phones sometimes add eccentric new features to meet the demands of the market and can produce them far quicker than the genuine manufacturers can adapt (apparently 28-30 days to market). It’s probably because they have access to the components, tools, skilled factory workers and they’re not held back by corporate bureaucracy, legal issues, manufacturing schedules and overheads - or safety. For example shanzai Nokia phones had dual SIM slots before the genuine ones did -

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Mon, 31 Jan 2011 15:29:00 -0800 http://journal.benbashford.com/post/3029509797
<![CDATA[Conflict or Cooperation?]]> http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/66802/richard-k-betts/conflict-or-cooperation?page=show

Among the theorists who jumped into the market for models of the future, three stood out: Francis Fukuyama, Samuel Huntington, and John Mearsheimer. Each made a splash with a controversial article, then refined the argument in a book -- Fukuyama in The End of History and the Last Man, Huntington in The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order, and Mearsheimer in The Tragedy of Great Power Politics. Each presented a bold and sweeping vision that struck a chord with certain readers, and each was dismissed by others whose beliefs were offended or who jumped to conclusions about what they thought the arguments implied. (Reactions were extreme because most debate swirled around the bare-bones arguments in the initial articles rather than the full, refined versions in the later books. This essay aims to give the full versions of all three arguments their due.)

None of the three visions won out as the new conventional wisdom, although Fukuyama's rang truest when the Berlin Wall

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Fri, 05 Nov 2010 05:54:00 -0700 http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/66802/richard-k-betts/conflict-or-cooperation?page=show
<![CDATA[The Wall and the Books]]> http://southerncrossreview.org/54/borges-muralla.htm

by Jorge Luis Borges

I read, in past days, that the man who ordered the construction of the nearly infinite Wall of China was that First Emperor, Shih Huang Ti, who likewise ordered the burning of all the books before him. That the two gigantic operations—the five or six hundred leagues of stone to oppose the barbarians, the rigorous abolition of history, that is of the past—issued from one person and were in a certain sense his attributes, inexplicably satisfied me and, at the same time, disturbed me. The object of this note is to investigate the reasons for that emotion.

        Historically there is no mystery in the two measures. A contemporary of the wars of Hannibal, Shih Huang Ti, King of Ch’in, conquered the Six Kingdoms and eliminated the feudal system; he built the wall because walls were defenses; he burned the books because the opposition invoked them in order to extol former emperors. Burning books and building fortifications is common task to emperors; the only th
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Sun, 13 Dec 2009 15:17:00 -0800 http://southerncrossreview.org/54/borges-muralla.htm