II. A contemporary human rights dilemma
As we mentioned earlier, China is not democratized as much as the other leading states in the international system. China’s internet censorship over its people by the central government can be seen as human rights dilemma in China, such as freedom of expression and privacy. China's internet regulations may be one of the most extensive and restrictive r
censorship exists all over the world, not just in China. For example, South Korea requires ISP (Internet Service Provider) to self-police contents that could be deemed harmful to youth but much of it is contents sympathetic to North Korea or advocating Korean reunification. Also Iran and Denmark have filtering systems themselves. How can search engines operate their business without any kind of
and the lots of systems which promote users participation are based. For example, Wikipedia, Amazon, ebay, and intellectual knowledge search service at never let us to share our knowledge and information.
On the other hand, people who does not educated information ethics, information can be abused and have malfunctions like non-professionalism and possibility of luring for the wrong purposes.
In spite of many regulation methods from several institutions, the media are filled with sensational violence contents. Often broadcasters are called to people pursuing public interest, convenience and requirements. But they are saying sponsors prefer nonviolence which is making the profit better and popular but it is not the reason why they are making violence contents. There are
Ⅰ. Introduction
1) Location
Russia is located in the north Eurasia continent (Far East Asia ~ Europe). Russia is the largest country in the world which is about 1/8 of the world’s land area. Because of this huge territory, there is an 11-hour time difference between East and West.
2) Climate
The huge territory of Russia also makes a various climate zone. Basically, Russia has continental