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boxun.com
boxun.us -- An English version of the site with a smattering of translated articles
boxun.tv or youtube.com/bxnews
N.C.'S DIGITAL CONNECTIONS TO CHINA
2008: Grace Wang, a Duke University freshman, grabs international headlines when she speaks out at a pro-Tibetan campus rally. The next day, pictures and videos of her are plastered across the Internet, calling her a traitor to China. Her parents move out of their apartment in China.
2003: Watson Meng, founder and editor of Boxun.com, moves to Durham. His Web site, based on servers in the U.S., publishes articles and blogs that China would otherwise censor.
2001: Bill Xia, a Falun Gong practitioner, founds Dynamic Internet Technology in North Carolina. The company disguises Web sites so they can slip past China's firewall filters. This allows Internet users in China to browse otherwise blocked pages, such as Boxun.com.
SOME EXAMPLES OF STORIES BOXUN HAS COVERED
* It was among the first to report on the SARS outbreak in 2002.
* On May 25, 2005, Boxun released news about the H5N1 type of avian flu about one month before Chinese officials publicly acknowledged the problem.
* It reported last year on farmers protesting pollution from a paper mill in Guangxi province. After The Associated Press followed up with a story, Beijing ordered the factory closed.
* This year, Boxun has posted videos of people who went to Beijing to protest grievances and were allegedly held in makeshift "black prisons."
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