ADOPT A BLOG PROJECT

Have some extra server space? Want to help out Banned China bloggers? ADOPT A BLOG!

Introduction

The Adopt a Blog project began in response to the second major blocking measure taken by the government of the People’s Republic of China against blogging services. The first such measure was taken against Blogger’s free Blogspot hosting service on January 8, 2003. That block is still in place today. The more recent block of Typepad blogs began on March 25, 2004, and is also still in effect.

The Adopt a Blog project is not a political agenda seeking to oppose the PRC or its policies. It is not confined to any particular country. It was founded strictly to uphold free speech, regardless of content. Its main idea is: we spread out our blogs, and when they block a blog, we move it elsewhere.

One of the reasons that blogs have been so easy to block is that their authors tend to use free services which keep many blogs together on one server. This works fine, until that server is blocked (as was the case with Blogspot and Typepad). If bloggers could all afford their own domain names hosted on different servers, blocking them all would become quite a headache for would-be blockers. Unfortunately, the expenses involved make that solution impractical.

Although the majority of bloggers use free hosting services, there are a large number of individuals that buy their own domains and pay for their own hosting. These individuals often use blogging clients such as Blogger or MovableType to maintain their websites. In many cases, these individuals are paying for way more space on the server than they actually use. Now consider that even a blog that has been going for 2 years, updated several times a week, containing some photos, in its entirety is not likely to take up as much as 10 MB of space online.

How it works
Enter the Adopt a Blog program. The solution is free and painless for all involved. This is how it works. A blog (or any website, really) using an independent hosting service hosts a blocked blog. (This simply means creating a subdirectory where the adopted blog can be published and store its files.) The host blog should not have a significant readership in the country where it is blocked, because the host blog is running a (small) risk of being blocked in that country. The adopted blog is run completely independently of its host, via a blog client such as Blogger or MovableType (if the host has installed MovableType and is willing to share the engine). The adopted blog should link back to its host on its main page, and it would be appreciated if it also included a small Adopt a Blog banner to help promote awareness of the program. The host blog could also display a small Adopt a Blog banner or a link to its adopted blog if it so chose.

By distributing the blocked blogs across a variety of hosts, the task of blocking a large number of blogs becomes increasingly difficult. If any adopted blog is blocked, it can say its thank yous and farewells to its host and then move onto a new host. Those who appreciate irony may see the concept as something similar to the guerilla warfare tactics employed by Mao Zedong againt the KMT. When the weak face a strong threat, they do well to retreat.

While our strength lies in our unity, in this case our strength also lies in our division.

Why should I host anyone?
One might ask why anyone might choose to adopt a blog and host it for free. The answer: the Adopt a Blog project is centered on the issue of the individual’s freedom of speech. Anyone who participates is making a strong statement in favor of free speech, as well as helping to further shape the internet as a tool for the free exchange of ideas internationally. The internet can be a very powerful force.

In most cases, hosting a blog requires very little online space, and practically zero maintenance after the initial setup. The host doesn’t lose anything.

Support free speech. Support the Adopt a Blog project.

How do I participate?
Owners of the blocked blogs should take the initiative. They can find blogs or other sites with which they identify in some way. Then they can e-mail the webmaster, linking to this page and to their own blog, politely requesting adpotion.

Alternatively, the owners of the blocked blogs can e-mail the Adopt a Blog project and request a match up. Willing hosts can of course do the same. The appropriate e-mail addresses are in the box to the left.

Besides the blog transfer and setup, it would be greatly appreciated if the new host and adopted blog could link back to this page in order to spread the word. The banners and buttons to the left are for that purpose.

Credits
Original Concept by John Pasden (sinosplice.com), 2004. Site layout template courtesy of bluerobot.com. Many thanks to livinginchina.com for the support.

To Contact the Adopt a Blog Project

All Typepad Sites Banned in China (All Updates Collected on this page)

Published by Yan Sham-Shackleton

Yan Sham-Shackleton is a Hong Kong writer who lives in Los Angeles. This is her old blog Glutter written mostly in Hong Kong from 2003 to 2007. Although it was a personal blog, Yan focused a lot on free speech issues and democratic movement in Hong Kong. She moved to the US in 2007.

9 thoughts on “ADOPT A BLOG PROJECT

  1. hi, typepad has responded to the chinese blockage asking blocked typepad users to post a help ticket (for you non typepadsters, the help ticket system is typepad’s way of tracking and responding to problems.
    Here’s what it says (you have to be a fee-paying member of typepad to get to the page it is posted on)

    We have heard reports from some Chinese TypePad users that they can not access their public weblogs but can access the TypePad application. We’ve heard from some weblog readers in China that they are able to access TypePad weblogs.
    We are pretty confident that there is not a technical reason on our end for the problems some Chinese users are having accessing their sites.
    Frankly, because we are not in China, we can’t be 100% sure of the exact cause and effects of the situation and to what degree our customers are being affected. I can say that we are trying to get to the bottom of this situation and trouble-shoot why some users aren’t able to access their sites.
    Now, if you’re a TypePad user in China and are experiencing a problem accessing your site (or are in China are not having problems), please open a help ticket. Right now we don’t have a definitive answer on what’s going on, but it would help to know where exactly in China you’re located. It may, in fact, be a regional issue.

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  2. Adopt a Blog

    It seems like everyday I log on and begin scrolling through my blogroll, I come across someone doing something pretty amazing. Its really humbling. Yesterday it was Wonko rewriting the HTML to Lessig’s book. Today it’sGlutter’s Adopt a Blog Project….

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  3. Maybe I’m being paranoid now – but now Sixapart’s entire website seems inaccessible, even via a proxy. I can’t believe a web company wouldn’t have a back up server behind a firewall somewhere. So COULD it be problems at Six Apart? I really don’t know.

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  4. Adopt a Blog project

    Have some extra server space? Want to help out Banned China bloggers? ADOPT A BLOG! The Adopt a Blog project began in response to the second major blocking measure taken by the government of the People’s Republic of China against…

    Like

  5. Adopt a Blog project

    Have some extra server space? Want to help out Banned China bloggers? ADOPT A BLOG! The Adopt a Blog project began in response to the second major blocking measure taken by the government of the People’s Republic of China against…

    Like

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