Unblock Facebook in China

Tunneling Through the Great Firewall

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Access Facebook in China

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July 2011 – You'll notice a lot of links that aren't working here on the site.  It seems that in recent weeks, The Great Firewall has had some serious updates, and many of the VPNs featured/reviewed are blocked (at least the sites are). This may not be for the entire country, but at least here in Fujian, many have been blocked.

Securitales is a Web Based Service that is not blocked.  A web based service is different from a VPN, but can also unblock sites in China.  The advantage of a Web based service over a VPN is that you don't have to download anything onto your computer. It works on iPhone, iPad and other smart phones as well as laptop and desktop operating systems like Mac, Windows, and Linux.

The most important thing right now is that it's NOT BLOCKED.

Check out Securitales at www.securitales.com.

access facebook in chinaBeing able to access Facebook in China is not as easy as it used to be. I've been in China for more than five years now. I was here before Facebook was blocked, and it's been a slippery slope for the scope of the Internet in China for as long as I can remember.  Every year there are fewer and fewer sites accessible from behind The Great Firewall.  What's worse, there are way to access blocked sites in China, but these are slowly getting weeded out by the Chinese government, and while just a few years ago there were hundreds of ways to access Facebook in China, there are now just a few.

Back in 2009, I remember using a bit of software called Freegate to access Facebook in China. It was free, and was passed around between me and a couple of my colleagues at work.  Their official site was quickly blocked in China, but I was lucky enough to have a group of friends to pass the software to me.

websites blocked in chinaJust a few months later, Freegate was useless.

Then I started using a site called Privacy Tunnel (or something like that, I can't really remember).  It was a free proxy that was (again), introduced to me by a friend of mine.  Proxies reroute your information to a server somewhere outside of China and change your IP address – this is how you're able to access Facebook in China though a proxy.

At that time there were tons of free proxies available, and as soon as one got blocked, more seemed to pop up.  You could always find fresh ones in forums and by word of mouth.

But China's been working hard at blocking proxies, and I can only think of a few that still work today….NONE of which are free.

Then I discovered VPNs.  I had never heard of VPNs before 2010 when I got tired of spending HOURS on the Internet looking for ways to access Facebook in China.  I found the cheapest one possible (12VPN) and went for it.

I couldn't believe how much more convenient it was.  Instead of having to type my URL into the proxy browser, all I had to do was connect to the VPN (after downloading and installing it on my computer), and then I could surf the Internet without thinking about it.  At that time is was 30 dollars for a year of service, and I couldn't have been happier.

But the game has changed in 2011.

access twitter in chinaSome big stuff went down in Egypt – The Twitter Revolution. And there was a small movement in China that tried to follow.

Facebook and Twitter were deemed heroes in The West as catalysts for political change.  So you can guess how the socialist government of China felt about that.

The immediately blocked some of the biggest names in VPN providers – StrongVPN, 12VPN, Witopia, and Freedur.

Not only that, but they blocked PPTP and L2TP VPN protocols which are used on mobile devices like smart phones (iPhone/Android) and tablet computers (iPad/Android).

Most VPN services soon recovered, with higher prices, special China packages, and frequent updates to their SSL/OpenVPN.  But the game wasn't over.  If you've been to Unblock Facebook in China .info before, you know that things change frequently. It seems that right when I updated the site to include all the VPN services that had recovered nicely from the March 2011 blocks, VPN sites started going down again.  Two of my favorite VPN services are currently blocked in many parts China (StrongVPN and 12VPN).  The SSL/OpenVPN still works great for both, but the sites are inaccessible, making it impossible to sign up.

So how can you access Facebook in China now?

vyprvpn in chinaWell there are other VPN services available. I've tried many. The only one I can really recommend, that's not blocked of course, is VyprVPN. It's a bit on the expensive side, but it works, and it's fast.

There's also a web based proxy service called Securitales.  This works well also.

Which one is better?

Why you should use VyprVPN

  • It's faster
  • It's more secure
  • It's more convenient
  • You can watch Hulu/Netflix/Pandora/BBC iPlayer

securitales in china
Why you should use Securitales

  • You can install it on iPhone, iPad, Android, and mobile devices
  • There's nothing to install so you can use it at work and on school computers
  • It's cheaper ($70/year)

Remember that not just Facebook is blocked in China.  Youtube, Twitter, Blogger, parts of Wikipedia, Google images, and thousands of other sites are blocked for seemingly no reason.

* Want to protect your Gmail account from getting hacked?
* * Did you know that Hotmail and Yahoo were both victims of Chinese hackers this year?
* * * What will you do if your email service is blocked in China?
* * * * How will you make phone calls if Skype is blocked?

You can forget about all these problems with a VPN or Web Based Proxy.

facebook in china
https://www.goldenfrog.com/vyprvpn


https://securitales.com

Gmail in China

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I haven't been able to access my Gmail in China for about a week now. Now before I say that Gmail is blocked in China, I realize that different places in China produce different results for different people, different computers, and different operation systems.

Google and Gmail in ChinaI've kept up on lots of the VPN services that unblock sites in China, and even those are a bit shaky – it seems that what works in Guangdong doesn't necessarily work in Xinjiang.  But that's another story.

So a lot of users report that they can access Gmail from China in one place, but not the other.  I'm just one of those guys. For example, with my home computer, running Windows XP SP3, using the Firefox 4 Internet browser (English version), I have about a 30 percent success rate as of May 2011.  That means that I'm able to access my Gmail account in China only 30 percent of the time (when I'm not using my VPN).  Of that 30 percent, only about ten percent of the time am I able to access Gmail in it's full form. Most of the time I've got to view it in basic HTML just open my mail.

internet censorship gmail chinaAt my job it's a totally different story.  When I check my Gmail (or attempt to, per say) on the computer at the office, I get about a 5 percent success rate, if that counts for anything at all.  All of the time I've got to use HTML mode, and most of the time I can't even get Google to search properly.  They are using a Chinese version of Internet Explorer – may IE 6 or 7 I'm not sure.  It's miserable.  The good news is that I've got to check out Bing and Yahoo sometimes – an I've found out that my site is pretty much invisible on those search engines – bummer.  It  must be because they censor their search results, because a lot of the articles I've written over the years are also unavailable.

So I use my VPN most of the time.  For me, it's  matter of convenience. If I have to wait for five minutes for the page to load every time I access Gmail in China (which would be several times a day for me), it would add up to HOURS of waiting time per year.  Maybe even days – just waiting for my stupid Gmail account to load.  So I just connect to my VPN account and it a few seconds I can access my Gmail account normally.

You can check out some of the VPN services I recommend HERE or browse the site.

Google in China, What’s they’re next move?

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Here's another interesting article about Google in China.  I think the most interesting part of the article is that they summed up Google future options in china pretty well

  • Promote Google strongly in China but continue to sit in Hong Kong.
  • Do something completely different (e.g., a new Chinese search engine).
  • Re-enter China.
  • Do nothing.

Says it pretty well huh?

Seems like this year, with all the turmoil, and now with the new department for monitoring internet censorship and all internet related topics there's going to be some big changes in the next move. According to this article, even Facebook is making some moves in the Chinese market.  Wow. I wonder what Mark Zuckerberg's Chinese name is.

Anyway, some interesting stuff about Google losing face in here. Check it out.

Should Google Escape the Death Spiral in China by 'Losing Face'?

Problems with Gmail in China

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China's at it again. I just can't get on my Gmail account without using my VPN. Seriously, block it or not. I'm tired of this temptation to access my gmail in China without the VPN…. and I wait, and wait, and wait. Until the stupid thing tells me to load it in Basic HTML.  I'm seriously thinking of switching to Yahoo one of these days. If only Gmail and Google weren't so damn cool.  Anyone else having problems with Gmail in China?

 

I couldn't access Astrill today either. I don't know if this is a permanent or temporary thing.

iVPN review now available

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Hi, I just had a chance to review the IVPN service and have written a review now featured as a page on the site you can check it out here.


iVPN in China Review

 

Good stuff, not the best, but good

Can’t access Gmail

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July 2011 – You'll notice a lot of links that aren't working here on the site.  It seems that in recent weeks, The Great Firewall has had some serious updates, and many of the VPNs featured/reviewed are blocked (at least the sites are). This may not be for the entire country, but at least here in Fujian, many have been blocked.

Securitales is a Web Based Service that is not blocked.  A web based service is different from a VPN, but can also unblock sites in China.  The advantage of a Web based service over a VPN is that you don't have to download anything onto your computer. It works on iPhone, iPad and other smart phones as well as laptop and desktop operating systems like Mac, Windows, and Linux.

The most important thing right now is that it's NOT BLOCKED.

Check out Securitales at www.securitales.com.

I don't know about you guys, but I can't access Gmail, or Google for that matter!  I'm not going to say that the whole of China can't access Gmail, but I've got two internet access points here, one at the office, and one at home.  Either both are on the fritz or China's at it again.  I'm using Firefox at home, and anything I type into the Google search bar gets shot down with a "the server request is taking too long"..but this may be a problem with my personal computer – I've got more viruses than the average person.  The school computer is generally virus free but I think they restored it from the 90's so that's nothing to get excited about either.  Regardless, I'm SOOOOO glad that I have a vpn, because without it i'd have to start using Yahoo for searching.

That's the funny thing, is that I can't access my Gmail account, but Yahoo and Yahoo mail is not  a problem. I started using it to search the other day, and didn't realize how slow Google actually was.  Have you heard about "throttling"?  It's where they limit bandwidth of an internet connection, in this case to make the site slow on purpose.  China does this when they can't block a site completely, but want to discourage users from using the site.  They used to do this with Wikipedia a few years ago, and they do this with Google and Google pages now.  As a webmaster, I use things like Google Webmaster Tools and Google Analytics.  All blocked in China. Or slow to the point of being useless.

Unblock Facebook in China 2011

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I know it's kind of late, but I though I'd make an update for the year 2011 so far.  Things we've seen at Unblock Facebook in China during 2011

China Hacking in to Google (Dec 2010)

Revolution in Egypt (25 Jan)

Night Dragon Hacks into Oil Companies Servers ( 10 Feb)

Jasmine Revolution (20 Feb)

China Blocks PPTP L2TP protocols (16 March)

Return of 12vpn and Strong vpn (April)

 

It's been a crazy year so far for Unblock Facebook in China!  I'm working to keep you updated!

Chinese Hackers, Internet Safety

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Hey I just found this article about the Night Dragon – Chinese hackers getting into Western Oil companies computer systems and stealing gigabytes of sensitive info. Scary stuff.

How is Astrill vpn workin out for you guys?

 

Gmail is f*ed as ever.  I'm to the point where I never turn my vpn off at all.  Any time I  update the site or check my mail China's got something to say.

Here's another very interesting article on censorring phone conversations.  The guy says "protest" twice and got cut off. Ridiculous.  Sorry, it's on Blogger so I'll paste the good parts here.

From Reality Lenses

 

You thought that the tension between China and Google couldn't be higher? Think again. Google is still fighting for freedom and transparency, while China is doing the exact opposite:

(Ars Technica) — Google has awarded $1 million to Georgia Tech researchers so that they can develop simple tools to detect Internet throttling, government censorship, and other "transparency" problems.

That money will cover two years of work at Georgia Tech, with an additional $500,000 extension possible if Google wants an extra year of development. At the end of the project, the Georgia Tech team hopes to provide "a suite of Web-based, Internet-scale measurement tools that any user around the world could access for free. With the help of these tools, users could determine whether their ISPs are providing the kind of service customers are paying for, and whether the data they send and receive over their network connections is being tampered with by governments and/or ISPs."

(NYT) — If anyone wonders whether the Chinese government has tightened its grip on electronic communications since protests began engulfing the Arab world, Shakespeare may prove instructive.

A Beijing entrepreneur, discussing restaurant choices with his fiancée over their cellphones last week, quoted Queen Gertrude’s response to Hamlet: “The lady doth protest too much, methinks.” The second time he said the word “protest,” her phone cut off.

He spoke English, but another caller, repeating the same phrase on Monday in Chinese over a different phone, was also cut off in midsentence.

A host of evidence over the past several weeks shows that Chinese authorities are more determined than ever to police cellphone calls, electronic messages, e-mail and access to the Internet in order to smother any hint of antigovernment sentiment. In the cat-and-mouse game that characterizes electronic communications here, analysts suggest that the cat is getting bigger, especially since revolts began to ricochet through the Middle East and North Africa, and homegrown efforts to organize protests in China began to circulate on the Internet about a month ago.

 

Enjoy

Super Vpn

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Supervpn.com will give you a free vpn (PPTP or L2TP) if you write a review on your blog. Now that I think about it, that's kind of useless in China, but you can try it anyway.  I mean, sometimes these things work.

Site Updates

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I've just complete quite a few site updates. After that crazy period when vpn companies were dropping like flies I did a lot of quick-fix site changes including putting big signs in bold and crossing out prices and stuff like that.  Ugly.

But now I'm working with a new blog editor so I'm going to try and pimp stuff up with a bit of color, font, and text size changes.  HTML is such a pain sometimes, but the new blog editor makes it a bit easier.

Part of the update was including 12vpn back on the roster. I know, they've gotten pretty expensive compared to what they used to cost, but their service is still as good as it was before, and seeing as they're now back online in China, and users in China can use their service, I think it's important to note their awesomeness.

Is anyone having trouble accessing their paypal accounts with a vpn? Some guy left me a not saying he's having issues but I can't tell if it's spam or not.  I've never had a problem,

Funny thing about having a blog is that you get SOOOOOO much spam.  Sorry if some of your comments get lots, I get hundreds of pieces of spam every day.

Will keep you guys updated.