It seems Dice is willing to highlight the censorship of others.
http://news.dice.com/2012/01/27/twitter-censorship/
"Twitter announced a change towards its censorship policy, and it has
sparked both positive and negative response from its users. The change
would allow Twitter to censor tweets locally in any particular country,
when required by the local law, but keep the tweet accessible in other
countries."
It's quite telling that the comment posted in response to this article was itself censored!
A big difference here between Dice and Twitter is that Twitter is censoring users to comply with local laws, whereas Dice.com are censoring users to promote their own corporate interests.
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