The Internet has set the stage for this erasure
and, pushed by big media, the law has now affected it.
Get set for next year's overhaul of official kanji | The Japan Times Online - 0 views
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Kanji aficionados and educators are buzzing over the biggest kanji news in nearly three decades: Next fall, for the first time since 1981, Japan's government is expected to announce a revision of the joyo (general-use) kanji list. Currently numbering 1,945, these kanji comprise the official list allowed for use in newspapers and government publications, and Japanese school children are meant to learn them all during their compulsory education.
YOMIURI ONLINE(読売新聞) - 0 views
NIKKEI NET(日経ネット):日経の最新ニュースを速報 - 0 views
しんぶん赤旗 - 0 views
朝日新聞の速報ニュースサイト - 0 views
asahi.com(朝日新聞社):English・ニュース - 0 views
asahi.com (朝日新聞社):Asahi Weekly - ENGLISH - 0 views
毎日新聞社 (Mainichi Shimbun) - 0 views
Free Culture - Lawrence Lessig - 0 views
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This is not a protectionism to protect artists. It is instead a protectionism to protect certain forms of business.
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Yet, as I argue in the pages that follow, that is precisely what is happening in our culture today. These modern-day equivalents of the early twentieth-century radio or nineteenth-century railroads are using their power to get the law to protect them against this new, more efficient, more vibrant technology for building culture. They are succeeding in their plan to remake the Internet before the Internet remakes them.
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