7 November 2002: Activist Jiang Lijun arrested following an investigation that used information supplied by Yahoo.14 June 2005: Microsoft agrees to censor its blog writing tool, called Spaces, on MSN China.
7 September 2005: Net giant Yahoo is accused of supplying information to Chinese authorities which led to the jailing of journalist Shi Tao.
25 January 2006: Google.cn is set up, and censored by the search giant in line with official rules on what people can do and see online in China.
9 February 2006: Yahoo is accused by Reporters Without Borders of aiding the Chinese authorities by releasing data that led to the arrest of net activist Li Zhi.
15 February 2006: Yahoo, Microsoft, Cisco and Google are criticized in a US congressional hearing for giving in to pressure from China to censor their web.
16 November 2006: The first part of the great firewall of China - also known as the Golden Shield Project - goes into service. This uses several means to make it difficult to reach sites the Chinese government has deemed illegal.
April 2007: Chinese version of MySpace launches, but lacks discussion forums devoted to politics and religion. It also has a filtering system that stops the posting of content about Taiwan's independence, Falun Gong, the Dalai Lama and other "inappropriate" topics.
August 2007: MSN and Yahoo sign a "self-disciplinary pledge" that will limit what users can say on their blogging sites. Both decline to implement one element of the pledge requiring them to collect the real names of users.
16 October 2008: China introduces laws which say anyone using an internet cafe must have their picture taken and show ID before they can go online.
2009: In March of 2009, Bill Gates weighs into the internet censorship row, declaring that “Chinese efforts to censor the internet have been very limited” and that the Great Firewall of China is "easy to go around". His comments are met with scorn by commentators on the web.
24 March 2009: Chinese government blocks access to YouTube for carrying videos of soldiers beating monks and other Tibetans.
9 June 2009: China introduces the Green Dam net filtering software that will be fitted to every new PC sold in the country from July 2009. The software was created to stop people looking at "offensive" content such as pornography and violent imagery. The Chinese authorities say use of the software is not "mandatory".
10 June 2009: On the 20th anniversary of the Tienanmen Square protests, micro-blogging service Twitter, photo site Flickr and YouTube are blocked to stop people discussing or seeing footage of events in 1989.
July 2009: During riots, China blocks keyword searches for "Urumqi" - the city where the unrest was unfolding. Also blocked were Twitter, Facebook and local alternatives.
13 January 2010: Google announces it is considering withdrawing from China following a cyber attack on e-mail accounts of human rights activists.
21 March 2010: China's state media attacks Google for having "intricate ties" with the US government.
22 March 2010: Google announces it will redirect its mainland China customers to an uncensored Hong Kong-based site.
8 June 2010: China has defended its right to censor the internet in a document laying out the government's attitude towards the web.
7 September 2005: Net giant Yahoo is accused of supplying information to Chinese authorities which led to the jailing of journalist Shi Tao.
25 January 2006: Google.cn is set up, and censored by the search giant in line with official rules on what people can do and see online in China.
9 February 2006: Yahoo is accused by Reporters Without Borders of aiding the Chinese authorities by releasing data that led to the arrest of net activist Li Zhi.
15 February 2006: Yahoo, Microsoft, Cisco and Google are criticized in a US congressional hearing for giving in to pressure from China to censor their web.
16 November 2006: The first part of the great firewall of China - also known as the Golden Shield Project - goes into service. This uses several means to make it difficult to reach sites the Chinese government has deemed illegal.
April 2007: Chinese version of MySpace launches, but lacks discussion forums devoted to politics and religion. It also has a filtering system that stops the posting of content about Taiwan's independence, Falun Gong, the Dalai Lama and other "inappropriate" topics.
August 2007: MSN and Yahoo sign a "self-disciplinary pledge" that will limit what users can say on their blogging sites. Both decline to implement one element of the pledge requiring them to collect the real names of users.
16 October 2008: China introduces laws which say anyone using an internet cafe must have their picture taken and show ID before they can go online.
2009: In March of 2009, Bill Gates weighs into the internet censorship row, declaring that “Chinese efforts to censor the internet have been very limited” and that the Great Firewall of China is "easy to go around". His comments are met with scorn by commentators on the web.
24 March 2009: Chinese government blocks access to YouTube for carrying videos of soldiers beating monks and other Tibetans.
9 June 2009: China introduces the Green Dam net filtering software that will be fitted to every new PC sold in the country from July 2009. The software was created to stop people looking at "offensive" content such as pornography and violent imagery. The Chinese authorities say use of the software is not "mandatory".
10 June 2009: On the 20th anniversary of the Tienanmen Square protests, micro-blogging service Twitter, photo site Flickr and YouTube are blocked to stop people discussing or seeing footage of events in 1989.
July 2009: During riots, China blocks keyword searches for "Urumqi" - the city where the unrest was unfolding. Also blocked were Twitter, Facebook and local alternatives.
13 January 2010: Google announces it is considering withdrawing from China following a cyber attack on e-mail accounts of human rights activists.
21 March 2010: China's state media attacks Google for having "intricate ties" with the US government.
22 March 2010: Google announces it will redirect its mainland China customers to an uncensored Hong Kong-based site.
8 June 2010: China has defended its right to censor the internet in a document laying out the government's attitude towards the web.