In the latest wrap-up from news outlets and bloggers across the globe:

HOW HUMAN RIGHTS GROUPS AND "HACKTIVISTS" ARE USING INTERNET TECHNOLOGY TO BUCK STATE CENSORS
AlterNet – More and more voices from around the globe are finding a place on the Internet -- even in countries where Web filters and censorship are the norm …

Q&A WITH ISAAC MAO ON TECH BLOGGING IN CHINA: CENSORSHIP AND OPPORTUNITY
VentureBeat – Isaac Mao is one of the earliest and most prominent bloggers in China. He’s been covering Chinese technology since 2002. He’s confronted censorship — even writing an open letter beseeching the Google founders to not self-censor search results in China …

HU JIA'S INDICTMENT
A translation prepared by the Congressional-Executive Commission on China of "Hu Jia's Indictment," issued by the Beijing Municipal People's Procuratorate No. 1 Branch on March 7, 2008. The Chinese text was retrieved from the blog of his wife and fellow activist, Zeng Jinyan …

CHINA NEEDS TO STOP PLAYING GAMES
Guardian – In Beijing's bid for the 2008 Olympics, the guarantee was clear and unmistakable: "there will be no restrictions on media reporting and movement of journalists up to and including the Olympic games" ...

CHINA SLAMS MEETING BETWEEN BROWN AND DALAI LAMA
AFP – China on Saturday voiced strong opposition to a meeting between Prime Minister Gordon Brown and the Tibetan exiled leader the Dalai Lama, calling it interference in its internal affairs …

EARTHQUAKE MUTES PROTESTS OF BEIJING OLYMPICS
AP – China's deadly earthquake may have saved the Beijing Olympics. Just a few weeks ago, International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge described the games as "in crisis." …

CHINA SHORTENS TIBET LEG OF OLYMPIC TORCH RELAY
AP – The controversial Tibetan leg of the Olympic torch relay has been cut to just one day because of the devastating earthquake in Sichuan province, a Beijing Olympics official said …

CHINA'S GREASTEST INTERNET POTENTIAL
CNet Asia Blog – Or at least, as I see it. I wrote before about Chinese crowd-sourcing, and how huge amounts of Nintendo game text could be translated in a matter of days by a few dedicated Chinese fans. I just found a quote on the China Segment blog which, in a nutshell, sums up the idea of what I think to be China's greatest advantage …