Article 35 of the Constitution of the People's Republic of China states: "Citizens of the People's Republic of China enjoy freedom of speech, of the press, of assembly, of association, of procession and of demonstration."
Yet... The Internet giveth, the PRC taketh away.
Note to readers in China: You will be able to view this list, as Dropbox thoughtfully provides access to files via encrypted HTTPS. Attempting to transmit or view this list without encryption will result in your connection being reset.
Apologies if Dropbox or HN becomes blacklisted as a result of this post; the current discussion of Google, China, and censorship should benefit from a more comprehensive look at what exactly is being withheld from Chinese netizens.
For those wanting to help, you can do so in many ways:
Raise awareness of censorship efforts world-wide by copying and redistributing this and similar lists, share them on other social news sites, discuss the issue on your blogs, with your friends, respected companies, and political groups.
Contribute your skills or spare change to projects such as Tor, Freenet, Freegate, Haystack, etc. that provide privacy and security to netizens. Offer encrypted versions of your services; use encryption anytime you can so it becomes the norm, and not "just for criminals."
Volunteer proxies, VPN services, or anything else that can help to open up the Internet to those in need. Create new projects and design new technologies to combat attempts at suppressing access to information.