By Michael Bristow BBC News, Beijing
When journalists at China's national broadcaster CCTV log on, one of the first things that pops up on screen is a notice about what not to report.
These notices are often short and seldom say who has authorised them, but they all contain strict instructions about how to report a story.
Journalists were recently warned off a health scandal, told how to report the death of Benazir Bhutto and had to steer clear of a Hollywood film story.
Censorship has been an everyday feature of news reporting in China for as long as the Chinese Communist Party has been in power.
But this wide range of so-called sensitive stories shows that, in China, any story on any subject at any time can still fall foul of the censor's red pen.
This is very significant to china cause this shows how the communist party jumps in and censors may importaint storys because they don't protray china in a good way.
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