As published by the Sydney Morning Herald. No link to a Chinese version, no citation of a source, and no way of confirming if these are genuine. But they look pretty credible and consistent with prior guidelines from the propaganda bureau. Nothing surprising or extra scandalous, at least from my perspective (your mileage may vary). But interesting to see under the hood if these are real:

  1. The telecast of sports events will be live [but] in case of emergencies, no print is allowed to report on it.

  2. From August 1, most of the previously accessible overseas websites will be unblocked. No coverage is allowed on this development. There's also no need to use stories published overseas on this matter and [website] operators should not provide any superlinks on their pages.

  3. Be careful with religious and ethnic subjects.

  4. Don't make fuss about foreign leaders at the opening ceremony, especially in relation to seat arrangements or their private lives.

  5. We have to put special emphasis on ethnic equality. Any perceived racist terms as "black athlete" or "white athlete" is not allowed. During the official telecast, we can refer to Taiwan as "Chinese Taipei". In ordinary times, refer to Taiwanese athletes as "those from the precious island Taiwan....." In case of any pro Taiwan-independence related incident inside the venue, you shall follow restrictions listed in item 1.

  6. For those ethnic Chinese coaches and athletes who come back to Beijing to compete on behalf of other countries, don't play up their "patriotism" since that could backfire with their adopted countries.

  7. As for the Pro-Tibetan independence and East Turkistan movements, no coverage is allowed. There's also no need to make fuss about our anti-terrorism efforts.

The remaining fourteen at the SMH site. H/T @niubi via Twitter.

Updated:

Here is the complete SMH story that cited the points. They come originally via the unlinkable South China Morning Post. The Herald refers to them as "stunningly frank". To me they look stunningly usual.