Friday, February 24, 2006

Chinese Internet Censorship efforts and the outbreak

In some of my January's Security Streams, I did some extensive blogging expressing my point of view on the current Internet censorship activities, and tried to emphasize on the country whose Internet population is about to outpace the U.S one - China. In my posts "China - the biggest black spot on the Internet’s map", "2006 = 1984?", "Twisted Reality", you can quickly update yourself on some of the recent developments related to the topic, but what has changed ever since?


Government bodies such as the DoJ seem to favour the amount of data the most popular and advanced search engine Google holds and tried to obtain information for the purpose of "social responsibility". What's more to consider are some of the weak statements made, namely :



"House Government Reform Committee Chairman Tom Davis (R-VA) has criticized Google for refusing to hand search records over to the US Justice Department while cooperating with China in censoring certain topics. Justice sought the records to bolster its case against a challenge to online anti-pornography laws, but Google refuses to submit the records on privacy grounds. Davis does not expect a standoff between Google and the government, but hopes an agreement can be reached, allowing Google to supply the records without frightening users that their searches may be examined."



and in case you're interested, some of my comments, :



"Is it just me or that must be sort of a black humour political blackmail given the situation?! First, and most of all, the idea of using search engines to bolster the online anti-pornography laws created enough debate for years of commentaries and news stories, and was wrong from the very beginning. Even if Google provide the data requested it doesn’t necessarily solve the problem, so instead of blowing the whistle without any point, sample the top 100 portals and see how they enforce these policies, if they do. As far as China is concerned, or actually used as a point of discussion, remember the different between modern communism, and democracy as a concept, the first is an excuse for the second, still, I feel it’s one thing to censor, another to report actual activity to law enforcement. I feel alternative methods should be used, and porn “to go” is a more realistic threat to minors than the Net is to a certain extend, yet the Net remains the king of content as always."



Google indeed issued a statement, sort of excusing the censorship under the statement of "the time has come to open ourselves to the Chinese market", and while their intentions make business sense, the outbreak had very positive consequences from my point of view - build more awareness and have the world's eyes on the Chinese enforcement of censorship practices, but is it just China to blame given "Western" countries do censor as well, or is it China's huge ambitions of maintaining a modern communism in the 21st century that seem to be the root of the problem?



In an article "A day in the life of a Chinese Internet Police Officer" I read some time ago, you can clearly see the motivation, but also come across the facts themselves : you cannot easily censor such a huge Internet population, instead, guidance instead of blocking, and self-regulation(that is limiting yourself with fear of prosecution) seem to be the current practice, besides jailing journalists! And while sometimes, you really need to come up with a creative topic worth writing about, free speech is among the most important human rights at the bottom line.



Chris Smith, Chairman of the House subcommittee that oversees Global Human Rights, proposed a discussion draft "The Global Online Freedom Act of 2006" "to promote freedom of expression on the internet [and] to protect United States businesses from coercion to participate in repression by authoritarian foreign governments". It is so "surprising" to find out that they are so interested in locating cyber-dissidents : "U.S. search engine providers must transparently share with the U.S. Office of Global Internet freedom details of terms or parameters submitted by Internet-restricting countries." exactly the same way I mentioned in my previous "Anonymity or Privacy on the Internet?" post.



Meanwhile, the OpenNetInitiative also released a bulletin analyzing Chinese non-commercial website registration regulation, giving even further details on the recent "you're being watched" culture that tries to cost-effectively deal with the issue of self-regulation :



"In a report published last year, “Internet Filtering in China: 2004-2005,” ONI shared its research findings that China’s filtering regime is the most extensive, technologically sophisticated, and broad-reaching Internet filtering system in the world. This new regulation does not rely on sophisticated filtering technology, but uses the threat of surveillance and legal sanction to pressure bloggers and website owners into self-censorship. While savvy website owners might thwart the registration requirement with relative ease, the regulation puts the vast majority of Chinese Internet users on notice that their online behaviour is being monitored and adds another layer of control to China’s already expansive and successful Internet filtering regime."



Yet another recent research I came across is a university study that finds out that "60% Oppose Search Engines Storing Search Behaviours", you can also consider the "alternatives" if you're interested :) A lots to happen for sure, but it is my opinion that personalized search is the worst privacy time bomb a leading search engine should not be responsible for, besides open-topic data retention policies and not communicating an event such as the DoJ's one, but complying with it right away, bad Yahoo!, bad MSN!



At the bottom line, Google's notifications of censored content(as of March, 2005 only, excluding the period before!), the general public's common sense on easily evaluating what's blocked and what isn't, and the powerful digital rights fighting organizations that simultaneously increased their efforts to gain the maximum out of the momentum seemed to have done a great job of building awareness on the problem. Still, having to live with the booming wanna be "free market" Chinese economy, and the country's steadily climbing position as a major economic partner, economic sanctions, quotas, or real-life scenarios would remain science fiction.



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