Saturday, July 7, 2018
The Internet Firewall Of China
Elizabeth C. Economy, The Guardian: The great firewall of China: Xi Jinping’s internet shutdown
Before Xi Jinping, the internet was becoming a more vibrant political space for Chinese citizens. But today the country has the largest and most sophisticated online censorship operation in the world.
In December 2015, thousands of tech entrepreneurs and analysts, along with a few international heads of state, gathered in Wuzhen, in southern China, for the country’s second World Internet Conference. At the opening ceremony the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, set out his vision for the future of China’s internet. “We should respect the right of individual countries to independently choose their own path of cyber-development,” said Xi, warning against foreign interference “in other countries’ internal affairs”.
No one was surprised by what they heard. Xi had already established that the Chinese internet would be a world unto itself, with its content closely monitored and managed by the Communist party. In recent years, the Chinese leadership has devoted more and more resources to controlling content online. Government policies have contributed to a dramatic fall in the number of postings on the Chinese blogging platform Sina Weibo (similar to Twitter), and have silenced many of China’s most important voices advocating reform and opening up the internet.
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WNU Editor: I always find it amazing how certain regimes around the world are truly petrified of outside information coming into their own country. That they are this fragile that they sincerely believe it is in their vital interests to either block and/or limit internet access to their citizens. North Korea, Syria, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran, Vietnam, and China are the worst cases that come to mind, but other counries are stepping up their control of the web (Russia being on the top of my list). I exepct this trend of greated government control over the internet to continue, even in Western countries.
Update The website Comparitech can inform you if a site is blocked in China (link is here).
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7 comments:
Wnu not quite correct..I'm in Vietnam and much information comes in and out. .much better here than China which gets worse and worse each year.plus. .the vietnanese love the West and are - despite the war - very open to the US.most students try to live there eventually. Not in china, which they hate
Thank you Anon for your input.
That is a welcome change from what I was hearing a few years back.
I am not sure that I would call them fragile. I think they are more insecure. They, and many observers, vastly overestimate the threat posed to their survival by free speech. Or to put it another way: the kind of regime that can be brought down by mere words spread online would not survive for long in any case, and most of the regimes mentioned have been surviving just fine.
I’m still amazed that regimes haven’t worked out that this policy of strict control never, ever works out.
In better news, my personal website is accessible in China. My kids will be delighted.
Seems to be working fine in China
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