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NEWSWEEK INTERNATIONAL: China's Cyber Crackdown By Paul Mooney December 8 Dec. 16 issue - Paul Baranowski sits in a small Toronto basement apartment surrounded by three
computers hooked up to an LCD monitor and stacks of computer manuals. He describes his workspace as
"minimalist," but there's nothing small about his mission. Baranowski, 28, is preparing to
take on the biggest obstacle to the free flow of information in the world-the People's Republic of
China. [...] In recent months, Beijing-using state-of-the-art technology-has significantly stepped up
its efforts to control the country's cyberspace, delaying dreams that the Internet would channel new
ideas and freedom of expression in China. Some even wonder if the government hasn't already turned
the technology to its own advantage as a tool of repression. "The bad guys have had a victory of sorts," says a Western diplomat in Beijing.
"My friends who were cocky 18 months ago about the Internet are not so cocky now. There's a lot
more to be worried about." No one knows exactly how big China's Internet police force is these days, although estimates run
as high as 40,000. But whatever its size, its sophistication is greater than ever. The government's
new capabilities were revealed in September when it blocked access to the Google search engine for a
week. When the blockade was lifted, Chinese surfers found their browsers' cache function-once an
easy way to access information from banned Web sites-disabled. More ominous, the government also had
the ability to search for keywords, and to block "sensitive" Web pages, like those devoted
to Taiwan, the Falun Gong or foreign news coverage. The software, which experts say is "a great
technological leap forward," punishes surfers who attempt to access blocked pages, preventing
them from accessing the Web for up to several hours. Chinese censors have also begun to employ
filtering technology to block e-mails from the country's 49.5 million Netizens. And Chinese
authorities are going on the offensive. Beijing has become quite skilled at hunting down proxy
servers that allow users to maneuver around firewalls. The average cyberlife of a new proxy server
is now about 30 minutes. Nor are Internet cafes havens any longer for exploring the Net. Cafes in
Jiangxi province are experimenting with swipe cards linked to customers' national ID cards. Some
Beijing Internet cafes have installed surveillance cameras overlooking computer screens. One cafe
manager took foreign reporters to a back room, where a police-linked computer, connected to four spy
cameras, monitored users. So how has China's Internet lockdown come to be so effective, so fast? "There's no way they
could have done this without Western help," says Baranowski, back in his Toronto apartment.
"Even now, they need Western help to keep up their firewall. They simply don't have enough
people and the technology they need to do this." In a report issued last month, Amnesty International singled out Microsoft, Sun Microsystems,
Cisco and Websense as U.S. corporations that are increasingly selling filtering hardware and
software, among other products, to Chinese authorities. Eric Gutmann, a visiting fellow at the
Project for the New American Century, a conservative Washington, D.C., think tank, claims that
Chinese engineers familiar with Cisco's operations told him that the U.S. company had "gone out
of its way" to adapt its routers and firewall technology for China. "Cisco knew exactly
what their equipment was going to be used for," insists Gutmann. Terry Alberstein, Cisco's head
of Asian public relations, denies that the company tailors its products for the China market,
adding, "If the government of China wants to monitor the Internet, that's their business. We
are basically politically neutral." But to some, being "neutral" is just a code for complicity. "Even if [Cisco] is
not modifying their equipment for China-and I'm very skeptical about that-to me it makes no
difference," says Greg Walton, a freelance researcher focusing on the impact of technology on
human rights. "It's a great leap of the imagination to think this is not going to be used in
harmful ways." But with Western firms competing for a share of China's
rapidly expanding technology market-said to be worth more than $20 billion a year-it's a safe bet
they'll continue to be drawn to morally questionable alliances. And online freedom fighters-loose collections of Chinese dissidents and hacktivists-will continue
to test the ingenuity of Chinese censors. Lin Hai, who was sentenced to 18 months in prison for
distributing 30,000 e-mail addresses to "overseas hostile publications," now lives in the
United States. He is developing software to enable Chinese surfers to circumvent government
interference with free Web-based e-mail accounts such as Yahoo and Hotmail. Researcher Walton says
there are about 30 hacktivists around the world who are excellent programmers and who have taken up
the cause of Internet freedom in China. 'There is a romantic tinge to the whole thing," says
Walton, but he thinks they'd be more effective if they teamed up with the "thousands of people
working in university labs" rather than acting as "lone wolves." Posting date: 12/12/2002
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