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Internet News: China's Filtering Technology Evolving By Thor Olavsrud
December 5, 2002
(Clearwisdom.net) The People's Republic of China blocks roughly 8 percent of
online content, according to an ongoing analysis by researchers with the Berkman
Center for Internet & Society Harvard Law School
While the researchers found that the Chinese government makes some effort to
block sexually-explicit sites, their findings indicate it is much more
interested in blocking content related to news, health and entertainment.
Jonathan Zittrain, co-director of the center and Jack N. and Lillian R.
Berkman Assistant Professor of Entrepreneurial Legal Studies at Harvard Law
School, working with Benjamin Edelman, technology analyst and first-year student
at Harvard Law School, have been tracking Internet filtering in China. Of the
204,012 sites the two have tested to date, the researchers found more than
50,000 to be inaccessible from at least one point in China on at least one
occasion. In an effort to separate sites that are intentionally blocked from
those which were unreachable due to temporary glitches, they reported that
18,931 (8 percent) sites were inaccessible from at least two distinct proxy
servers in China on at least two days.
While they found some effort had been made to block sexually explicit
content, Zittrain and Edelman found that such efforts were not particularly
effective, blocking only about 13.4 percent of their sample of well-known
sexually-explicit sites. For instance, while Playboy's and Penthouse's sites
were blocked, they found the Hustler Magazine site and adult site whitehouse.com
were consistently available. In comparison, the esearchers -- who have
previously studied Internet filtering in Saudi Arabia and American public
libraries -- found that Saudi Arabia blocked 86.2 percent of the same sample.
Commercial filtering applications block between 70 percent and 90 percent of
those sites.
On the other hand, China more consistently blocks dissident/democracy sites
like Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the Hong Kong Voice of
Democracy, the Direct Democracy Center and Falun Gong and Falun Dafa sites. It
also makes a strong effort to block health-related sites, like the AIDS
Healthcare Foundation, the Internet Mental Health reference, and the Health in
China research project. On the education front, it blocks a number of university
sites, as well as sites for The Learning Channel, the Islamic Virtual School and
the Music Academy of Zheng. Of Google's top 100 results for news, 42 were
blocked, and the researchers said they found evidence of blocking of 923 sites
listed in Yahoo's News and Media directory categories and subcategories. A
variety of government sites by governments in Asia and beyond were blocked,
including U.S. court sites, state communications organs, and state-sponsored
travel sites. Taiwanese, Tibetan and religious sites were consistently blocked,
as were several movie sites.
Some of the selections seem a little odd at first, like the apparent decision
to block the site for Red Lobster restaurants. But Edelman explained, "It does
seem the word "Red" may be targeted -- perhaps not surprising for the many
instances in which it's used to refer to China, especially in a negative light.
As applied to any particular site, this is primarily speculation -- but the
pattern has become increasingly clear to me via a casual review of the sites." Edelman said that his findings lead him to believe that some of the
rationales for blocking may include:
"Of these, only the first is, strictly speaking, "intentional" -- while the
other categories (and plenty of further classes of sites) are arguably to
varying extents "accidental." Of course, this all results from an intentional
choice not to take the necessary precautions to prevent such accidental blocks,"
he said.
For the most part, according to the researchers, the primary means of
blocking is at the router level and on the basis of IP address, which means that
those that implement the filtering must choose between blocking an entire site
on the basis of a small portion of the content, or tolerating the entire site.
The analysis also found that the Chinese government is experimenting with more
technology-intensive and refined content filtering, like blocking by keywords or
phrases in any particular HTML page requested by the user. The researchers said
such technology appears to be linked to the ability to disable Internet access
for a period of time for a user that requests a page with forbidden content.
Other nascent forms of filtering appear to attempt to limit the information that
can be gleaned from search engines.
"The Chinese government and associated network authorities are clearly
continuing to experiment with different forms of blocking, indicating that --
unlike Saudi Arabia, which appears to have a single, declared method of blocking
and a much more constant (and apparently smaller) list of non-sexually explicit
blocked sites -- Chinese network filtering is an important instrument of state
Internet policy, and one to which significant technical and human resources
continue to be devoted," the researchers said.
While China has not released a list of sites blocked or its methodologies for
blocking them, the researchers have been accumulating Web sites and testing them
for accessibility. From March 20 to May 6, 2002, they connected by modem,
through an international telephone call, to dial-up accounts with several
Chinese ISPs. They noted that after May 6, their modems were unable to
successfully negotiate a "handshake" with modems at any Chinese ISPs, a failure
they said was consistent across multiple phone lines and locations, as well as
multiple ISPs and points-of-presence (POPs) in China. From Aug. 14, to Nov. 12,
2002, the researchers connected to open proxy servers in China.
They said they conducted testing of only one URL per Web host based on
background knowledge, confirmed in subsequent testing, that when the default
page of a site is filtered, the entirety of the site is typically filtered.
"On the basis of our testing, both automated and manual, we have reached an
increased understanding of the design of filtering systems used to restrict
Internet access in China," they reported.
"During testing, we requested 204,012 distinct sites drawn from various Web
indices (such as sites listed within Yahoo! Taiwan's directory categories) and
search results (such as Google's top 100 results for a search on "China
freedom"). Most sites were accessible from China just as from our standard
Internet connection in the United States, but we found that certain URLs were
consistently unavailable. By attempting to retrieve these sites repeatedly over
time, from multiple locations within China, we drew inferences on which specific
sites among them were intentionally blocked by Chinese network staff. Our
subsequent analysis considers a site to be blocked if it was found to be
inaccessible by our testing system on at least two distinct occasions from at
least two distinct testing locations in China, and if at those times it was
simultaneously reachable from our main testing location in the United States,"
they reported.
As part of their research, they have made a real-time testing system
available to the public through the Web. Single instance tests are fairly
inconclusive. For example, an attempt Wednesday to test the Chinese government's
official site, www.gov.cn, found the site to be "likely inaccessible in China." Edelman noted, "The real-time testing system is currently experiencing an
unprecedentedly high load, which unfortunately has made it somewhat less
accurate that is typically the case. If you get the message "reportedly
accessible" or "reportedly inaccessible," you can reach the corresponding
conclusion with some degree of certainty -- but I'd advise against putting too
much stock in the "likely to be..." reports."
He added, "Our report uses different (though related) testing methods, as
well as repeated tests over time. For these reasons, it's likely to be
significantly more reliable than the real-time testing site."
www.internetnews.com/bus-news/article.php/1552751
Posting date: 12/6/2002
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