The Associated Press: China's Web surveillance slows access even as government promotes Internet use


March 5, 2003

China's tens of millions of Internet users are suffering sharp slowdowns in access, which industry experts blame in part on heightened efforts by the communist government to police online content.

Some say problems have worsened this week, suggesting Beijing is tightening surveillance during the annual meeting of China's parliament.

The slowdown highlights the clash between China's efforts to reap the Internet's benefits and communist zeal to control what its people read and hear. Authorities have invested both in spreading Web access nationwide and installing technology to scan Web sites and e-mail for content deemed subversive or obscene.

Problems emerged in October after "packet-sniffer" software was installed that briefly holds each chunk of data to be screened. Beijing has built an online barrier around China, requiring traffic in and out to pass through just eight gateways -- a step that heightens official control.

Banned topics include human rights and the outlawed Falun Gong spiritual group.

Each item emerging from China bears the same Internet return address, showing that all are held up at the same location rather than coming directly from their senders, said Michael Iannini, general manager of Nicholas International Consulting Services Inc. in Beijing.

Iannini compares it to all of China's Web surfers -- a population that the government says hit 59 million in January -- breathing through the same tiny air hole.

"Through this hole the government has set up many filters," he said.

The snarl is worsened by the breakup of China's former monopoly phone company amid double-digit growth in its online population, which already is the world's second-biggest.

China Telecom was split into two smaller carriers in a move meant to spur competition and lead to better, cheaper service. But in the short run, it has left China's north in the hands of a spinoff company with sharply lower Internet capacity.

Ordinary users say they have their biggest problems in reaching foreign Web sites and on weekdays, when people go to work and log on at the same time. They say access sometimes is so slow that they can't reach Google, Hotmail and other popular foreign sites -- many based in the United States.

"At home sometimes it's too slow to use, and at work, it's even slower," said Sara Li, a former magazine editor in Beijing. Access is even slower, she said, during "special time periods" -- a reference to such politically sensitive events as the National People's Congress under way in Beijing.

Help could come from the spread of faster "broadband" access, which has reached some 4 million users, said Todd Bryan of MFC Insight, a Beijing consulting firm. But he said the lack of a standard national network means many aren't getting the best service.

Industry experts say carriers are said to be installing more Internet capacity between China and the United States, but it isn't clear how much will be added or when.

http://www.securityfocus.com/news/2907

 Yearly Archive   Printer Version


We welcome your comments and suggestions, please email:
feedback@clearwisdom.net


Related Articles

Article Review
Canadian Member of Parliament Rob Anders Urges Prime Minister to Initiate a Resolution to Condemn China's Treatment of Falun Gong [3/7/2003]
Falun Dafa Practitioner from Germany Lin Wenrong Held in Shiyan Labor Camp's Brainwashing Center in Hubei Province (Phone Numbers Included) [3/7/2003]
Report of Shanghai Jiaotong University Alumni Being Persecuted for Practicing Falun Gong [3/7/2003]
Ireland: Letter to UK Prime Minister from Ireland Friends of Falun Gong [3/7/2003]
Virginia Senate and House Pass Resolutions Condemning the Persecution of Falun Gong (Photos) [3/6/2003]
Canadian House of Commons' Unanimous Motion Frees 3 Prisoners of Conscience [3/6/2003]
Boston: "Rescue Charles Li and North American Falun Gong Practitioners' Family Members" Press Conference Held at MIT (Photos) [3/6/2003]
The Dignity of Dafa--Clarifying the Truth Using the Internet and Telephone [3/6/2003]
Firmly Believing in Dafa, Breaking Free of the Demon's Den (Part 1) [3/6/2003]
Family of New Practitioners Validates the Fa and Experiences the Blessings of Dafa [3/5/2003]
Speech Given by UK Falun Gong Association Director at Home Office Press Conference: "A Touchstone Case for the UK Asylum System" [3/5/2003]
Liverpool Echo (UK): My wife is going home to torture [3/5/2003]
Yahoo News: On the Brink of War in Iraq, An American Held Hostage in China, And the Persecution of Chinese Families of Americans: Falun Gong [3/5/2003]
When Our Lives Are Endangered, We Have the Right to Defend Ourselves [3/4/2003]
FDI: Falun Gong Woman Left Paralyzed from Severe Torture in Chinese Forced Labor Camp [3/4/2003]
Canada: Transcript of the Parliamentary Debate on the Motion in Support of Rescuing Falun Gong Practitioners [3/4/2003]
Some Thoughts on The Issue of Practitioners Seeking Political Asylum Outside of China [3/4/2003]
Taiwan Vice President Lu Hsiu-Lien: Hong Kong's Barring of Taiwan Practitioners Violates Human Rights (Photo) [3/4/2003]
Article Review: Jiang Zemin Spread Lies to the World on CBS [3/3/2003]
Remarkable Stories of an Elderly Female Dafa Practitioner [3/3/2003]
More Articles...