The Independent, Bangladesh: Watching the Web
MA JIAN
Although the Internet's coverage in China has been expanding steadily, the
Communist Party's ability to censor it has grown even faster, thanks to Western
technology. The Party has been dreaming of this kind of oversight ever since its
revolutionary days. Although "the Golden Shield Project" is the
Communist Party's largest single investment in the ideological field since it
gained control of China in 1949, it is also likely to be the last big bet before
the Party's collapse. Like the Berlin Wall, China's Internet restrictions may be
technically sound, even as they defend the indefensible and sustain the
unsustainable. Eleven years after its initial connection to the World Wide Web, China's
access to the Internet is still guarded, embedded in its proxy servers, which
have proven to be more practical and impenetrable than the Berlin Wall.
Moreover, an increase in the demand for broadband connection has triggered the
launch of an $800 million "Jin Dun (Golden Shield) Project," an
automatic digital system of public policing that will help prolong Communist
rule by denying China's people the right to information. The principle underlying the Golden Shield is that "as virtue rises one
foot, vice rises ten." Aided by systems developed by western intelligence
agencies, China has forged a virtual sword that threatens to block the path to
democracy. Internet "gateways" mainly supervise and filter political
information in China. Their technical functions include blocking overseas Web
sites, filtering content and key words on Web pages, monitoring email and
Internet cafes, hijacking PC's, sending out viruses, and inter-connecting with
the monitoring systems of the Public Security Bureaus. Rather than heralding a
new era of freedom, the Internet is enabling Chinese authorities to perfect
totalitarian control. Since April 15 of this year, the Golden Shield's advanced science and
technology has been monitoring every thought and action of those Chinese people
who use the Internet. But what Orwell failed to predict is that China's
government has accomplished this with the help of Western democracies. Today, China is the only country in the world that has enshrined in law the
concept of a "Web political criminal." Publishing articles on the
Internet can amount to "committing an offense," and "radical
views" may result in imprisonment. The real criminals, the officers of the
companies - Nortel, Cisco, and Sun Microsystems - that built this sinister
system of mind control, will never get closer to a prison than China's five-star
hotels. Since the first Chinese Web criminal, Lin Haiyin, was imprisoned for
instigating subversive actions in 2000 to the recent arrest of writer Shi Tao,
more than 100 independent intellectuals have been imprisoned for expressing
their views. Internet monitoring is also behind the constant rise in the number
of Falun Gong practitioners executed by the state - a total of 1,692 as of April
18. Internet communication in modern China is filled with baits and traps:
user-friendly Web page designs, easy-to-click icons and symbolized facial
expressions, beautiful female stars in online ads and constantly updated
international news induce users to participate and express their own ideas. But
once someone's fingertips touch the keyboard, the "Kitchen Table
Democracy" of the Web no longer exists - he or she may find themselves
stepping into a trap, because the Internet Police monitor every word that is
typed. In a country where freedom of expression has been off limits for half a
century, the Internet had at first proven to be a godsend: people poured their
enthusiasm into it by building Web sites and personal homepages. Now these
people find themselves exposed to the Public Security Bureaus. For example, the Democracy and Freedom Web site has been either temporarily
shut down or blocked 43 times in three years. Its robust reports on the death of
Zhao Ziyang, the reform-minded leader of the 1980's who was imprisoned for
objecting to the Tiananmen Square crackdown of June 1989, ultimately forced it
to succumb to the power of the "Golden Shield." Today, the average
online lifespan of proxy servers in China is a mere 30 minutes, and 17,000
Internet cafes have been shut down. The online filtering technology is capable
of blocking or intercepting the emails of the 80 million or so "Net
citizens" in China. Because Internet chat rooms and personal emails have become essential to many
Chinese, the upgrading of Internet supervision is also gaining momentum. As a
result, thinkers today are far more likely to get caught expressing
"unsanctioned" ideas than they ever were in the 1980's and early
1990's, when underground publications served as the main channel of free
expression. Ma Jian is the author of the acclaimed memoir Red Dust and of the novel, The
Noodlemaker, among other books. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2005. www.project-syndicate.org http://independent-bangladesh.com/news/jul/02/02072005ed.htm#A6
Yearly Archive
Printer Version
feedback@clearwisdom.net