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WSJ: Chinese Internet Censors Face 'Hacktivists' in U.S. [Excerpt] Programs Like Freegate, Built By Expatriate Bill Xia, Keep the Web Open February 13, 2006 Surfing the Web last fall, a Chinese high-school student who calls himself
Zivn noticed something missing. It was Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia that
accepts contributions or edits from users, and that he himself had contributed
to. The Chinese government, in October, had added Wikipedia to a list of Websites
and phrases it blocks from Internet users. For Zivn, trying to surf this and
many other Web sites, including the BBC's Chinese-language news service, brought
just an error message. But the 17-year-old had loved the way those sites helped
him put China's official pronouncements in perspective. "There were so many
lies among the facts, and I could not find where the truth is," he writes
in an instant-message interview. Then some friends told him where to find Freegate, a software program that
thwarts the Chinese government's vast system to limit what its citizens see.
Freegate -- by connecting computers inside of China to servers in the U.S. --
enables Zivn and others to keep reading and writing to Wikipedia and countless
other Web sites. Behind Freegate is a North Carolina-based Chinese hacker named Bill Xia. He
calls it his red pill, a reference to the drug in the "Matrix" movies
that vaulted unconscious captives of a totalitarian regime into the real world.
Mr. Xia likes to refer to the villainous Agent Smith from the Matrix films,
noting that the digital bad guy in sunglasses "guards the Matrix like
China's Public Security Bureau guards the Internet." Roughly a dozen Chinese government agencies employ thousands of Web censors, Internet cafe police and computers that constantly screen traffic for
forbidden content and sources -- a barrier often called the Great Firewall of
China. Type, say, "media censorship by China" into emails, chats or
Web logs, and the messages never arrive. Even with this extensive censorship, Chinese are getting vast amounts of
information electronically that they never would have found a decade ago. The
growth of the Internet in China -- to an estimated 111 million users -- was one
reason the authorities, after a week's silence, ultimately had to acknowledge a
disastrous toxic spill in a river late last year. But the government recently
has redoubled its efforts to narrow the Net's reach on sensitive matters. It has required all bloggers, or writers of Web logs, to register. At the end
of last year 15 Internet writers were in jail in China, according to the
Committee to Protect Journalists, a New York group. China also has gotten some
U.S. Internet companies to limit the search results they provide or the
discussions they host on their Chinese services. A tiny firm Mr. Xia set up to
provide and maintain Freegate had to lobby computer-security companies such as
Symantec Corp., of Cupertino, Calif., not to treat it as a virus. In response to China's crackdown, and to restrictions in many Middle Eastern
countries as well, a small army has been mustered to defeat them. "Hacktivists,"
they call themselves. [...] Freegate has advantages over some of its peers. As the product of ethnically Chinese programmers, it uses the language and fits the culture. It is a
simple and small program, whose file size of just 137 kilobytes helps make it
easy to store in an email program and pass along on a portable memory drive. Mr. Xia says about 100,000 users a day use Freegate or two other
censorship-defeating systems he helped to create. It is impossible to confirm
that claim, but Freegate and similar programs from others, called UltraReach and
Garden Networks, are becoming a part of the surfing habits of China's Internet
elite in universities, cafes and newsrooms. A Big Booster Freegate has a big booster in Falun Gong, the spiritual group China banned in
1999 as subversive. It is a practice of meditations and breathing exercises
based on moralistic teachings by its founder, Li Hongzhi. Chinese expatriates --
marrying U.S. free-speech politics with protests over persecution of Falun Gong
practitioners in China -- have focused their energy on breaking China's
censorship systems. They have nurtured the work of Mr. Xia, himself a Falun Gong
follower, and several other programmers. Freegate also gets a financial boost from the U.S. government. Voice of
America and Radio Free Asia, part of the federal government's Broadcasting Board
of Governors, pay Mr. Xia and others to send out emails featuring links to their
stories. Kenneth Berman, manager of the anti censorship office of the board's
International Broadcasting Bureau, declines to say how much it compensates Mr.
Xia's company. He says the bureau pays less than $5 million a year to companies
to help combat Internet censorship abroad, especially in China and Iran. "Our policy is to allow individuals to get anything they want, when they
want," Mr. Berman says. "Bill and his techniques help us do
that." Human Rights in China, a New York nonprofit group funded by individuals and
charities founded by Chinese scientists and scholars in 1989, also helps fund
Mr. Xia's enterprise, which runs on a budget of about $1 million a year, and
pays it to send out emails. The resources behind Freegate and others hacktivists could increase if
Congress revives a bill to create an Office of Global Internet Freedom. U.S.
Internet companies have drawn strong criticism in Congress for compliance with
Chinese Web restriction, and hearings on their activities are set for Wednesday. [...] Moving to the U.S. a decade ago to begin graduate studies in physics, [Mr.
Xia] says, he never imagined becoming either a dissident or a programmer.
Slowly, he became more uncomfortable with China's restriction of public
discourse. In the U.S., he watched taped footage of the 1989 Tiananmen Square
assault on protesters. Mr. Xia says he taught himself computer science out of textbooks and in 2002
set up a small company called Dynamic Internet Technology Inc., hiring 10 people
to help send out emails for such clients as Voice of America. He says he takes
no salary, living a modest life off his savings and his wife's earnings. Often working alone at his computer until 3 a.m., Mr. Xia lives like a secret
agent, communicating with a small team of volunteer programmers across North
America over secure email or coded phone calls. He combs his house with a device
to detect the loose radio waves of bugging devices. In his 30s, Mr. Xia asked
that the city in which he lives and works not be disclosed so he can maintain a
low profile. The programmer says he dashes to his computer as soon as he wakes up each
morning, to make sure his system is still intact. He keeps a raft of programs
running on his oversize flat-screen monitor, testing Freegate through a dozen
different Web browsers and instant-message and chat programs. Freegate works by constantly changing the address of its U.S. servers so that
China can't block the connection, and users like Zivn, the 17-year-old, can read
and write at will. Zivn says he uses Freegate three to four times a week to read
domestic and international news. Besides the BBC site he frequents Radio Free
Asia and the Epoch Times, a newspaper that champions Falun Gong. All have
Chinese-language news services normally blocked by China's firewall. Zivn says he isn't a member of Falun Gong and describes his political slant
as "neutral." He says he has read about North Korean leader Kim Jong
Il's recent secret visit to China and the closure of a liberal Chinese magazine
called Freezing Point. He says he has copied some foreign news reports onto his
personal blog, which is available inside China and periodically gets blocked
itself. One user, who describes himself online as a 22-year-old who works in Chinese media, praises the software but adds that its use is "limited to a small
group of people who are knowledgeable about computers and the Internet."
Most Chinese, he says, "have not realized the harmful effects from network
blocking." China's Internet control system, called Golden Shield, doesn't
aim for complete control over information but rather to discover and plug major
breaches in the firewall. Nor can Freegate prevent self-censorship. Many Chinese surfers and bloggers,
having a sense of the forbidden words and topics, check themselves before they
cross the line. Then, too, many Chinese are as frivolous in their Internet use as anyone
else. Most of China's estimated 33 million bloggers write about entertainment,
fashion and such, not the free-speech or police crackdowns. Still, Mr. Xia says he sees a rise in Freegate traffic after events such as
democracy protests or corruption scandals, which the state-controlled press
doesn't cover. Freegate's Web site supports an effort [...] to get Chinese citizens who
belong to the Communist Party to renounce their membership, and the paper claims
nearly eight million have signed a petition doing so. Many did so through
Freegate, Mr. Xia says. Mr. Xia says he gets a mountain of feedback. He convinced Symantec not to
treat Freegate as a virus. "The users are not technical. They just say, 'It
doesn't work!' and we have to ask them a lot of questions" to resolve
problems, Mr. Xia says. He politely declines the help of volunteers inside
China, fearing that they might be government spies or that they would be
punished if discovered. Occasionally, he says, he gets tips from Chinese who say they have been given
the job of maintaining the Internet restrictions. "One guy told us, 'Sorry,
I participated in some efforts to block your software. I think it is not going
to work in a few days,' " Mr. Xia says. "China may have many people
working on the firewall, but for them it is just a job." When Mr. Xia got into this work, the anticensorship movement's great hope at
that time was dying. It was a program called Triangle Boy, which worked by
connecting Chinese users to a regularly updated list of secret portals, called
proxy servers, hosted overseas. It worked well until 2002, when China sped up
its countering system to close those holes in its firewall within hours after
noticing a leak. Short of resources and solutions, Triangle Boy couldn't keep
up. Similarly, with each new version of Freegate -- now on its sixth release --
the censors "just keep improving and adding more manpower to monitor what
we have been doing," Mr. Xia says. In turn, he and volunteer programmers
keep tweaking Freegate. At first, the software automatically changed its Internet Protocol address --
a sort of phone number for a Web site -- faster than China could block it. That
worked until September 2002, when China blocked Freegate's domain name, not just
its number, in the Internet phone book. The government accomplished that by actually taking over China's whole
portion of the Internet naming system, the common directory that computers on
the Internet use to talk with each other. It then diverted Freegate users from
the company's North American servers to several addresses China had picked. More than three years later, Mr. Xia still is amazed by the bold move,
calling it a "hijacking." Ultimately he prevailed, through a solution
he won't identify for fear of being shut down for good. Confident in that fix, Mr. Xia continues to send out his red pill, and users
like Zivn continue to take it. The teen credits his cultural and political
perspective to a "generation gap" that has come of having access to
more information. "I am just gradually getting used to the truth about the
real world," he writes. Posting date: 2/17/2006
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