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China has launched another crackdown on the internet — but it's different this time

takeitwithyou

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Chinese President Xi Jinping delivered a message for the world during his opening speech at the 19th Communist Party Congress: Chinasupports an open economy, and it will further liberalize its markets to foreign investors.

But while the leadership talks of financial liberalization, some facets of life inside the world's second-largest economy are becoming a lot less free.

That's especially true for digital communication inside China. Regulators have moved aggressively to curtail what the country's more than 750 million internet users can or cannot do online. While Beijing has shut out access to Google and Facebook in the past, new restrictions introduced this year have been some of the strictest ever, according to experts.

This year, authorities have cracked down on China's top video-streaming websites, doubled down on their crackdown of virtual private networks (VPNs), removed foreign TV shows from online platforms, required users to register to online forums with their real names and introduced laws that hold chat group admins accountable for what is said in their spaces.

New rules also require online news websites to be overseen by government-approved editorial staff and for workers to have reporting credentials from the central government.

Those limitations are likely here to stay, and may even grow, tech experts and china watchers told CNBC.

Circumvention intervention
Internet users in China have long relied on circumvention tools to access hundreds of websites that have been blocked by the country's censorship apparatus.

Zahra, a student who has been living in the mainland for six years, had relied on VPNs to get past China's infamous "Great Firewall" and connect to the outside world. It also allows users privacy by hiding browsing activities from internet service providers.

The 23-year-old medical student, who asked to be identified by only her first name, told CNBC that VPNs allowed her to access YouTube and numerous reference websites that were relevant to her coursework.

"It's like being shut off from the world."-Zahra, a medical student in China, who relies on VPN for her studies.

While Beijing allowed users some wiggle room in the past, commentators said pressure had been mounting on authorities to rein in China's growing online space. Unlike the heavily regulated offline media in the country, the internet had allowed anyone to disseminate information and express critical opinions with little chance of punishment.

"The increasing pressure to gain control over online media is longstanding, reflecting Xi's goal to treat online media in the same way as traditional media," Paul Triolo, practice head for geo-technology at consultancy Eurasia Group, told CNBC.

As a result, authorities this year have aggressively targeted VPNs as part of what they characterized as an effort to clean up China's domestic internet.

Though quite a few VPN services are still functioning on the mainland, a source told CNBC in July that some of the remaining companies could end up collaborating with the authorities and hand over user data when requested.

Zahra told CNBC that it has become harder in recent months to rely on VPNs to access banned websites from the mainland. Many of the services, she said, were either not working or the connections through them were very slow.

"It's like being shut off from the world," she said.

It's not just VPNs, either. Authorities have also stepped up restrictions in other areas to control the online narrative surrounding the country's national and political identity.

The moves from the Chinese government keep "surprising me (in not a good way) in terms of what else they can regulate, control and censor," Lokman Tsui, an assistant professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, told CNBC in an email. "Let's also not forget that they push propaganda and misinformation actively."

He even predicted that Beijing officials could begin "taking a more active role outside their borders. There have been signs of that: lobbying at the UN level, the kidnapping of the booksellers, the great cannon, etc."

Reports have previously detailed the "Great Cannon" — a term coined by the University of Toronto's Citizen Lab for a Chinese tool that can flood a website with traffic to overwhelm its servers and, as a result, force it offline.

For now, Tsui explained the current restrictions to control the domestic internet are on multiple levels that "push the Great Firewall even higher."

On a technical level, he said, China is increasing disruptions to messaging services like WhatsApp or circumvention tools like VPN. Existing regulation such as real-name registration are being enforced more strictly and new laws are holding more platform stakeholders liable for online content, he said.

"Controls on new media are much stricter now than we have seen at any point since the dawn of the internet," David Bandurski, co-director of the China Media Project and a fellow at think tank the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, told CNBC.

Since regulators have "effectively neutralized" the dissemination of any unwanted information in traditional media, "the real heart of controls is shifting to cyberspace," he added.

Beijing's 2017 crackdown
Jan. 22 - China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology says it will clean up the domestic internet by March 31, 2018.

May 2 - The Cyberspace Administration of China introduces new restrictions that require online news platforms to be managed by party-sanctioned editorial staff.

Jun. 1 - China's new cybersecurity law goes into effect, which requires foreign businesses in the country to store crucial data on local servers. The move draws criticism due to vaguely defined terminology and worries over potential surveillance.

Jun. 22 - Beijing shuts down online video services of three Chinese media sites: Weibo, ACFUN and iFeng.com. Previously, authorities shuttered 60 popular celebrity gossip social media accounts for not being in line with "core socialist values," according to Reuters.

Jun. 29 - The Ministry of Culture shuts down 12 live-streaming mobile apps and hands out administrative punishments to another 20.

Jul. 10 - Beijing orders China Mobile, China Telecom and China Unicomto bar the use of VPNs by Feb. 1, 2018, according to a report.

Jul. 18 - Reports say users experience difficulties sending and receiving photos on Facebook-owned WhatsApp messenger without a VPN.

Jul. 31 - iPhone-maker Apple pulls several VPN services from the local version of the App Store — the move is slammed by multiple VPN service providers online.

Sept. 4 - China bans streaming of dramatic video content that does not have government permits.

Sept. 7 - China issues new rules that require internet chat service providers to verify the identities of users and keep a log of group chats for no less than six months, according to Reuters. Those rules also require those who manage chat groups to monitor the online activity of their fellow forum members. The regulations also said that chat group service providers had to establish a credit scoring system.

Sept. 25 - Regulators fine tech giants Baidu, Weibo and Tencent for failing to deal with pornography, violence and other banned content on their social-media platforms.

Oct. 1 - New rules require internet users to register their real names when using online forums. Authorities have attempted to push "real-name" registration before — users of social media platform Weibo and online portal Sohu have been asked register their identities in the past — but those initiatives were not as strictly implemented.



@Two What are your thoughts about being told what to read, what to listen to, what to say and treated like cattle for some reason?

https://www.cnbc.com/2017/10/26/chi...ew-crackdowns-and-rules-are-here-to-stay.html
 
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Chinese President Xi Jinping delivered a message for the world during his opening speech at the 19th Communist Party Congress: Chinasupports an open economy, and it will further liberalize its markets to foreign investors.

But while the leadership talks of financial liberalization, some facets of life inside the world's second-largest economy are becoming a lot less free.

That's especially true for digital communication inside China. Regulators have moved aggressively to curtail what the country's more than 750 million internet users can or cannot do online. While Beijing has shut out access to Google and Facebook in the past, new restrictions introduced this year have been some of the strictest ever, according to experts.


This year, authorities have cracked down on China's top video-streaming websites, doubled down on their crackdown of virtual private networks (VPNs), removed foreign TV shows from online platforms, required users to register to online forums with their real names and introduced laws that hold chat group admins accountable for what is said in their spaces.

New rules also require online news websites to be overseen by government-approved editorial staff and for workers to have reporting credentials from the central government.


Those limitations are likely here to stay, and may even grow, tech experts and china watchers told CNBC.

Circumvention intervention
Internet users in China have long relied on circumvention tools to access hundreds of websites that have been blocked by the country's censorship apparatus.

Zahra, a student who has been living in the mainland for six years, had relied on VPNs to get past China's infamous "Great Firewall" and connect to the outside world. It also allows users privacy by hiding browsing activities from internet service providers.

The 23-year-old medical student, who asked to be identified by only her first name, told CNBC that VPNs allowed her to access YouTube and numerous reference websites that were relevant to her coursework.

"It's like being shut off from the world."-Zahra, a medical student in China, who relies on VPN for her studies.

While Beijing allowed users some wiggle room in the past, commentators said pressure had been mounting on authorities to rein in China's growing online space. Unlike the heavily regulated offline media in the country, the internet had allowed anyone to disseminate information and express critical opinions with little chance of punishment.

"The increasing pressure to gain control over online media is longstanding, reflecting Xi's goal to treat online media in the same way as traditional media," Paul Triolo, practice head for geo-technology at consultancy Eurasia Group, told CNBC.

As a result, authorities this year have aggressively targeted VPNs as part of what they characterized as an effort to clean up China's domestic internet.

Though quite a few VPN services are still functioning on the mainland, a source told CNBC in July that some of the remaining companies could end up collaborating with the authorities and hand over user data when requested.

Zahra told CNBC that it has become harder in recent months to rely on VPNs to access banned websites from the mainland. Many of the services, she said, were either not working or the connections through them were very slow.

"It's like being shut off from the world," she said.

@Two What are your thoughts about being told what to read, what to listen to, what to say and treated like cattle for some reason?

https://www.cnbc.com/2017/10/26/chi...ew-crackdowns-and-rules-are-here-to-stay.html
Oh, I don't want to say anything. Because Western propaganda has nothing to do with me.

But on a Chinese TV show. Iran men say Indians are all criminals. do you want to say?
360截图20170915145308081.jpg


And another Chinese TV show. Thailand men say that India is full of mice.
360截图20171024075749449.jpg


@takeitwithyou What do you say? I can provide full video.:-)

Chinese President Xi Jinping delivered a message for the world during his opening speech at the 19th Communist Party Congress: Chinasupports an open economy, and it will further liberalize its markets to foreign investors.

But while the leadership talks of financial liberalization, some facets of life inside the world's second-largest economy are becoming a lot less free.

That's especially true for digital communication inside China. Regulators have moved aggressively to curtail what the country's more than 750 million internet users can or cannot do online. While Beijing has shut out access to Google and Facebook in the past, new restrictions introduced this year have been some of the strictest ever, according to experts.

This year, authorities have cracked down on China's top video-streaming websites, doubled down on their crackdown of virtual private networks (VPNs), removed foreign TV shows from online platforms, required users to register to online forums with their real names and introduced laws that hold chat group admins accountable for what is said in their spaces.

New rules also require online news websites to be overseen by government-approved editorial staff and for workers to have reporting credentials from the central government.

Those limitations are likely here to stay, and may even grow, tech experts and china watchers told CNBC.

Circumvention intervention
Internet users in China have long relied on circumvention tools to access hundreds of websites that have been blocked by the country's censorship apparatus.

Zahra, a student who has been living in the mainland for six years, had relied on VPNs to get past China's infamous "Great Firewall" and connect to the outside world. It also allows users privacy by hiding browsing activities from internet service providers.

The 23-year-old medical student, who asked to be identified by only her first name, told CNBC that VPNs allowed her to access YouTube and numerous reference websites that were relevant to her coursework.

"It's like being shut off from the world."-Zahra, a medical student in China, who relies on VPN for her studies.

While Beijing allowed users some wiggle room in the past, commentators said pressure had been mounting on authorities to rein in China's growing online space. Unlike the heavily regulated offline media in the country, the internet had allowed anyone to disseminate information and express critical opinions with little chance of punishment.

"The increasing pressure to gain control over online media is longstanding, reflecting Xi's goal to treat online media in the same way as traditional media," Paul Triolo, practice head for geo-technology at consultancy Eurasia Group, told CNBC.

As a result, authorities this year have aggressively targeted VPNs as part of what they characterized as an effort to clean up China's domestic internet.

Though quite a few VPN services are still functioning on the mainland, a source told CNBC in July that some of the remaining companies could end up collaborating with the authorities and hand over user data when requested.

Zahra told CNBC that it has become harder in recent months to rely on VPNs to access banned websites from the mainland. Many of the services, she said, were either not working or the connections through them were very slow.

"It's like being shut off from the world," she said.

It's not just VPNs, either. Authorities have also stepped up restrictions in other areas to control the online narrative surrounding the country's national and political identity.

The moves from the Chinese government keep "surprising me (in not a good way) in terms of what else they can regulate, control and censor," Lokman Tsui, an assistant professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, told CNBC in an email. "Let's also not forget that they push propaganda and misinformation actively."

He even predicted that Beijing officials could begin "taking a more active role outside their borders. There have been signs of that: lobbying at the UN level, the kidnapping of the booksellers, the great cannon, etc."

Reports have previously detailed the "Great Cannon" — a term coined by the University of Toronto's Citizen Lab for a Chinese tool that can flood a website with traffic to overwhelm its servers and, as a result, force it offline.

For now, Tsui explained the current restrictions to control the domestic internet are on multiple levels that "push the Great Firewall even higher."

On a technical level, he said, China is increasing disruptions to messaging services like WhatsApp or circumvention tools like VPN. Existing regulation such as real-name registration are being enforced more strictly and new laws are holding more platform stakeholders liable for online content, he said.

"Controls on new media are much stricter now than we have seen at any point since the dawn of the internet," David Bandurski, co-director of the China Media Project and a fellow at think tank the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, told CNBC.

Since regulators have "effectively neutralized" the dissemination of any unwanted information in traditional media, "the real heart of controls is shifting to cyberspace," he added.

Beijing's 2017 crackdown
Jan. 22 - China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology says it will clean up the domestic internet by March 31, 2018.

May 2 - The Cyberspace Administration of China introduces new restrictions that require online news platforms to be managed by party-sanctioned editorial staff.

Jun. 1 - China's new cybersecurity law goes into effect, which requires foreign businesses in the country to store crucial data on local servers. The move draws criticism due to vaguely defined terminology and worries over potential surveillance.

Jun. 22 - Beijing shuts down online video services of three Chinese media sites: Weibo, ACFUN and iFeng.com. Previously, authorities shuttered 60 popular celebrity gossip social media accounts for not being in line with "core socialist values," according to Reuters.

Jun. 29 - The Ministry of Culture shuts down 12 live-streaming mobile apps and hands out administrative punishments to another 20.

Jul. 10 - Beijing orders China Mobile, China Telecom and China Unicomto bar the use of VPNs by Feb. 1, 2018, according to a report.

Jul. 18 - Reports say users experience difficulties sending and receiving photos on Facebook-owned WhatsApp messenger without a VPN.

Jul. 31 - iPhone-maker Apple pulls several VPN services from the local version of the App Store — the move is slammed by multiple VPN service providers online.

Sept. 4 - China bans streaming of dramatic video content that does not have government permits.

Sept. 7 - China issues new rules that require internet chat service providers to verify the identities of users and keep a log of group chats for no less than six months, according to Reuters. Those rules also require those who manage chat groups to monitor the online activity of their fellow forum members. The regulations also said that chat group service providers had to establish a credit scoring system.

Sept. 25 - Regulators fine tech giants Baidu, Weibo and Tencent for failing to deal with pornography, violence and other banned content on their social-media platforms.

Oct. 1 - New rules require internet users to register their real names when using online forums. Authorities have attempted to push "real-name" registration before — users of social media platform Weibo and online portal Sohu have been asked register their identities in the past — but those initiatives were not as strictly implemented.



@Two What are your thoughts about being told what to read, what to listen to, what to say and treated like cattle for some reason?

https://www.cnbc.com/2017/10/26/chi...ew-crackdowns-and-rules-are-here-to-stay.html
And something interesting lately. A Korean actress married to China, the Korean media attention. then we found one thing. In China, 3000 m above sea level is still a good signal. And the WiFi signal is still full.
【中字】170814 同床异梦 E06 秋瓷炫于晓光夫妇cut20170930165023.jpg

【中字】170814 同床异梦 E06 秋瓷炫于晓光夫妇cut20170930165152.jpg


@takeitwithyou You can compare your WiFi signals in India. What do you want to say? :-)
Do you feel that your country is garbage?
 
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It is better China/Russia make their own internet and people can just choose to surf on freedom internet or the ones that is used for spying by google etc
 
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While Beijing has shut out access to Google and Facebook in the past

They need to bring their servers into China. Period. And share technology and patents. Like what Microsoft's Bing did. Still, China's internet industry is too big too compete. Unlike the rest of the world, such as India, we have a complete internet ecosystem which has generated jobs, innovation and patents.

Any foreign rivals in China's internet market will practically be destroyed. Just look at amazon, or uber, or bing. They are falling behind China in innovation and frontier tech.

One has got to love China's visionary government. Money stays at home instead of going onto Washington's coffers.

This year, authorities have cracked down on China's top video-streaming websites, doubled down on their crackdown of virtual private networks (VPNs), removed foreign TV shows from online platforms, required users to register to online forums with their real names and introduced laws that hold chat group admins accountable for what is said in their spaces.

Many foreign VPN companies were making illegal money. They should have been stopped. I am surprised why it took so long. Foreign people who do not like it can liberally get the hell out of China.

The 23-year-old medical student, who asked to be identified by only her first name, told CNBC that VPNs allowed her to access YouTube and numerous reference websites that were relevant to her coursework.

Poor Zehra. Are you one of those whom Trump had recently banned a visa? But, you know, if you, as a medical student, rely on YouTube as your source of medical science (instead of academic websites provided freely by every universities in Mainland China) then, you are in the wrong field and wrong place.

You miss the caliber to become a scientist. Because you have just reduced science to YouTube videos and Twitter tweets. Please just leave.

***

As for India, the OP's homeland, well, they are the most ignorant bunch as far as, for example, pollution goes.

This tells you something.

Even with full access to Google and Facebook, you can still be an Indian with very little knowledge on your own living conditions.

What sort of existence would be more pathetic than this kind of life?
 
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