China closes 17,000 Internet cafes



DIGITAL FREEDOM NETWORK: Human rights and technology news

by Bobson Wong, Digital Freedom Network

(November 21, 2001) Chinese officials have reportedly closed more than 
17,000 Internet cafes and ordered thousands more to install Internet 
surveillance software as part of a major offensive against unsupervised use 
of the Internet.

Shanghai's Wen Hui newspaper said today that Chinese police and commercial 
officials have examined over 94,000 Internet cafes in the last seven 
months. Last April, the government announced it was imposing a three-month 
ban on the opening of new cybercafes. All registered Internet cafes were 
required to renew their licenses, and those operating illegally would be 
shut down.

Only about half the country's Internet cafes have installed the required 
filtering software, according to Wen Hui. About 28,000 cafes have been 
ordered to install it. In February, the Ministry of Public Security 
announced that it released Internet filtering software called Internet 
Police 110 that allegedly can also monitor Web traffic and delete or block 
messages from sources deemed offensive.

About 15 percent, or four million, of the country's Internet population 
rely on cafes as their main source of access, according to the China 
Internet Network Information Center. Most of these users are in the 
country's smaller cities.

While China has always tried to discourage pro-democracy or dissident 
material from being circulated on the Internet — at least 19 individuals in 
China are currently being detained for using the Net for religious or 
political purposes (see the complete list at 
http://dfn.org/focus/china/netattack.htm) — it is far more concerned about 
the impact that an unregulated Internet will have on the nation's young 
people. China's Internet population is much younger than the rest of the 
population. Over half of the country's Internet users are under age 25. 
Many parents have complained that their children were becoming addicted to 
pornographic Web sites or computer games.

Growing loss of online privacy

The intense focus on cybercafes will be a big loss for Chinese users who 
want to maintain their privacy online. Before the government's April 
announcement, Internet cafes were not closely regulated. For example, many 
cafes did not log who was using their computers.

And in an unrelated move, the U.S.-based company SafeWeb quietly closed its 
free Web proxy service last week. A SafeWeb spokesperson said that the 
service, in which users could go to SafeWeb's site and surf the Web 
anonymously, was shut down because it cost too much to maintain. According 
to the company, many of the proxy service's users were based in China.

There is some hope for SafeWeb users, though. The company recently signed a 
contract with the International Broadcasting Bureau, parent agency of the 
Voice of America (VOA), for a pilot program in which the bureau would 
provide money for new computers to run SafeWeb software specifically 
tailored for people in China.

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Copyright (c) 2001 Digital Freedom Network (http://dfn.org). All rights 
reserved. This article may be reproduced or redistributed for online 
not-for-profit use without prior written consent as long as DFN is 
recognized with this credit. For information about DFN's permissions 
policy, see <http://dfn.org/about/permissions.htm>.



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