China's Web Police Send Mixed Message

Published: 29 June 2004 y., Tuesday
Internet cafe users in China have long been subject to an extraordinary range of controls. They include cameras placed discreetly throughout the establishments to monitor and identify users and Web masters, and Internet cafe managers who keep an eye on user activity, whether electronically or by patrolling the premises. Chinese court recently announced that a democracy advocate who had used the Internet and was charged with subversion would receive a suspended sentence instead of a long prison term. The case had drawn criticism from human rights groups and served as a rallying cry for this country's rapidly growing number of online commentators. Both in China and abroad, some commentators quickly applauded what seemed like an official show of leniency toward the accused man, Du Daobin, a prolific author of online essays on issues of democracy and free speech. But many among China's Internet commentators are warning that what appears to be government magnanimity in this high-profile case conceals a quiet but concerted push to tighten controls of the Internet and surveillance of its users. China's restrictions on the medium are already among the broadest and most invasive anywhere.
Šaltinis: ecommercetimes.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

AT&T and SpeechWorks team up to offer speech-recognition softwar

AT&T Corp. is expected to announce Tuesday that it will license its speech-processing technology to SpeechWorks International Inc., a provider of speech-recognition software, in a bid to capture a share of that fast-growing market. more »

“Linux” – in the Laptops?

Trade in laptops with installed free "Linux" software began. more »

Pew Research Center: Internet Leading Financial News Source

Jun 12 2000: Despite current upheavals in the online media sector, the outlook is good for Internet news services. more »

Million hits

Chinese consumers have rushed to click on the International Coffee Organization's Chinese-language Web site (http://www.coffeelife.net.cn) to learn about Western coffee culture. more »

E-mails Now Sent From Submarines

A Massachusetts company has developed a way to send e-mails longer distances under the ocean than ever before. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

New software

Microsoft Corp. on Monday launched new software that will help businesses more »

Napster boots Dr. Dre fans from service

Another 230,142 Napster members have become temporary casualties in the battles between the record industry and the music-swapping software company. more »

FBI warns of new Outlook computer virus

A new computer virus dubbed "Killer Resume" is spreading through email systems using the Microsoft Outlook program, the FBI said. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »