Call it an upgrade of the Great Fire Wall of China.
In the last week and a half, China has begun using more sophisticated, expensive technologies in an effort to keep its growing number of Internet users from viewing undesirable content on the Web even as it steps up its censorship on text-messaging, satellite TV channels and books.
Starting about Sept. 1, users of the US-based search engine Google have found themselves rerouted to a half dozen Chinese-run search engines that are less effective. Google has a feature for finding Chinese-language material online.
A few days ago, users of another American search engine, Altavista.com, also found they were being rerouted to the same heavily censored Chinese sites.
This week, users have begun complaining of an increase in selective blocking -- being able to visit Web sites but not being able to see specific articles or other content of a politically sensitive nature.
A common complaint has been that users can access a foreign media site but find only a blank screen when they try to call up an article on, for example, Chinese President Jiang Zemin (
In its usual secretive way, Beijing made no announcement of the new measures and refused to confirm their existence.
But analysts say the measures represent a technological leap from the earlier "Great Fire Wall" of China, which had clumsily tried to block entire Web sites deemed politically dangerous or pornographic.
"Blocking has been escalated in the last week or so. It's a new high-water mark in Internet controls," said Duncan Clark, managing director of BDA China, a Beijing-based Internet consulting firm.
Clark and others said the new blocking seems to be related to the Communist Party Congress scheduled for November.
Ben Edelman, a Harvard University researcher who has been documenting Chinese online censorship, said China's recent filtering modifications "show in new clarity their dedication to restricting access to content they deem undesirable, inappropriate or simply illegal."
Analysts say they're more interested in whether the controls will be eased after the congress. Pressure to do so will be intense because of the economic costs, analysts said. Installing and upgrading new censorship software is expensive, and the restrictions lead to less comprehensive searches and bog down all Internet use.
On the other hand, authorities may be reluctant to give up their new powers. Chinese Internet companies may also want the restrictions kept in place to block foreign competitors.
"It'll be an early test of the tenor of the new administration" that replaces Jiang, Clark said.
Many Chinese users are already complaining that the Internet's business utility is being damaged.
"Without the English search engines, users in China are at a dead end," said Ben, a 36-year-old employee at a foreign company in Shanghai who uses the Internet for work.
"Chinese engines don't provide sufficient information on Chinese-language sites, let alone English sites," he said.
An operator at the customer service center of Shanghai Online, the largest service provider in China's largest city, said the company has been deluged with complaints.
"Users are quite angry. They rely on foreign search engines as a work tool," said the operator, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "We can only tell customers that the Web sites were shut down by the government and that we can do nothing about it."
Meanwhile, The People's Daily has warned cellphone users they endanger society if they swap political rumors via text messages.
Television regulators have threatened to sack cadres at local stations should the banned Falun Gong movement take over their airwaves, fearing that broadcasts might be sabotaged during the congress.
The party's Central Publicity Department has muzzled even oblique criticism. It has stopped state presses from reprinting sold-out books about China's widening social inequities, although several had support from on high.
One was a contentious Chinese Academy of Social Sciences survey showing workers and peasants slumping to society's bottom rungs, above only the jobless.
Another new book addressing similar ills -- the rural-urban divide, the tax burden on farmers and official corruption -- was banned in August after selling out its first 10,000 copies.
The book passed the censors and won approval from high-ranking cadres who read it before publicity bureaucrats blacklisted it, said author Zhong Dajun.
"They said my book attacked China's constitution and the party's four basic principles, alienated workers and farmers and advocated Western values of human rights," the Beijing-based journalist-turned-economist said.
CELEBRATION: The PRC turned 75 on Oct. 1, but the Republic of China is older. The PRC could never be the homeland of the people of the ROC, Lai said The People’s Republic of China (PRC) could not be the “motherland” of the people of the Republic of China (ROC), President William Lai (賴清德) said yesterday. Lai made the remarks in a speech at a Double Ten National Day gala in Taipei, which is part of National Day celebrations that are to culminate in a fireworks display in Yunlin County on Thursday night next week. Lai wished the country a happy birthday and called on attendees to enjoy the performances and activities while keeping in mind that the ROC is a sovereign and independent nation. He appealed for everyone to always love their
FIVE-YEAR WINDOW? A defense institute CEO said a timeline for a potential Chinese invasion was based on expected ‘tough measures’ when Xi Jinping seeks a new term Most Taiwanese are willing to defend the nation against a Chinese attack, but the majority believe Beijing is unlikely to invade within the next five years, a poll showed yesterday. The poll carried out last month was commissioned by the Institute for National Defense and Security Research, a Taipei-based think tank, and released ahead of Double Ten National Day today, when President William Lai (賴清德) is to deliver a speech. China maintains a near-daily military presence around Taiwan and has held three rounds of war games in the past two years. CIA Director William Burns last year said that Chinese President Xi Jinping
MAKING PROGRESS: Officials and industry leaders who participated in a defense forum last month agreed that Taiwan has the capabilities to work with the US, the report said Taiwan’s high-tech defense industry is to enhance collaboration with the US to produce weapons needed for self-defense, the Ministry of National Defense said in a report to the Legislative Yuan. Deputy Minister of National Defense Hsu Yen-pu (徐衍璞) discussed building regional and global industry alliances with US partners at the US-Taiwan Defense Industry Conference in Philadelphia held from Sept. 22 to Tuesday last week, the ministry said in the declassified portion of the report. The visit contributed to maintaining bilateral ties, facilitated Taiwan’s efforts to acquire weapons and equipment, and strengthened the resilience of the two nation’s defense industries, it said. Taiwan-US ties
CONCERNS: Allowing the government, political parties or the military to own up to 10 percent of a large media firm is a risk Taiwan cannot afford to take, a lawyer said A Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) legislator has proposed amendments to allow the government, political parties and the military to indirectly invest in broadcast media, prompting concerns of potential political interference. Under Article 1 of the Satellite Broadcasting Act (衛星廣播電視法), the government and political parties — as well as foundations established with their endowments, and those commissioned by them — cannot directly or indirectly invest in satellite broadcasting businesses. A similar regulation is in the Cable Radio and Television Act (有線廣播電視法). “The purpose of banning the government, political parties and the military from investing in the media is to prevent them from interfering