Chinese Blockage: That Country Needs an Enema

Written by Eric Olsen
Published December 04, 2002

The struggle for control of the Chinese Internet continues. We reported last week that two dissidents, in custody for "subversive" Internet use, died in custody under mysterious circumstances. Last month we discussed the "hacktivists" seeking to liberate users from blockage. Now, Jonathan Zittrain and Benjamin Edelman of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School have issued a report called Empirical Analysis of Internet Filtering in China, which concludes:

    From our data, it appears that the set of sites blocked in China is by no means static: whoever maintains the lists is actively updating them, and certain general-interest high-profile sites whose content changes frequently appear to be blocked and unblocked as those changes are evaluated. (This is particularly noticeable with news sites such as CNN and Slashdot.) Some new sites with sensitive content do not appear to take long to be blocked. However, even some longstanding sites of apparent sensitivity remain unblocked. This is most easily noticed in our data with respect to sexually-explicit sites — we found blocking of only 13.4% of our sample of well-known sexually-explicit sites — but is also anecdotally apparent from our data, as one notes blocking of some US intelligence sites but not others, etc. Further data collection will be geared at determining the extent to which the basket of sites blocked reflects shifting substantive government policies — whether, for example, a sea change in relations with Taiwan, whether positive or negative, is reflected in blocking, and if so, how quickly.

    China's Internet filtering efforts remain opaque, and in the absence of government cooperation or admission of filtering methods, data probing of the sort used in our study remains a useful tool in determining the scope of filtering. The authors have previously studied filtering in Saudi Arabia and in American public libraries; in these locations, blockage of a web page leads to an error message clearly explaining that the requested page is unavailable due to intentional blockage. In contrast, China's systems make it difficult for a user to distinguish between an intentional block and a temporary network or server glitch. This may be intentional or may reflect technical happenstance — that this implementation was easier or cheaper, given the size and design of China's network infrastructure. But some newer forms of Chinese filtering — namely, redirection of a request for a sensitive web site to another web site — can be either more or less obvious to the user than an apparent network glitch, depending on whether the substitution is noticed.

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Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and publisher of Blogcritics.org, which, quite frankly, rules - as do his wife and four children.
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Chinese Blockage: That Country Needs an Enema
Published: December 04, 2002
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Section: Culture
Writer: Eric Olsen
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