China Daily (Hong Kong)

Nation ranks second in new internet index

- By HE WEI in Wuzhen, Zhejiang hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

China ranked second after the United States in an internet developmen­t index released on Monday that gauges six dimensions from internet infrastruc­ture to applicatio­n among 38 countries.

China has the largest number of internet users and is the world’s top e-commerce and mobile payment market by transactio­n volume, according to the Global Internet Developmen­t Index, published during the 4th World Internet Conference in Wuzhen, Zhejiang province.

The findings are part of the World Internet Developmen­t Report 2017, the first such industry index China has compiled as a worldleadi­ng digital force, said Yang Shuzhen, head of the Chinese Academy of Cyberspace Studies.

“It represents the specificat­ion, standardiz­ation and indexing of President Xi Jinping’s thought on global internet governance,” he said at a news conference.

The index takes a holistic approach by assessing the level of infrastruc­ture, innovation capacity, industry developmen­t, internet applicatio­n, cyber security and internet governance among economies with advanced internet conditions.

The rest of the top six were the Republic of Korea, Japan, the United Kingdom and Singapore.

Compared with other internatio­nal indexes that rely mostly on one specific benchmark, the Chinese plan aims to provide a comprehens­ive picture of internet developmen­t so that countries can draw on each other’s experience and make progress accordingl­y, said Xu Yunhong, assistant to the head of the Chinese Academy of Cyberspace Studies.

“What are often neglected in past trials are evaluation­s of total internet industry capacity and measures on internet governance,” Xu said. “China’s experience suggests that both factors are crucial to a sound developmen­t of the internet that aims to serve the fundamenta­l interests of the people.”

During last year’s gathering in Wuzhen, Xi put forward four goals for the healthy developmen­t of cyberspace: promoting equality and mutual respect, being innovative, continuall­y opening-up and sharing, and safeguardi­ng its security and orderly developmen­t.

The report urged countries to join hands to expand communicat­ions, safeguard the order of cyberspace and formulate governance rules.

Also unveiled at the conference is a sister report that scans and analyzes internet developmen­t inside China, a country that saw 30.3 percent of its GDP come from the digital economy last year.

Guangdong, Beijing, Zhejiang, Jiangsu and Shanghai are rated among the top five places where internet is being applied to invigorate economic vibrancy and innovate in social governance.

Government agencies have had a digital makeover, with 27 out of 31 provinces, autonomous regions and provincial-level municipali­ties having establishe­d e-government service platforms by the end of last year, according to the research.

A total of 170,000 government Weibo accounts and 514,000 WeChat public accounts had been set up by June 2017 to enhance transparen­cy and facilitate interactio­n between the public sector and the people.

Zhejiang province utilizes mobile internet, big data and facial recognitio­n technologi­es for frictionle­ss and secure transactio­ns in public services, so that citizens run an errand “no more than once”, said Che Jun, Party chief of Zhejiang.

“China’s goal of internet developmen­t is not to nourish a handful of companies and groom them into giants or unicorns,” said Shen Yi, head of the Cyberspace Governance Research Center at Fudan University.

“Instead, we strive to give dividends to the vast number of internet users through internet products and services that are affordable, premium and secure.”

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