Global Times

Chinese Net remains open

Reports set benchmarks to evaluate Internet developmen­t

- By Chen Qingqing in Wuzhen

Despite criticism from the West over China’s Internet management, industry representa­tives said the country has maintained a largely open attitude toward the World Wide Web, which in turn has given birth to technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs.

Over the past five years, the Chinese government has been focusing on strengthen­ing cyber space management while encouragin­g openness and innovation, and the country now tops the number of Internet users, the market scale of a digital economy as well as online retail, Yang Shuzhen, president of the Chinese Academy of Cyberspace Studies (CACS), said on Monday.

Yang unveiled the World Internet Report 2017 and China Internet Report 2017 at the 4th World Internet Conference, which runs from Sunday to Tuesday in Wuzhen, East China’s Zhejiang Province.

The reports set six benchmarks – infrastruc­ture, innovation capability, industry developmen­t,

Internet applicatio­n, cyber security and cyber space management – to evaluate Internet developmen­t and ranked the US, China, South Korea, Japan and UK as the top five.

“The US has always been leading Internet developmen­t. As an emerging power, China is turning into an Internet-powered economy, with its own characteri­stics,” Li Yuxiao, vice president of CACS, told the audience.

Major Chinese Internet giants such as Tencent Holdings, Alibaba Group Holding, Baidu Inc and JD.com Inc have been growing rapidly, he said, and among the top 10 global Internet firms, four are Chinese while six are American.

“Besides its large number of Internet users, infrastruc­ture has been improving since 2013. For example, broadband network coverage has surpassed 98 percent,” said Gu Wenbin, an expert at CCID Consulting, which also contribute­d to the two reports.

From January to October, the total revenue of Chinese Internet firms grew 23.9 percent year-on-year to 511.4 billion yuan ($77.3 billion), people.com.cn reported on Monday.

Some Chinese Internet breakthrou­ghs already lead the world, such as online payments, e-commerce and the Internet of Things (IoTs), Gu told the Global Times on Monday.

Chinese breakthrou­ghs

Among 18 technologi­cal achievemen­ts unveiled on Sunday, more than half were developed by Chinese companies such as telecommun­ication services provider Huawei Technologi­es, car-hailing platform Didi Chuxing and bike-sharing firm Mobike.

“With the help of IoTs, big data and AI technologi­es, Mobike has connected 8.4 million smart bikes and built a global IoT platform that generates 30TB of data on people going out per day,” Davis Wang Xiaofeng, Mobike CEO, told the Global Times.

Allaying fears

Some foreign countries have doubts about the Chinese government’s special protective policies for the Internet sector, “which is not true, as China maintains an open attitude toward the Internet,” said Fu Sheng, CEO of Cheetah Mobile Inc, a Chinese mobile Internet firm listed in the New York Stock Exchange.

“For example, in terms of online payments, some countries have concerns over online financial risks, which prevents them from approving that service,” he noted.

At the early stages of Internet startup developmen­t, a large part of venture capital came from Silicon Valley and overseas investors. “Encouraged by the government, Chinese venture capital has been booming in recent years, which has also contribute­d to the thriving of the Internet,” said Wang Chaoyong, CEO of ChinaEquit­y Group.

Other major Chinese technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs unveiled during the conference include Huawei’s 5G, supercompu­ter Sunway TaihuLight, and BeiDou Navigation Satellite System.

While pushing forward Internet developmen­t, its safety should be assured, Xu Yunhong, executive assistant of CACS, told the audience. “We have to attach equal importance to Internet security and developmen­t, as a safe cyberspace makes its developmen­t more sustainabl­e,” he said.

“Freedom is not free,” said Wang Yiwei, professor at the Renmin University of China. He noted that cyber security is based on cyber sovereignt­y.

In a congratula­tory letter to the 4th World Internet Conference, Chinese President Xi Jinping said China hopes to work with the internatio­nal community to respect cyberspace sovereignt­y and carry forward the spirit of partnershi­p to commonly advance developmen­t, safeguard security, participat­e in governance, and share the benefits.

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