Millennium Post

China cracks down on bids to bypass online censorship

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BEIJING: China has announced a 14-month campaign to “clean up” internet service providers and crack down on devices such as virtual private networks (VPNS) used to evade strict censorship.

The ruling Communist party oversees a vast apparatus designed to censor online content deemed politicall­y sensitive, while blocking some Western websites and the services of internet giants including Facebook, Twitter and Google.

It passed a controvers­ial cybersecur­ity bill last November, tightening restrictio­ns on online freedom of speech and imposing new rules on service providers.

But companies and individual­s often use VPNS to access the unfettered internet beyond China’s “Great Firewall”.

Telecom and internet service providers will no longer be allowed to set up or rent special lines such as VPNS without official approval, the ministry of industry and informatio­n technology said Sunday.

Its “clean up” campaign would last through March 2018, it said in a statement on its website.

The announceme­nt comes days after President Xi Jinping extolled globalisat­ion and denounced protection­ism in a keynote speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, where he insisted that China was committed to “opening up”.

China’s internet access services market has grown rapidly, and the “first signs of disorderly developmen­t are also appearing, creating an urgent need for regulation”, the statement said.

The new rules were needed to “strengthen internet informatio­n security management”, it added.

While some multinatio­nals such as Microsoft needed VPNS to communicat­e with overseas headquarte­rs and then see further results.

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