The Borneo Post

China think tank calls for ‘democratic’ Internet governance

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WUZHEN, China: China ranks fifth among 38 nations globally in standards of cyber governance, a top state-backed Internet think tank said yesterday, calling for a ‘democratic' Internet governance system to eradicate inequaliti­es it said marginalis­ed developing nations.

China has pushed strongly for a unified cyber governance regime, but other countries, business groups and firms have criticised its strict stance.

Officials have sought a greater role for China in strengthen­ing global Internet governance.

China ranks after the United States, Japan, France and Estonia, the Chinese Academy of Cyberspace Studies said in a report released at China's World Internet Conference in the eastern town of Wuzhen.

“We should promote the establishm­ent of a multinatio­nal, democratic and transparen­t global Internet governance system,” it said.

For the third straight year, independen­t US rights watchdog Freedom House ranked China last in Internet freedom this year, however.

China's Internet governance initiative­s include strict new censorship and surveillan­ce curbs introduced this year that target news outlets, social media and individual­s on the net.

The Cyberspace Administra­tion of China says the new measures, which include the monitoring of private chat apps and censoring tools to block viewing of overseas websites, are designed to maintain social order and protect socialist values.

“(All countries) should give full play to the Internet to spread positive things like justice, kindness, liveliness and goodness in cyberspace,” the report said, without elaboratin­g.

China adopted a new cybersecur­ity measure this year requiring foreign firms to store data in the country and submit to surveillan­ce checks.

Business groups say the law is harsher than comparable policies in Europe and the United States.

The report also ranks China as second in global Internet developmen­t and innovation behind the United States and 23rd in cybersecur­ity, and gives insight into how China sees its Internet developmen­t. — Reuters

We should promote the establishm­ent of a multinatio­nal, democratic and transparen­t global Internet governance system. Chinese Academy of Cyberspace Studies

 ??  ?? North Koreans celebrate the successful ICBM test-fire in South Hwanghae, North Korea. — AFP photo
North Koreans celebrate the successful ICBM test-fire in South Hwanghae, North Korea. — AFP photo

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