The Oklahoman

China detains man for selling ways to evade firewall

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BEIJING — Chinese authoritie­s have detained a software developer for selling computer services that allow internet users to evade China’s “Great Firewall,” which blocks access to thousands of websites, from Facebook to Twitter to some news outlets, a media report said Monday.

The software developer, who is from the coastal province of Jiangsu, near Shanghai, was arrested in late August and held for three days for building a small business to sell virtual private networks, the Global Times newspaper reported, citing the official Xinhua News Agency. VPNs create encrypted links between computers and allow Chinese web users to see blocked sites by hiding the address from government filters.

Subscriber­s paid 10 yuan, or about $1.50, for one month of the developer’s service. Authoritie­s also seized the developer’s earnings, which totaled 1,080 yuan, or about $165.

Some internet businessme­n have faced far harsher punishment­s: Earlier this year, a 26-year-old entreprene­ur who sold VPN services in Dongguan, near Hong Kong, was sentenced to nine months in prison.

Beijing launched a campaign early this year to stamp out the use of unlicensed VPNs, part of a broader crackdown over control of informatio­n ahead of October’s twice-a-decade ruling party congress. China restricts how licensed VPNs are used, but has yet to disclose what those restrictio­ns entail.

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