Edmonton Journal

China bans Wikipedia before key anniversar­y

- Jacob Dubé

In another move to restrict what its citizens see online, China has banned the wikipedia.org domain just weeks before the 30th anniversar­y of the tiananmen square protests.

In april, organizati­ons such as the open observator­y of network Interferen­ce (oonI) — a project that provides tools to verify internet censorship around the world — found that China was blocking all access to sites under the wikipedia.org domain.

since 2015, China has been blocking access to the Chinese-language page of the open-sourced informatio­n website, but this new block now includes all pages in every available language.

In a statement, a spokespers­on for the Wikimedia Foundation, which runs Wikipedia, confirmed that the site is not accessible in China. they said the organizati­on has not received any informatio­n from the Chinese government as to why the block is happening and why now.

“With the expansion of this block, millions of readers and volunteer editors, writers, academics, and researcher­s within China cannot access this resource or share their knowledge and achievemen­ts with the world,” the statement said. “When one country, region, or culture cannot join the global conversati­on on Wikipedia, the entire world is poorer.”

mai truong, research director for strategy and management for Freedom house, an american democratic freedom watchdog, said the block doesn’t come as a surprise, and it’s consistent with a broader trend of Chinese authoritie­s cracking down on any freedom of expression online.

“the internet freedom landscape in China is already so highly restricted, with so much censored under a really extensive surveillan­ce and censorship apparatus in the country,” truong said. “Censoring other languages in Wikipedia is kind of a drop in the bucket since there’s so much that’s already censored.”

truong added that she thinks the timing of the block coincides with the 30th anniversar­y of the tiananmen square massacre on June 4.

“Every year, we’ve seen a growing breadth of content that’s blocked around critical events like tiananmen square and other high-profile government events,” truong said.

Freedom house’s 2018 Freedom on the net report of the internet freedoms of 65 countries around the world placed China as the year’s “worst abuser of internet freedom” for the fourth consecutiv­e year. the report cited the punishment of online dissidents, increased censorship regulation­s, and advancemen­ts in surveillan­ce technology as reasoning for their score.

the report also stated that other repressive regimes around the world have begun to adopt China’s online censorship model, as they’re seeing how successful it has been without negative economic repercussi­ons.

truong said having limited access to informatio­n on the internet limits the ability of Chinese citizens to “live freely”, and actively participat­e in their society.

“It limits the ability to make demands for more openness and make government­s accountabl­e,” she said.

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