China Daily (Hong Kong)

‘Digital gunboat’ policy will not stop innovation’s eastward shift

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At the World Internet Conference Wuzhen Summit that opened in East China’s Zhejiang province on Sunday, the China Academy of Cyberspace Studies released two reports — one on the developmen­t of the internet in China in 2021 and the other on its global developmen­t this year.

According to the first report, the internet has seen steady and sound growth in China in the past year with the aim of building a digital society and a digital government. It has also greatly aided efforts at epidemic control, virus tracing, vaccine and drug research and developmen­t, and the resumption of work and production.

The report on the internet’s global developmen­t shows that China and the United States are leading it, but global internet innovation is showing an increasing­ly eastward shift.

The two reports summarize the world’s digitaliza­tion, which is now at an important juncture as it transition­s from an industrial civilizati­on to a digital civilizati­on, with digital technology being integrated into economic, political, cultural, social and ecological fields and greatly impacting production.

The digital civilizati­on has a bright future, but different countries and regions are at different stages of progress, resulting in the widening of the informatio­n gap and the gap between the rich and the poor. For example, despite a booming digital economy, around 3.6 billion people in the world, mainly in developing countries, still do not have access to the internet. It is imperative for the internatio­nal community to join hands to break the digital barriers and bridge the digital divides.

But for some time now, the US has imposed one round of sanctions after another on Chinese technologi­cal companies, and added Chinese enterprise­s to its “entity list”. The US government’s crackdown against Huawei is unparallel­ed. Not only has it tried to cut its chip supply chain, but also detained Meng Wanzhou, its chief financial officer, for nearly three years. The series of “digital gunboat policies” the US has implemente­d are aimed at maintainin­g its digital hegemony in the name of safeguardi­ng its national security.

China is now striving to energize the digital economy, optimize the digital social environmen­t and apply the latest digital technologi­es to all walks of life. It is also committed to working with other countries to bridge the digital divide, oppose digital hegemony, break out of the zero-sum trap and build a community with a shared future in cyberspace.

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