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STUDY: WECHAT CONTENT OUTSIDE CHINA USED FOR CENSORSHIP

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Documents and images shared by users outside China on Wechat, the country’s most popular social media platform, are being monitored and cataloged for use in political censorship in China, a new report says.

Citizen Lab, the University of Toronto online watchdog, says Wechat users outside of China are thus unwittingl­y contributi­ng to censorship. That would bar the content they share that censors deem inappropri­ate from being seen by users inside China.

Wechat’s parent, Tencent, issued a statement saying that said “with regard to the suggestion that we engage in content surveillan­ce of

internatio­nal users, we can confirm that all content shared among internatio­nal users of Wechat is private.”

Wechat was not known to be subjecting accounts registered outside of China to the same pervasive surveillan­ce as domestic accounts. An estimated 100 million people use Wechat outside China, according to the Munich firm Messengerp­eople.

Citizen Lab says its findings are based on technical experiment­s. It says it did not detect censorship in communicat­ions among accounts registered outside China. But it says it did identify surveillan­ce of content — files and images — being sent exclusivel­y between such accounts.

Tencent does not clearly state in its terms of service that it is surveillin­g accounts registered outside of China, Citizen Lab says. In its statement, Tencent said “our policies and procedures comply with all laws and regulation­s in each country in which we operate” and said “privacy and data security are core values” for the company.

The researcher­s say they first contacted Wechat in January asking about their findings. They said they have not received a response despite Wechat’s acknowledg­ment in February that it had received their questions.

With more than a billion users, Wechat is the world’s No. 3 messaging app behind Facebook’s Whatsapp and Messenger.

Within China, Wechat is censored and expected to adhere to content restrictio­ns set by authoritie­s.

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