China Assails New U.S. Policy on Internet Freedom

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By Andrew Jacobs | The New York Times
February 17, 2011

The Chinese Foreign Ministry on Thursday criticized a new Obama administration policy on Internet freedom, saying it was an attempt to meddle in the internal affairs of other countries.

The comments by a ministry spokesman, offered during a regular weekly news conference, were in response to a speech this week by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton outlining a $25 million program to promote technology that would allow people to circumvent Internet restrictions.

Although not aimed solely at China, the new efforts are in part intended to help users circumvent the so-called Great Firewall, a far-reaching menu of direct censorship and "opinion guidance" that restricts what the country's 450 million Internet users can read or write online.

"The United States continues to help people in oppressive Internet environments get around filters, stay one step ahead of the censors, the hackers and the thugs who beat them up or imprison them for what they say online," Mrs. Clinton said in the speech, given on Tuesday at George Washington Unitversity.

In his comments, the ministry spokesman, Ma Zhaoxu, reiterated China's oft-repeated contention that Chinese Internet users are unrestrained, with some exceptions "in accordance with the law," and that China was not opposed to cooperating with other countries that seek to promote a more open Internet. "But we are against any other countries using Internet freedom as a pretext for interfering in others' internal affairs," he said.

China has some of the world's most extensive Internet restrictions, which include blocks on pornographic content and Web sites like Facebook, YouTube and Twitter. Day-to-day censorship, however, is often carried out by privately run Web sites.

Mrs. Clinton's speech did not get much coverage in China, and censors promptly removed blog posts on the subject sent out by the United States Embassy in Beijing.

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Silenced - China's Great Wall of Censorship. This book takes the reader on a fascinating and disturbing trip behind China’s Great Wall of Censorship. It also tells the story of Voice of Tibet, the radio station China couldn’t silence.

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