1996-04-16 - TIME Daily: Policing China’s Firewall

Header Data

From: nobody@REPLAY.COM (Anonymous)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: f6bfb087ad61ade915b7b5e3ad6f63a9eda714ed910102ba0f9617cb406aa2a0
Message ID: <199604161334.PAA25484@utopia.hacktic.nl>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-04-16 18:20:47 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 17 Apr 1996 02:20:47 +0800

Raw message

From: nobody@REPLAY.COM (Anonymous)
Date: Wed, 17 Apr 1996 02:20:47 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: TIME Daily: Policing China's Firewall
Message-ID: <199604161334.PAA25484@utopia.hacktic.nl>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



>From http://pathfinder.com/time/daily/

Policing China's Firewall

BEIJING: The Chinese government is requiring all Internet users and
companies marketing Internet services to register with the police.
Mailed warnings from the Beijing Police Public Security Bureau
announce all individuals using the Internet must register with a
special police section of Computer Security Supervision, and include
their email addresses, presumably for monitoring purposes. The rules,
which are taking effect as these notices surface, require each Chinese
registering to sign a pledge agreeing to abide by Chinese law and
respect state security. Users are also required to pay a 400 yuan
(about $50) registration fee, and pay 100 yuan a month for six hours
nline time. The fee, close to a month's salary many urban Chinese,
could stop many from logging on. The country's some 100,000 Internet
users are already barred from newsgroups containing 'undesirable'
material such as government human rights violations and pornography.
"This is the latest move to try to control the Internet," says TIME's
Beijing Bureau Chief, Jaime Florcruz. "It dawned on the Chinese
government that new ideas from overseas were leaking into the psyche
of the Chinese people. It's still unclear how they will block the flow
 of information, especially when the government has such need for it,
itself. Its a losing battle, especially in the provinces. If the Party
cadres there want Internet access, or satellite TV, Beijing will have
a hard time curbing them."







Thread