Wednesday, 19 November 2014

China web conference opens amid internet freedom criticism

The attendees of the conference will be allowed access to sites such as Google and Facebook
Officials and executives are gathering in China for a government-backed internet conference, amid criticism of Beijing's internet practices.
Observers say the World Internet Conference, in Wuzhen, is part of China's aim to play a bigger role in the management of global cyberspace.
China has more than 600 million internet users.
But rights group Amnesty International warned that in China internet freedom was "under sustained attack".
The conference will include sessions on global internet governance, cyber security and mobile internet, according to the organisers, the Cyberspace Administration of China, which is the country's top internet watchdog. Continue...

Along with Chinese technology firms, representatives from global companies including Apple, Amazon and Microsoft are attending.
The Chinese government routinely blocks thousands of foreign websites including news providers and social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter.
"Internet freedom is under attack by governments across the world. Now China appears eager to promote its own domestic internet rules as a model for global regulation," said William Nee, China researcher at Amnesty International in a statement ahead of the meeting.
"This should send a chill down the spine of anyone that values online freedom," he added.
'Control and suppression'
At the conference Vice Premier Ma Kai, the highest-ranking Chinese official attending, said all countries should severely strike at internet terrorism activities and work together against cyber-attacks.
"All countries should strengthen co-operation and fully respect the different concerns that each nation has towards internet security," he said according to the AFP news agency.
Jack Ma, founder of e-commerce company Alibaba, told the conference: "The Chinese internet has influenced and changed Chinese society and the Chinese economy", AFP said.
Chinese internet companies including Alibaba, Tencent and Baidu now compete against global giants such as Google and Amazon.
Earlier this week the so-called great firewall of China ramped up censorship, with authorities blocking a major internet hosting company and cloud service provider. The EdgeCast content delivery network reported that thousands of its websites and mobile apps had been partially blocked.
BBC China editor Carrie Gracie says armies of censors delete any content from Chinese citizens that propaganda chiefs object to, and courts sometimes jail those responsible.
"China's internet model is one of extreme control and suppression," said Mr Nee from Amnesty.
The attendees of the conference, which runs from the 19-21 November, will be allowed access to sites such as Google and Facebook, which are normally blocked in China.
China does ease its controls on the internet for high-profile events. Attendees of the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation summit in Beijing earlier this month were given access to Facebook and Twitter as well.

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