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China Pledges To Step Up Internet Administration 52

angry tapir writes "China says it will step up administration of the Internet this year while continuing to build out the country's fiber-optic backbone and expand broadband access for consumers. Internet administration was mentioned in a keynote report on the work of the government to China's parliamentary session. It underlined the importance of culture and noted the need to 'strengthen the development of civic morality' and 'speed up the establishment of moral and behavioral norms that carry forward traditional Chinese virtues.' The pledge comes amid revelations that DDoS attacks against WordPress last week allegedly originated from China."
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China Pledges To Step Up Internet Administration

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  • Authortarian Vomit (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Microlith ( 54737 ) on Monday March 07, 2011 @11:07PM (#35414972)

    It underlined the importance of culture and noted the need to 'strengthen the development of civic morality' and 'speed up the establishment of moral and behavioral norms that carry forward traditional Chinese virtues.'

    Or in other words: suppress the flow of information that might threaten CCP rule, and push more magical-thinking hogwash created by the CCP down the people's throat. Just like every other "morality" or "virtue" rule the CCP has pushed in the past 30+ years.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Exactly what I thought when I read that. The internet shouldn't be "administered" at all, especially by any governmental body, and DEFINITELY not one that fears freedom of information, communication, speech and press.

      • by Jurily ( 900488 )

        and DEFINITELY not one that fears freedom of information, communication, speech and press.

        What else is there?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by corbettw ( 214229 )

      Just like every other "morality" or "virtue" rule statists have pushed in the past 10,000+ years.

      FTFY. Not that the Chinese government isn't the ultimate example of this kind of thinking in the 21st century, but this kind of hogwash and claptrap has been the bread and butter for statist pigs for millenia. Anytime someone tells you they have the answer to what is just and moral, and all it takes is you giving up your free will to conform to it to make the world a better place, well, they can just go fuck themselves.

      • pigs

        This doesn't help your rhetoric.

        Returning to the topic, if you construct an evil straw man the opposition will rise up to fight it and as a consequence take some small degree of resemblance to it. If however you encourage their developments to fit your own, positive, expectations they will also rise to this challenge to some degree. Which one of this approaches you choose, positive or negative, speaks a lot about your own disposition.

        Do you want to be "knee-jerk", or "smart"? Slashdot has chewed the same ne

      • FTFY. Not that the Chinese government isn't the ultimate example of this kind of thinking in the 21st century, but this kind of hogwash and claptrap has been the bread and butter for statist pigs for millenia.

        Whatever about states and statists, this kind of press release is pretty typical of what has come out of corporate PR offices in the last decade or two.

        I digress by noting the cosy relationship between corporations and the Chinese state over the same period.

    • Yeah, it's called "socialist morality". Look it up.
    • by ravenspear ( 756059 ) on Tuesday March 08, 2011 @12:46AM (#35415488)

      And the US is complicit, as long as China keeps paying.

      The infrastructure that powers China's firewall (interconnections, deep packet inspection routers, software filters, etc) was built and configured by US corporations.

      China is not the only place where economic considerations trump human rights for many people.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Yeah I wasn't saying it was exclusively US companies, but I do know that companies like Cisco played a big part.

          • Yeah I wasn't saying it was exclusively US companies, but I do know that companies like Cisco played a big part.

            They just got the ball rolling. I don't think China has any intention of being dependent upon Cisco (or any other foreign corporation) for critical infrastructure for any longer than necessary to develop their on in-house replacements.

      • If the US is complicit in Chinese traffic filtering, then gun manufacturers are complicit in all bank robberies, knife manufacturers are complicit in muggings, and beer manufacturers are complicit in bar-brawls.

    • Eh, give them time to develop the 30 minute sit-com. Then these hamfisted methods won't be needed anymore. But I have to ask, who's making more noise about wikileaks?

    • If it's filtering things like child porn and mass produced soap operas - information shaping is fine by me...
      • ONLY thinks like child porn? ONLY things like mass produced soap operas? I take it you welcome porn for adults, "Return of the Condor Heroes", news of the Jasmine Revolution? BTW, the phrase "information shaping" is a bit revealing.
        • ONLY thinks like child porn? ONLY things like mass produced soap operas? I take it you welcome porn for adults, "Return of the Condor Heroes", news of the Jasmine Revolution? BTW, the phrase "information shaping" is a bit revealing.

          Yes. Synonymous with "filtering based upon identification of specific content."

      • by slick7 ( 1703596 )

        If it's filtering things like child porn and mass produced soap operas - information shaping is fine by me...

        That's fine and all, however,I wouldn't trust the P(i)R(a)C(y) to administer anything. The P(i)R(a)C(y), for the last several thousand years has a checkered past of corruption at all levels of government. The only half credible government, IMHO was the Ming dynasty, and even that, I'm sure, had its problems too.

  • Chinese virtues as in blocking and tracking what people post?

    • by c0lo ( 1497653 )

      Chinese virtues as in blocking and tracking what people post?

      No, but rather on the line of "To win 100 victories in 100 battles is not the highest skill". Which translates to:

      "multiple Gigabits per second and tens of millions of packets per second" (2nd TFA) is still puny. We need a bigger bandwidth and better coordination.

  • Why is it that when a attack originates in China, people immediately think it was ordered by the chinese government, but if it originates from Turkey -- not so much?
    Perhaps because we don't understand the Chinese too well?

    "Turkey says it will step up administration of the Internet this year while continuing to build out the country's fiber-optic backbone and expand broadband access for consumers. Internet administration was mentioned in a keynote report on the work of the government to Turkey's parliamentar

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Please. The Chinese "People" are ordinary people, much like the rest of us. They go to work, build friendships, try to get laid... imposing their control and world view in a global sense isn't much of a concern for them. But we're talking about someone that has these inclinations of imposing control.

      Now, the Chinese Government calls itself "The Ruling Party", and mobilizes their police force to prevent international news reporters from actually reporting anything that has to do with a certain inspirational

  • by Troll-Under-D'Bridge ( 1782952 ) on Tuesday March 08, 2011 @12:03AM (#35415256) Journal

    China says it will step up administration of the Internet this year

    If politically, the US is a nation of lawyers, then, as a single-party state, the PROC is effectively a nation of administrators. The US Congress might debate about network neutrality, but in China all issues pertaining to the Internet are viewed as problems of administration (management). China, Inc. makes more sense than the old Japan, Inc.

    The PC World article references a downloadable PDF translation of Premier Wen's report to the National People's Congress from the Wall Street Journal [wsj.com]. The part about administering the Internet comes from a section titled "Vigorously enhancing cultural development".

    We will develop the press and publishing, radio and television, film, literature and art and archives. We will step up the use and administration of the Internet. We will deepen reform of the cultural management system and actively push forward the transformation of cultural institutions that are operating as commercial entities into real businesses.

    The word "administration" occurs at least 15 times throughout the document, chiefly in the construct "social administration" and goes well with an image of Wen as some sort of company president or CEO delivering his annual stockholders' (party) report.

    Geek note: The ~3 MB PDF appears to be a series of scanned pages overlaid upon the OCR [wikipedia.org]'ed text version of the document. So you can actually cut and paste the text.

    • China's love for administrators runs far, far deeper than a difference between single-party rule and liberal democracy. China has been an authoritarian bureaucracy since at least the Qin Dynasty whereupon Shang Yang's legalist reforms were applied across the whole nation. For thousands of years it was the dream of most literate Chinese (and extensibly their families) to pass the civil service exams and become respected bureaucrats. After so many generations that has become inextricable from the Chinese cult
  • Wait for the Chinese population to be as economically dependent on e-commerce as we are (which will happen very soon with widespread broadband availability). That will make it seem very unreasonable for the government to outlaw SSL without a major outcry from its populace. After that, the world should gradually move to make http over SSL the norm rather than the exception. Webmasters of the world, I'm looking at you. Let's see if the "great firewall" can handle that proficiently.
    • by 0olong ( 876791 )
      Uh, no. The Chinese government will just block everything but their own mandated and back-doored encryption alternative to SSL?
  • What gets me, is how easily American international corporations and businesses - (think "big box" and "dollar stores" among other Importers) bed down with these totalitarian statist "one party rule" Chinese thugs. I cannot think of a single instance, whereby the Chinese Mandarin Rulers in Beijing have "lightened up" a little; not on Tibet; not on Hong Kong; not on Japan; not on Southeast Asia; not on the U.S. Navy in the Pacific Far East; and not on Taiwan, to name just a few concerns. Why we Americans do
  • I read that as "stop up internet administration". I think my version is more likely to come to pass.

  • Soon they'll have Gb/s+ internet access to all those people, now if they could only figure out how to FEED THEM. But no, great job guys. Maybe if they're spending so much time online playing MMMMMORPG's, they won't notice they're starving to death. If only you could stream a bowl of rice...
  • After all, once they shut down NPR and PBS the only open and uncontrolled source of information that is readily accessible to all of the American people will be the 'net...and since the right doesn't like facts and the truth obscuring their message...their manipulation, that is...

    Well, if you're a gambling man I think you could call an eventual attempt by the Republicans to speed up the establishment of moral and behavioral norms that carry forward traditional American virtues ("virtues" which will be defi

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