Last updated: October 2, 2008 - 8:43am
A group of Canadian human-rights activists and computer security researchers has discovered a huge surveillance system in China that monitors and archives certain Internet text conversations that include politically charged words. The system tracks text messages sent by customers of Tom-Skype, a joint venture between a Chinese wireless operator and eBay, the Web auctioneer that owns Skype, an online phone and text messaging service. The discovery draws more attention to the Chinese government's Internet monitoring and filtering efforts, which created controversy this summer during the Beijing Olympics. Researchers in China have estimated that 30,000 or more "Internet police" monitor online traffic, Web sites and blogs for political and other offending content in what is called the Golden Shield Project or the Great Firewall of China. The activists, who are based at Citizen Lab, a research group that focuses on politics and the Internet at the University of Toronto, discovered the surveillance operation last month. They said a cluster of eight message-logging computers in China contained more than a million censored messages. They examined the text messages and reconstructed a list of restricted words. The list includes words related to the religious group Falun Gong, Taiwan independence and the Chinese Communist Party, according to the researchers. It includes not only words like democracy, but also earthquake and milk powder.
Links to Sources
- Login or register to post comments
- Email this page
Related
- Far-Ranging Support for Google's China Move
- China to Scan Text Messages to Spot 'Unhealthy Content'
- U.S.-China meeting next month to include Internet freedom talk
- Google to Stop Censoring China Results, May Shut Site
- Censorship fears over China spam curb
- Google vs. China Round 2: China Underlines Its Laws, Google Stops Android Roll-Out
- UK 'exporting surveillance technology to repressive nations'
- For young activists, video is their voice
- Skype: We didn't know about security issues
- Rights Group Reports on Abuses of Surveillance and Censorship Technology
- Obama announces sanctions for tech used in human rights abuses in Iran and Syria
- Internet Users Invent Ways to Outwit Beijing's Censors
- In China, Labor Movement Enabled by Technology
- Letter From Forty-Four Digital Rights Groups Demands Skype Detail Its Surveillance Practices
- Mideast Uses Western Tools to Battle the Skype Rebellion
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

