Last updated: May 23, 2011 - 8:40am
Cisco, the maker of Internet routing gear, customized its technology to help China track members of the Falun Gong spiritual movement, according to a federal lawsuit filed last week by members of the movement.
The lawsuit, which relies on internal sales materials, also said that Cisco had tried to market its equipment to the Chinese government by using inflammatory language that stemmed from the Maoist Cultural Revolution. The suit was filed May 19 in Federal District Court for the Northern District of California in San Jose by the Human Rights Law Foundation on behalf of members of Falun Gong. It contends that Cisco helped design the controversial “Golden Shield” firewall that is used to censor the Internet and track opponents of the Chinese government. The lawsuit names several Cisco executives, including the chairman and chief executive, John T. Chambers. It seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages and to enjoin Cisco from unlawful activity.
Links to Sources
- Login or register to post comments
- Email this page
Related
- Free Software Takes Users Around Filters
- New evidence links Cisco to jailing and torture of Chinese
- Chinese Calls Prompts CBC to Pull Show
- Cisco File Raises Censorship Concerns
- The means exist to rupture Internet censorship -- if the State Department will cooperate
- Top China Video Site Steps Up Its Piracy Fight
- Mrs. Clinton, Tear Down this Cyberwall
- State Department to fund group to skirt Internet censorship across the globe
- Political Cues in China Web Filter
- The Internet War
- Yahoo Asks Court In U.S. to Dismiss Suit Over China
- Enabling China
- US Firm Acknowledges Syria Uses Its Gear to Block Web
- Fighting China's Golden Shield: Cisco sued over jailing and torture of dissidents
- India Grapples With Web Censorship
Topics
Location
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

