ˇ@
Google
threatens to quit China
ˇ@
WEB ATTACKS: The US demanded
an explanation from Beijing over Googleˇ¦s claim that hackers attempted to break
into the Gmail accounts of Chinese rights activists
REUTERS , SHANGHAI AND SAN FRANCISCO
Thursday, Jan 14, 2010, Page 1
ˇ§We want to express outrage, but not at Google. Coming here is a type of
support for Google.ˇ¨ˇX Zhao Gang, Chinese IT worker
Internet giant Google Inc on Tuesday made a shock threat to quit China, the
worldˇ¦s biggest Internet market by number of users, after hackers accessed human
rights activistsˇ¦ e-mail accounts.
ˇ§These attacks and the surveillance they have uncovered ˇX combined with attempts
over the past year to further limit free speech on the Web ˇX have led us to
conclude that we should review the feasibility of our business operations in
China,ˇ¨ Google chief legal officer David Drummond said in a statement.
ˇ§We recognize that this may well mean having to shut down Google.cn, and
potentially our offices in China,ˇ¨ he said.
TENSIONS
The hacking intensified Sino-US frictions as Washington said that Internet
control was a serious issue and demanded an explanation from Beijing.
ˇ§The ability to operate with confidence in cyberspace is critical in a modern
society and economy,ˇ¨ US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said yesterday.
ˇ§We have been briefed by Google on these allegations, which raise very serious
concerns and questions,ˇ¨ Clinton said in a statement in Honolulu. ˇ§We look to
the Chinese government for an explanation.ˇ¨
Beijing has not made any significant comment on Googleˇ¦s allegation.
Chinese authorities were ˇ§seeking more information on Googleˇ¦s statement that it
could quit China,ˇ¨ Xinhua news agency reported, citing an unnamed official at
the State Council Information Office.
China has said it does not sponsor hacking. Its officials have also accused the
West of seeking to undermine Chinaˇ¦s one-party rule by backing dissidents and
campaigns against censorship.
Google said the hackers in the recent attack had tried to break into Gmail
accounts of Chinese human rights activists, but only managed to access two
unidentified accounts, and could only see subject headings and other data such
as when the account was created.
It did not say what information the hackers tried to access from other
companies, nor which they were. Google said it was now notifying the other
affected corporations, adding it was working with US authorities.
A Google spokesperson said the company was still investigating the attack and
would not say whether Google believed Chinese authorities were involved.
A New York Times report on its Web site quoted James Mulvenon, an expert on
Chinese cyberwarfare capabilities, as saying: ˇ§A United States expert on cyber
warfare said that 34 companies were targeted, most of them high-technology
companies in Silicon Valley. The attacks came from Taiwanese Internet
addresses.ˇ¨
Microsoft, whose rival Hotmail e-mail service is also available in China, said
it had no indication that any of its mail properties had been compromised in
China.
CHINESE SUPPORT
Meanwhile, Googleˇ¦s announcement drew applause, warnings and bouquets from
dissidents and Internet activists yesterday, with few seeing much chance of the
wary government giving ground.
At the companyˇ¦s China headquarters in Beijingˇ¦s university district, a dozen
locals laid a bouquet of red roses and white lilies on Googleˇ¦s sign at the
entrance to the company.
They praised the company, shouting some salty Beijing slang.
ˇ§We want to express outrage, but not at Google. Coming here is a type of support
for Google,ˇ¨ IT worker Zhao Gang, 30, said.
ˇ§Google faces very strict and adverse conditions in China. Something we knew in
our hearts is now out in the open. I believe itˇ¦s a watershed moment for the
Internet in China this year,ˇ¨ Zhao said.
Chinese activists have long complained that the Communist Party has tightened
its grip on the Internet, stifling the spread of information and ideas in the
name of public safety and morals.
ˇ§The surprise isnˇ¦t the hacking or censorship. Thatˇ¦s everywhere here,ˇ¨ said Liu
Ning, a writer and blogger in Beijing. ˇ§The surprise is such a big company
breaking the silence about all these problems ... Until now, theyˇ¦ve kept
quiet.ˇ¨
Yet even Chinese dissidents who welcomed Googleˇ¦s stance saw little chance of
Beijing bowing to the renewed pressure, worried the countryˇ¦s 360 million
Internet users could be exposed to banned news and ideas, especially challenges
to one-party rule.
ˇ§Our space for expression on the Internet has been narrowing, because government
control has become increasingly detailed and pervasive. I donˇ¦t see that
relaxing,ˇ¨ said Xu Youyu, a Beijing academic who has campaigned for broader
human rights.
|