China’s 18th Communist National Party Congress opened in Beijing this week at the same time Twitter accounts have been hacked and there have been reports of problems gaining internet access in the country noted for its draconian censorship and intrusive online surveillance.

The ten yearly Congress formally endorses key leadership positions and sets the country’s agenda for the decade.

The decisions on appointments , including that of president and prime minister have already been settled as have those for other high ranking position in negotiations in the lead up to the congress.

But there is little input from the average citizen. And the Government is keen that netizens only get to hear what they want them to. Not that there anything unusual in that.

Officials have denied the Government ordered or was behind the hacking or loss of internet service but it is a mighty bid coincidence.

Ezine PolicyMic reports that Twitter notified a number of users today that their accounts may have been hacked.

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Research by the University of Toronto Citizen Lab shows that computer back doors are a permanent security risk to users through out the world.

Their research based on events in the middle east demonstrates readily available commercial software is being used by governments to infiltrate computers used by critics and dissidents.

Bloomberg news reported the case of Ahmed Mansoor who was sitting in “his study in Dubai and made the mistake of clicking on a Microsoft Word attachment that arrived in an e-mail, labeled “very important” in Arabic, from a sender he thought he recognized.

“With that click, the pro-democracy activist unwittingly downloaded spyware that seized on a flaw in the Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) program to take over his computer and record every keystroke. The hackers infiltrated his digital life so deeply they still accessed his personal e-mail even after he changed his password.

Since then, Mansoor, 42, an electrical engineer and father of four, says he has suffered two beatings by thugs in September during his campaign for citizens’ civil rights in the Persian Gulf federation of the United Arab Emirates. While those assailants remain unknown, researchers say they’ve figured out what was behind the virtual assault.

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China’s Great Firewall is proving to be about as effective at isolating netizens from the outside world as it’s physical name sake, the Great Wall of China, was at keeping the citizens isolated from attacks.

Both proved to be big, expensive failures.  Research released this week on the modern day version  indicates the size of that failure is in the tens of millions of Chinese readings and seeing what they like.

Market researcher GlobalWebIndex released data that showed Twitter and Facebook while supposedly blocked in China are among the most widely used services in the region outside of China-based options.

According to PCmag “When asked which services they had contributed to in the last month, 25 percent of surveyed Chinese users said they had used Google+, 15 percent used Facebook, and 8 percent accessed Twitter. The most popular option in China was Qzone (66 percent), followed by Sina Weibo (61 percent), and Tencent Weibo (56 percent).

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Facebooks IPO has generated much interest among China’s netizens however many of them are skeptical about the chances of its success in China where it is currently blocked.

Sina Weibo provided the following translations of online comments. They were published by the China Digital Times.

- A female colleague just came back from a blind date. She is quite excited. She said to me, this man is quite accomplished. He is just over thirty and is already the Chief Manager of the China Office of the Facebook. I said to her: grab him, don’t miss this one.

Following are some of the comments under this post:

- We are in the same business then. I am the CEO of the China office of Youtube*.

- I won’t tell you that I am the chief representative of the China office of *.

- I am exactly 30 this year. My father is the Commander-in-Chief of Mongolia’s Navy.

- Facebook’s prospectus has listed four countries which limited their citizens to visit their website: Syria, Iran, China, and North Korea. These are what in history books will be called the “four ancient civilizations.”

- The acronym [of the "four ancient civilizations"] is SICK.

- The sin of Facebook is that it lets people meet whom they want to meet. The sin of Twitter is that it lets people say what they want to say. The sin of Google is that it lets people know what they want to know. The sin of YouTube is that it lets people show the reality which needs to be shown. Almost all the world’s top ten websites are blocked in China. Why do we want to be the enemy of those technologies that have changed the world?

* [YouTube and Twitter are also blocked inside China]

 

The current controversy over Twitter‘s decision to allow countries to censor material it posts just shows how fast the young upstart can quickly become the rich conservative.

British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli is credited with the quote “If you are young and not liberal, then you have no heart; but if you are old and not conservative, then you have no brain.”

Twitter has been a key part of the move towards open societies and democratization round the world as for example the role it played in the Arab Spring, but like Google before it the temptation of the financial gains to be obtained by entering  markets like China means that role will apparently be sacrificed.

Twitter argues that it is simply obeying local laws. This fatuous argument has been used to justify any number of outrages through history, will twitter staff in those countries with Sharia law join in the occassional stoning of adulterers because it is the local law.

In an ideal world the rule of law and doing what is morally right would be entwined. In this imperfect world the best we can hope for is that those two views can be aired and debated by all members of a community in the hope of making the gap smaller even if only by a tiny amount.

That debate certainly does not happen in China, Burma, Cambodia, Thailand (the first country to publicly support Twitter’s position), much of the middle east and many other countries.

Censorship is justified in these countries on the grounds of maintaining social order. It does not. Repression, particularly of information, leads to paranoia, rumours and uncertainty. These are the foundations of social unrest. They create a pressure cooker that can be kept under control for a while by brutality and repression but at some time the lid blows and when it does it does not care who it hits.

A former member of the Khmer Rouge’s central committee who left the movement rather than take up arms once told me that much of the killing done in the immediate aftermath of the take over in Cambodia was due to a break down in the social order and a blood letting as people who had put up with so much for so long exacted a disproportionate revenge on those who had at some time repressed them even in the most minor way.

New media should be seen as safety valve for airing those grievances and either informing or shaming the authoities to take action. The issue is not that discontent is aired but rather that it is ignored. An open society in which people are treated fairly, have a say in the running of their own affairs and can hold their leaders responsible and accountable has nothing to fear from Twitter, Online Media or letters written in flames in the sky.

It is sad that a tool like Twitter or any social media should abandon the very qualities that make it so valuable to those seeking a better society. One presumes as has often been the way with the media the financial rewards become blinding.

Even Rupert Murdoch reputedly had a bust of Lenin in his rooms at University. His newspapers, particularly The Sun, were radical, accessible and innovative when launched in the 1960s, they provided much useful information particularly regarding women’s issues when the rest of the British media just thought of such things as “yucky”. And with this freshness and honesty came a rise in circulation and success –  a more than 4 million daily circulation (making it the largest english language daily paper in the world at the time). The 1 million GBP profit a week built the Murdoch empire but along the way the radical student’s papers moved away from trying to save innocent people from the gallows as his first paper in the Australian city of Adelaide did  to being ardent proponents of its return.

But even an editorial line supporting capital punishment may have been justifiable (despite the serious miscarriages of justice which ultimately lead to Parliament suspending then abolishing it) but  the telephone hacking scandal that came to light recently certainly is not. There was no public good in these intrusions, it was not a deterent against violent crime as death penalty proponents argue,  it was just a grubby new low point on a downward trajectory that had become more steep  as standards were abandoned for increased profits

It would behove Twitter to look at the history of the media, just because the technology is different does not mean the pitfalls of the business combined with the need to disseminate information have changed.

As they say in New Zealand “its the same meat just different gravy”.

 

Well known Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei says he will stop tweeting if Twitter is censored as proposed by Chinese authorities.

Ai Weiwei’s incredibly popular and twitter feed is seen as the trail blazer in online commentary in China.

He has reacted to the threat of his tweets, which are often critical of the regime, being blocked by saying he will just shut down.

The China Digital Times reported that: “the new policy has been widely read as a concession to allow Twitter to enter China, in a similar vein to Google’s aborted censorship of search results on Google.cn. The speculation has been fuelled by co-founder Jack Dorsey’s recent visit to Shanghai, though that trip may have had more to do with Dorsey’s e-payment company, Square. Speaking to The Associated Press, Google’s chief legal officer played down the focus on China:

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The Chinese government appears  ready to take a serious hold of micro-blogging sites using new recently passed regulations.

Authorities in China have been wary of micro-blogging since its inception but even more so following the Arab spring which saw social networks and micro blogs play a key role in toppling autocratic regimes.

New regulations were issued relating to micro-blogging and now it seems they are to be enforced.

The China Digital Times said “Weibo” the Chinese version of Twitter, has become a mighty conduit for sharing information, expressing political views, challenging officialdom and spreading rumours. Efforts to quell those rumours are being seen by some observers as a bid to close an avenue of anonymous digital dissent on the mainland.

It quoted the South China Morning Post which reported the controls may include issuing licenses to those sites that “can effectively eliminate rumours”, Song said. “Just like a supermarket, the food safety watchdog would hardly allow the operation of a supermarket if it regularly sold counterfeit or poisonous food.”

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The great firewall, China’s main weapon against free online access for its netizens, is often thought of as a blunt instrument but besides its blanket blocking of facebook or Twitter, there is a more subtle edge to what gets through and when.

PC magazine’s, Sascha Segan, took a trip across the border from Hong Kong to Shenzen to compare services directly behind the great firewall and that a bit  further away. 

HONG KONG—Here in Hong Kong, the Internet is global. But just over the border in the Chinese boom town of Shenzhen, major international websites get shut down behind the famed “Great Firewall of China.”

Watching the vibrant economic ferment in Shenzhen, it’s hard to remember that you’re in a totalitarian state. The Chinese folks I encountered were generally pretty blase about politics. Then again, Shenzhen is one of the richest cities in China, and the people I spoke to came from the relatively well-off professional classes.

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For countries like China and Burma monitoring social media sites is a routine matter and part of their regimes’ internal surveillance as part of broader efforts to control what information their citizens have access to.
 
But now western intelligence agencies are anylzing the likes of Facebook and Twitter, after the social media sites were seen as being central to surprise uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia.

Ezine Mobeledia reports intelligence officials in the U.K. have recently said the current events illustrated how this “open source” intelligence can be used as a barometer of opinion. Government alike are paying closer attention to the information freely available rather than focus strictly on the “secret” data, a top civil servant said.

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The so called “Father” of China’s vast internet censorship system found his own voice drowned out by the those targetted by his online child.

Fang Binxing, the 50-year-old president of Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, tried to launch his own online micro blog website but was forced to close it down as it became inundated with online criticism of him and his work.

Many p0sted comment to his site using expletives in criticisms of his role in repressing free speech by his creation of the  “Great Firewall”.

Fang removed his microblog on the popular web portal Sina.com on Monday, just a few days after launching it, The Global Times said Wednesday.

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