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Thursday, June 11, 2009

China's "Green Dam" Censorware Could Spawn a Zombie Network

The country's latest attempt to control its citizens' Internet use could backfire badly.
By Erica Naone

Controversy erupted this week over reports that the Chinese government plans to require all computers sold in the country to come with software that screens for objectionable websites. Although initial criticism came from privacy advocates and those most concerned about censorship, experts have also now found that the software could introduce critical security risks to computers across the country.

According to the BBC, the software communicates in plain text with central servers at its parent company. Not only does this potentially place personal information in the hands of eavesdroppers, but it could also allow hackers to take over PCs running the software, creating a massive zombie network that could deliver spam or attack other computers across the globe.

The report adds that the software does not seem to work as intended, sometimes blocking ordinary websites and failing to block others that contain objectionable content. And the software appears to work only on Microsoft Windows, not on Macs or Linux machines.

The news, while disturbing, is unsurprising. It's not the first time that attempts to censor and monitor users have placed personal information at risk. Late last year, for example, researchers at the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto uncovered massive surveillance of users of instant-messaging service TOM-Skype, largely because the data being collected was unprotected and accessible over the Internet.

The Internet does not lend itself to central control, and China's government continues to struggle with that fact, both on a philosophical level, as the larger debate on censorship shows, and on a technical level.

Comments

  • Oh
    This was one of the first articles I found that related Tom-Skype and Green Dam. ah... hate China for doing this. Not smart!

    Leumas
    laowise.com
    http://www.laowise.com
    Rate this comment: 12345

    samuelgilman
    06/13/2009
    Posts:1
    Avg Rating:
    5/5
    • Re: Oh
      I also agree with you on that, I also don't understand that why Chinese gov put so many restrictions on its people. Everyone have rights of freedom as well as privacy.

      technical writing | website designing
      Rate this comment: 12345

      sem
      08/03/2009
      Posts:2
  • Green Damn It and China Cats
    Have you considered Green Damn It and biz as usual in China?

    Mandatory. Not mandatory. Mandatory for Acer of .tw. Mandatory for Sony, from the land of the Rising Sun. And really mandatory for China's own, Lenovo. They've already loaded Green Damn It. HP and Dell. Not mandatory. They held their water.

    So... to bad for numbers one and two. Probably. Not on the payroll. Lenovo? They'll get compensated at Hodge Podge to keep up the Green Damn It. You, know, to make up for the "penny stock elevator going down" situation. That won't show up on the Stockholders report, but it will be there.

    After that? Dell and HP's in Shanghai. Lenovo's in Zhejiang and fill in the province here. And on and on. Has to be.

    The catsouttathebag on a regional basis.

    Not going back in there. Take care of business as usual and get on with it.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    medison
    07/04/2009
    Posts:1
  • Strangling its peoples
    China continues to go overboard with introduction of such privacy strangling stuff. There's should be a limit to intervening in people's private lives. Instead of facilitating life, the Chinese are making life even more miserable for its already oppressed people. And worse, they do it for no logical reason.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    dubizzle
    08/16/2009
    Posts:2
    Avg Rating:
    1/5
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