China will still require Green Dam Web filter program
It is just "a matter of time" before China requires PC makers to ship the program, state media said
By Owen Fletcher
,
IDG News Service
, 07/02/2009
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China has not lifted its requirement that an Internet filtering program be shipped with all computers sold in the country,
even though the plan was postponed this week, state media said Thursday.
It is just "a matter of time" before the mandate for PC makers to ship the program takes effect, the website of the official
newspaper China Daily cited an unnamed official as saying Thursday.
China indefinitely delayed enforcement of the mandate late Tuesday, just hours before the deadline originally set for foreign
and domestic PC makers to ship the program. But the announcement also said China would continue seeking input on how to carry
out the plan.
China says the program, called Green Dam Youth Escort, is meant to protect children from "harmful" information online. The
program blocks pornography and other content, including some related to politically sensitive issues such as criticisms of
a former president. Sites are also blocked if they reference Falun Gong, the spiritual movement banned as a cult in China.
Foreign industry groups and the U.S. government had protested the mandate over concerns including the program's security,
free speech, user privacy and the software's alleged theft of code from a U.S. company.
But China pushed back its mandate only because PC makers said they needed more time to prepare and to distribute the software,
not because of copyright infringement concerns, China Daily cited the official in the Ministry of Industry and Information
Technology (MIIT) as saying.
"The government will definitely carry on the directive on Green Dam," the official was quoted as saying.
Chinese PC makers including Lenovo said they would still ship the program, according to the report. Lenovo did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.
Foreign PC makers did not appear to relax when China pushed back the Green Dam requirement. A Hewlett-Packard spokeswoman
repeated an earlier comment that the company is seeking additional information. A Dell spokeswoman said the company supported
China's goal of protecting children from online pornography and would work to educate customers about filtering software that
has been thoroughly tested.
A spokesman at the MIIT declined to comment.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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Comments (1)
Green Damn It and China CatsBy Max Edison on July 4, 2009, 12:48 amHave 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...
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