The Chinese government is requiring that as of July 1 all personal PCs shipped into the country must have software that blocks access to certain types of Websites, according to the Wall Street Journal.The Chinese Ministry of Industry and Information Technology plans to require
that all personal computers sold in the country as of July 1 be shipped with
software blocking access to certain Internet sites, the Wall Street Journal is reporting.
The software is called "Green Dam-Youth Escort." In China,
"green" is said to refer to Internet use free from explicit adult
materials and other illicit content.
While the Chinese government hasn't made the news public yet, the Journal
reports that a May 19 Chinese government notice described the requirement as
"constructing a green, healthy and harmonious Internet environment, and
preventing harmful information on the Internet from influencing and poisoning
young people."
According to research company IDC, PC sales
to China are
projected to exceed 40 million units in 2009. PC manufacturers that don't
comply not only risk significant losses, but difficulties with factories and
research facilities in China.
By complying with the mandate, however, manufacturers
could be accused of enabling censorship.
A spokesperson for Hewlett-Packard responded that HP
is "working with the government authorities and evaluating the best way to
approach this," the Journal reported.
The Chinese government already runs an Internet filtering system, which many
Web surfers in China circumvent and that works at the network level, blocking
content that might be embarrassing to the government or that promotes ideas
it disagrees with, such as Falun Gong.
The Journal wrote that "the new method could give the government a way to
tighten its control, say foreign industry officials who have examined the
software."
The notice from the ministry reportedly said the Green Dam software must be
either preinstalled or enclosed on a CD. The software is said to have been
developed by Jinhui Computer System Engineering along with Beijin Dazheng Human Language Technology Academy and designed to work with Microsoft's Windows
operating system. According to the Journal, the founder of Jinhui, Bryan Zhang,
said the software could be turned off or uninstalled.
The group Global
Network Initiative, which has a tag line, "Protecting and Advancing
Freedom of Expression and Privacy in Information and Communications Technologies,"
has created guidelines for how to address censorship requests from countries.
Among its members are Google, Yahoo and Microsoft.
It is still unclear how the personal PC manufacturers will respond to the
Chinese government's request.