Jump to content

China responds to Clinton allegations


nsane.forums

Recommended Posts

medium.jpg

China does not restrict internet freedom, apparently

The Chinese government has responded to comments made by US secretary of state Hillary Clinton about the ongoing Google controversy.

According to reports, a statement posted today on China's Foreign Ministry web site accused the US of making ungrounded accusations, specifically in regard to the way it does, or does not, censor the internet.

The Chinese foreign ministry was reacting to a long speech by Clinton, in which she said that an "information curtain" was descending on the area.

"The US has criticised China's policies to administer the internet, and insinuated that China restricts internet freedom," said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu.

"This runs contrary to the facts and is harmful to China-US relations. We urge the US to respect the facts and cease using so-called internet freedom to make groundless accusations against China."

How accurate this is remains to be seen. China blocks social networking sites Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, restricts access to the web, and recently began censoring text messages in some of its provinces.

However, despite these measures, and the Google hacking incident, it looks increasingly likely that the web firm will stay in China, albeit with some changes to the way it offers, or censors, search results.

Google chief executive Eric Schmidt said during an earnings call yesterday that the firm is "quite committed to being in China", but on "somewhat different terms than we have been".

This would tally with Clinton's speech when she called on China to stop censoring search results.

view.gif View: Original Article

Link to comment
Share on other sites


  • Replies 3
  • Views 674
  • Created
  • Last Reply

china_firewall_ars-thumb-230x130-5942-f.jpg

In the wake of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's major speech yesterday on Internet freedom, a speech in which she called out countries like Egypt, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, Iran, and China, most governments have yet to respond. China, however, was quick to reply after dealing with the Google issue for a week already.

Here's what has happened in 24 turbulent hours.

view.gif View: Original Article

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...