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CYBER WARS
Blocked Internet firms on Chinese charm offensive
By Julien GIRAULT
Beijing (AFP) Nov 11, 2015


Moscow tells Twitter to store Russian users' data in Russia
Moscow (AFP) Nov 11, 2015 - Moscow has warned Twitter that it must store Russian users' personal data in Russia, under a new law, the national communications watchdog told AFP on Wednesday.

Legislation that came into force on September 1 requires both Russian and foreign social media sites, messenger services and search engines to store the data held on Russian users on servers located inside the country.

The controversial law was adopted amid Internet users' growing concerns about the storage of their data, but also as Russia has moved to tighten security on social media and online news sites that are crucial outlets for the political opposition.

Non-compliance could lead Russia's communications watchdog Roskomnadzor to block the sites and services.

Roskomnadzor spokesman Vadim Ampelonsky confirmed to AFP that Russia had changed its initial position on US-based Twitter, which it had previously said did not fall under the law.

Twitter must comply because it now asks users to supply their personal data, Ampelonsky said, confirming earlier comments by the head of Roskomnadzor Alexander Zharov to Russian media.

Roskomnadzor has sent both Twitter and Facebook official messages asking whether they intend to comply with the law but neither has replied, Ampelonsky said.

"A few months ago, Twitter changed its terms of use [...] and now collects personal data, according to us," Roskomnadzor head Zharov told Russian media on Tuesday.

In July, the watchdog had said the new legislation would not apply to Twitter because the service did not store users' data.

The deputy head of the watchdog, Maxim Ksenzov, in May threatened to block Twitter in Russia, only to be reprimanded by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, an avid social media user, who recommended officials "switch on" their brains.

Twitter declined to comment when contacted by AFP on Wednesday.

Google, Facebook and Twitter are all banned in China, but the Internet giants' top executives are increasingly frequent visitors to Beijing as they seek opportunity and profit from the world's second-largest economy, despite concerns over censorship.

Google terminated most of its operations in mainland China in 2010 after controversy over the country's online controls and an attack on users of its Gmail service.

But Eric Schmidt, its former CEO and now president of its new parent company Alphabet, was in Beijing last week declaring: "We never left China."

"We would very much like to serve all of China," he told a Techcrunch forum. "We continue to chat with the government."

Google has kept around 500 employees in Beijing and Shanghai, mainly selling advertising spots to Chinese companies.

The country's Communist authorities operate vast limits on Internet access, dubbed the Great Firewall of China, and exercise formidable censorship within their cyber borders.

Facebook has been blocked since 2009, its photo-sharing subsidiary Instagram has been unavailable since last year's pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, and Twitter and Google-owned YouTube are inaccessible.

Nonetheless, the CEOs of several Silicon Valley giants lined up to be photographed alongside Chinese President Xi Jinping during his state visit to the United States in September.

When China's top Internet official Lu Wei visited Facebook's headquarters last year he was photographed at CEO Mark Zuckerberg's desk -- with Xi's book The Governance of China next to the billionaire's laptop.

Facebook claims more than a billion active daily users, and China's 668 million Internet users represent a huge potential market -- if access to it is ever unblocked.

Zuckerberg's Chinese-language speech to Tsinghua University in Beijing last year caused a sensation, and he was back last month to remind students of a Chinese proverb urging perseverance: "If you work hard enough, you can grind an iron bar down to a fine needle. With patience, you can change the world."

- 'Internet sovereignty' -

US think tank Freedom House listed China as the world's worst abuser of Internet freedom in a report last month, and campaign groups express concern for Internet freedoms worldwide if firms begin kowtowing to Beijing's strict censorship demands.

China hopes to push for "Internet sovereignty" -- the concept that each country should have the right to control the Internet as it sees fit.

It has promoted the concept at high-profile events such as the "World Internet Conference" it mounted last year.

"We have great concerns that Internet companies may kind of lower their standards and comply with some Chinese practices that are contrary to human rights, especially freedom of expression and users' right to privacy," said William Nee, China researcher for Amnesty International.

Google Maps has once again become accessible from mainland computers, but it shows the nine-dash line delineating Beijing's claim to almost the whole South China Sea and identifies Taiwan as a "province", among other differences to the global version.

- 'Bigger and bigger' -

Chinese state mouthpieces such the official Xinhua news agency and broadcaster CCTV are not averse to Western social media, spreading Beijing's gospel -- in English -- on Twitter and Facebook.

The two firms are also seeking Chinese corporate and government clients. Several Chinese cities have set up Facebook pages to promote themselves to foreign tourists, while Xi's US tour in September had a verified page on the network.

"Twitter is not yet here" but it does have mainland clients, said Alan Lan, Twitter's head of online sales for Greater China, which includes Taiwan and Hong Kong.

"We have a lot of local enterprises whose communication is Chinese but (which) need to think globally: that's where Twitter comes and can help," he told the Techcrunch event.

Jeremy Goldkorn, founder of Danwei, which tracks Chinese media and the Internet, told AFP that Western social media giants were more likely to generate revenue from Chinese advertisers than users.

They cannot hope "to be able to operate in China the same way they do in America and in Europe", he said.

"The only way they will be able to operate is by making quite a lot of concessions to the Chinese government... and I don't think they are ready for it."

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Previous Report
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Chinese still 'jumping' firewall to use Twitter: study
Washington (AFP) Nov 4, 2015
China's blocking of Twitter has failed to keep activists, journalists and others from using the messaging platform to connect with the rest of the world, said a study released Wednesday. The study by Harvard University's Berkman Center for Internet and Society said it was not possible to estimate the number of Chinese Twitter users but said that "this alternative venue is enjoyed by various ... read more


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