China crackdown on VPN services that skirt online censorship of websites such as Google and Facebook

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By J Maslow

 

China blocks VPN services making it impossible to reach popular websites such as Google and Facebook.
China blocks VPN services making it impossible to reach popular websites such as Google and Facebook.China blocks VPN services that skirt online censorship

China blocks VPN services that skirt online censorship

BEIJING (AP) — China is blocking VPN services that let users skirt online censorship of popular websites such as Google and Facebook amid a wider crackdown on online information, tech companies and specialists said Friday.

The virtual private network provider Golden Frog wrote on its blog that the controls have hit a wide swath of VPN services. The popular provider Astrill informed its users this week that the controls have started hitting iPhone access to services such as Gmail this year.

The Chinese government blocks thousands of websites to prevent what it deems politically sensitive information from reaching Chinese users. Many foreigners in China as well as millions of Chinese depend on VPNs to connect to servers outside the country and access blocked information and Google-based business tools.

China-based entrepreneur Richard Robinson said the controls have particularly hurt small- and medium-sized foreign companies that depend on VPNs. Many larger companies can afford direct connections to servers outside the country, he said.

Over the past weeks, Chinese censors have already blocked what remaining access there is to Gmail and other Google products. Google services have been periodically blocked or limited since 2010 when the company said it would no longer cooperate with China’s censors.

“These smaller businesses, they’re dependent on Gmail,” Robinson said. “And it’s all in the Google services that people are really screwed.”

The crackdown comes during sensitive political times in China, as President Xi Jinping’s government prosecutes top Chinese officials accused of corruption, said Xiao Qiang, an adjunct professor with UC Berkeley’s School of Information.

“We all know that China is in the middle of a very ferocious power struggle or political cleansing under the name of an anti-corruption campaign,” Xiao said. “That to me is a very clearly related fact with the amount of political rumors and information related to China’s high politics showing up in websites outside of China.”

And while the controls hurt businesses that depend on online information and tools, Chinese censors are more worried about restricting political information, Xiao said.

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