Chinese Internet policy
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External Websites
- Brigham Young University - ScholarsArchive - Censorship Sensing: The Capabilities and Implications of China’s Great Firewall Under Xi Jinping
- Stanford University - Computer Science Department - China's Great Firewall
- Asia Society Policy Institute - The Great Firewall: The Effects of China’s Internet Policies
Also known as: the Great Firewall of China
Written by
Nicholas Gisonna
Fact-checked by
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Last Updated: •Article History
- Also called:
- the Great Firewall of China
Great Firewall, regulatory and technological system of Internet control used by the Chinese government to monitor, filter, or block Internet-based content for users within the country. The Great Firewall was deployed to selectively separate Chinese cyberspace from the outside world and to prevent Chinese citizens from accessing information that the government has deemed detrimental or potentially destabilizing to the country’s interests.
Development of the Great Firewall
In the late 1990s the number of Internet users grew rapidly in China. While Chinese leaders understood the potential value that the Internet could provide by granting greater access to global markets and technologies, they were reluctant to jeopardize their authority and control. To gain greater control of the Internet, in 1998 China’s Ministry of Public Security began an initiative called the Golden Shield Project to control the flow of information. The project sought methods to control and monitor citizens’ Internet activity and prevent people from reaching websites that did not conform to the Chinese government’s strict policies. The result of this project was the virtual boundary known as the Great Firewall.
Overview
The Great Firewall uses a variety of legislative and technological functions to achieve the goal of Internet control. China’s government has mandated that companies are responsible for their public content; therefore, companies must self-censor their public-facing content to eliminate prohibited topics or obscene material. The content itself is directly monitored by the government or by the government-controlled Internet companies that serve China’s users. Key tactics of Internet control include filtering keywords, blocking select foreign websites and apps, and blocking IP addresses from certain regions. By law, the Great Firewall prevents users from accessing content that may incite political resistance of any kind or would reveal state secrets. Content related to pornography, gambling, or violence is also blocked by the Great Firewall.
More technologically advanced methods are continually being employed as part of the Great Firewall, some of which are often used by malicious hackers. Though the full scope of the Great Firewall’s methods is only known to those who operate and manage the system, security experts have been able to surmise some of the methods. Through a tactic known as Domain Name System (DNS) poisoning, for example, the government can instruct its Internet service provider companies to block or redirect DNS queries sent to banned websites. Information shared on the Internet in China is also subjected to a monitoring system that uses sophisticated Deep Packet Inspection (DPI) techniques to review the metadata of each data packet (a short fixed-length section of data transmitted as a unit) exchanged when a user requests to visit a website. The Great Firewall can also block traffic to a web address by interfering with its network connections through a method known as a Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) reset attack. These techniques are applied by government authorities who inspect and control online communication.
The combination of the techniques employed by the Great Firewall affects a massive amount of content from around the globe. Popular social media sites such as Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and Discord are blocked by the Great Firewall. Streaming sites such as YouTube and Netflix are also forbidden, as are news sites such as The New York Times, Thomson Reuters, The Washington Post, and The Economist.
The Great Firewall has created a captive market of isolated users in China who are left with no choice but to use the domestic alternatives to the blocked international sites. China effectively has built an Internet within the Internet. In doing so, it has allowed the presence of a number of websites that offer services that mirror those provided by some of the external websites that it has banned. Chinese users have access to WeChat and Weibo for social media and messaging. There are also several music streaming services available in China, including Baidu Yinyue, KuGou, and QQ Music. Moreover, there are China-only video streaming services such as Bilibili and Youku. Baidu, a popular search engine, meets the government’s strict requirements by adjusting its algorithms to censor its search results.
Criticism and concerns
Many human rights organizations have criticized the Chinese government for the rigorous and intrusive state surveillance employed by the Great Firewall. Critics have argued that by imposing the intensive censorship of the Great Firewall, China has limited its citizens’ ability to freely access information sources.
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The Great Firewall’s application has also been the subject of domestic protests and resistance. When China banned Google in 2010 because the company refused to comply with government demands to filter search results, online activists gathered at Google’s Beijing office and handed out flowers in symbolic protest. Additionally, Fang Binxing, a computer scientist who was instrumental in the creation of the Great Firewall, was pelted with eggs and shoes by a student when giving a speech at Wuhan University in 2011.
Despite the criticism of the Great Firewall, many technology companies have acquiesced to the Chinese government’s self-censorship regulations and developed different versions of their products tailored for users in China. The Microsoft Corporation, for example, has created a modified version of its Web search engine, Bing, to comply with Chinese regulations. Both Amazon.com and Google also have established separate sites that are in accordance with China’s self-censorship regulations.
Hong Kong and Macau, both of which are special administrative regions of China, have had relatively lower levels of Internet censorship compared with that of mainland China. However, there is growing concern about increasing censorship in Hong Kong. In June 2020 the Chinese government passed a series of national security rules relating to Hong Kong, which experts believe could increase the level of Internet censorship in the region.
Nicholas Gisonna