|
It is only a matter of time before a controversial scheme to install Internet filtering software on all computers begins in China, a state newspaper said on Thursday, after the plan was abruptly delayed this week. The surprise climbdown was reported late on Tuesday by Xinhua news agency, which said the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology would "delay the mandatory installation of the controversial 'Green Dam-Youth Escort' filtering software on new computers". Officials said the software was intended to stamp out Internet pornography, and computer companies had originally been told they had to bundle "Green Dam" with any personal computers heading to stores for sale in the country from Wednesday. But the order was assailed by opponents of censorship, industry groups and Washington officials as rash, politically intrusive, technically ineffective and commercially unfair. PC companies have mostly avoided making firm public statements on the issue. But the English-language China Daily, citing an unidentified ministry official, said the plan would eventually come to pass. "The government will definitely carry on the directive on Green Dam. It's just a matter of time," the official was quoted as saying. The reason for the delay was because some computer makers needed more time to include the software, it said. "What will happen is that some PC manufacturers will have it included with their PC packages sooner than the others," he said. "But there is no definite deadline at the moment." The ministry declined comment when contacted by Reuters. The decision was the latest turn in a see-saw battle between the ruling Communist Party, wary of the Internet as a conduit of political dissent and objectionable values, and social and commercial forces pressing to use the Internet as a channel for more unfettered expression. Google has also been caught in recent controversy over censorship, and the stakes for citizens and companies can be high. China has about 300 million Internet users. About 42.6 million personal computers will be sold across the country this year, according to data research firm Gartner. The country's largest PC brand is homegrown Lenovo, though global players such as HP, Dell and Acer have made considerable headway in the market in recent years. |
Partners for Mozilla's Boot to Gecko mobile OS to be revealed at MWC
Suspicion grows China was behind hack of US commission
Internet addiction similar to drugs, alcohol addiction: Report
India accused of hacking into U.S commission's emails
Samsung televisions may come with Google TV, next year
Facebook denies hack in India, assures safety
The latest "should they-shouldn't they" event with Facebook is the lift of the minimu...
Leaked Images, Availability, Pricing,
Specs, Pre-order
Top 5 free all-in-one messengers for Windows
The number of instant messaging services have exploded, since the first...
Project Darpan: Digitizing Indian local languages
Compared to the relatively slow adoption rate of the traditional PC, that...
Top 10 tips for Internet Explorer 9
Microsoft’s browser Internet Explorer has been around a while and things
By Tech2

Portable Wi-Fi Drives for your smartphone
Ritwick Halder
Sat May 26, 20:46:06
Exploring Apps Store: Apps for the Samsung Galaxy Note
Andi Braime
Sat May 26, 20:00:23
Exploring Apps Store: Apps for the Samsung Galaxy Note
Andi Braime
Sat May 26, 19:59:32
Sony to roll-out ICS update next week,...
BlackBerry Curve 9320 announced in India...
Microsoft VP talks about Ballmer's...
Cisco won't invest in their Android...

















Mixx
Facebook
Twitter
Digg
delicious
reddit
MySpace
StumbleUpon
LinkedIn































































_011517074205_160x90.jpg)















