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China Begins Monitoring Billions of Text Messages

eldavojohn writes "The Telegraph is reporting that China has begun monitoring 'billions of text messages' in order to increase censorship. However, a People's Daily article claims they only monitor users who have been reported, and only shut down their message service if the complaints are true. Anything considered pornographic will require the user to bring a letter of guarantee to the local public security bureau promising to never again send such messages before service can be reactivated."

6 of 178 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Monitoring is universal by sakdoctor · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Does anyone, in any country use SMS for more than "meet in bar at 7"?
    It's 140 characters. It's expensive per tiny unit of information (UK). It spawned a whole degenerate sub language, and it's just about the lamest way that two humans can communicate.

    In china it's cheap, but I still wouldn't use it for my revolution planning. Encrypted XMPP/self run multi-protocol gateway (MSN, ICQ etc)/VOIP over 3G FTW.

  2. But in the us you don't go to jail for religion th by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    But in the us you don't go to jail for being a part of the religion that is not the one the sate forces you to be in.

  3. Logistics by adbge · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Ethical concerns aside, it would be extremely interesting to see how censorship on this large of a scale is implemented.

    I wonder how effective automated modern systems will be at filtering, and how much of the censorship will have to rely on human employees. Total cost? Effectiveness? Cultural implications?

  4. idk by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I think it'd be hard enough for computers to decipher English LOL-speak, much less Chinese.

    Sooo, who is going to offer the first hardware encryption in handsets...and how soon would THAT be forbidden?

  5. I'm fascinated ... by PPH · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ... by the parallels between the Chinese and American right wingers' war on pornography. I'd think that the Chinese would be more intent on stamping out possible challenges to Communist rule (Falun Gong), independence movements (Tibet) and threats to national security. The American conservative logic is more understandable. The economic conservatives don't care about porn per se (its just another business after all), but in order to assemble a viable voting block, their 'deal with the devil' (the religious right) requires that they adopt their position that every ejaculation must have a name. The Chinese don't suffer from the same political pressures as the GOP does. There's no opposition party espousing sexual freedom that could benefit from the circulation of porn. Sitting at home wanking in front of the computer screen is not an activity around which groups tend to organize.

    Although the battle cry of our right wingers has been "Godless Commies", it seems that these two groups share quite a bit of ideology.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  6. Here's the deal. by eddy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Anyone who doesn't think every SMS in the US (for example) is passed into the NSA is naive beyond belief. The difference is that in the west doing this snooping is still a 'dirty secret', while in china they see value in the people knowing they're monitored. Keeps everything calm. In the west being open about this would have the opposite effect, and we all want everything to remain calm, right? They all do it "for the people" of course.

    The EU as a whole isn't there yet, but the infrastructure is coming up as fast as the laws can be pushed through.

    Even if your local government quite dislike the idea of Total Interception, they'll still do it because information is the currency in the global military industrial information complex. If moscow will trade you information about Al-Qaeda for information about some chinesee dissident in your country...

    Sheesh, nowadays you can't talk about the world we live in without sounding like a friggin nutcase.

    --
    Belief is the currency of delusion.