China trying to export its Great Firewall and governance model

Beware of Communists bearing internet governance proposals, says Australian 
Strategic Policy Institute

By Simon Sharwood, APAC Editor, Wed 24 Nov 2021 
https://www.theregister.com/2021/11/24/aspi_chinese_internet_governance_report/


China is actively trying to export its internal internet governance model, 
according to a paper from the International Cyber Policy Centre at the 
Australian Strategic Policy Institute.

Titled "China's cyber vision: How the Cyberspace Administration of China is 
building a new consensus on global internet governance", the paper outlines how 
China perceives sovereignty over its internet as having equivalent importance 
to sovereignty over its territory.

www.aspi.org.au/report/chinas-cyber-vision-how-cyberspace-administration-china-building-new-consensus-global

Recent data security initiatives that restrict Chinese data from going 
offshore, and crackdowns on tech giants, are both expressions of Beijing's 
desire to ensure that the Communist Party of China (CCP) can control the 
internet within China's borders.

Pervasive censorship with the Great Firewall is another element, as are the 
blizzard of new rules covering acceptable online content (another dropped 
yesterday, restricting how celebrities can behave online as they engage with 
fans).

http://www.cac.gov.cn/2021-11/22/c_1639177815270259.htm

China is also working to share the rules with which it governs its own internet 
with other nations, and to "enact policies jointly with international 
governments and companies on mechanisms to co-govern the global internet, or at 
least growing national segments of it, while reshaping global norms and 
standards based on the model of the CCP's approach domestically," the paper 
states.

A key tool for that effort is the World Internet Conference – an event that 
despite its name has only ever been staged in China since its inception in 
2014. The 2021 edition of the conference attracted speakers including Elon 
Musk, Cisco CEO Chuck Robbins, and Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon.

https://www.wuzhenwic.org/

"The World Internet Conference serves as an opportunity for China to 
collaborate with the international community on internet development innovation 
in addition to cooperating on internet co-governance mechanisms," the paper 
explains, adding that the event is pitched as an international forum but in 
reality is "under the direct management and supervision of officials under 
China's cyber policy system".

Technical standards are another front

The USA is also worried that China is attempting to dominate the organisations 
that control technical standards, and in April 2021 vowed that it would "lead 
in international standard-setting bodies that set the governance norms and 
rules for critical digitally enabled technologies".

The conference advances China's vision for the global internet, which is 
described with phrases such as "promoting openness and cooperation" and 
"building a sound order".

"Although those ideas sound innocuous, the CCP plans to encourage cooperation 
in cyberspace in order to extend its vision of cyberspace to countries that 
look to the PRC for assistance in accelerating development of internet 
infrastructure," the paper states.

The paper concludes that China's efforts need to be considered cautiously.

"Due to the lack of transparency within China's cyber policy system, countries 
that cooperate with China on internet development and participate in the World 
Internet Conference should be vigilant," the document recommends, before 
adding: "When approaching the topic of internet co-governance and development 
strategies with China, countries should consider the future of cyberspace and 
what information should be shared, and even controlled, by countries such as 
China."

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