Feb 08 2010
In Xinjiang, the Internet is Guilty Until Proven Innocent

We are witnessing the birth of a new kind of internet censorship in the Xinjiang province of Western China: the kind where a web site must be specifically allowed, instead of specifically disallowed.
China’s largest province was disconnected from the world completely, including a shutdown of phones and SMS, after hundreds of people were killed in separatist protests by the Uyghur minority people in July. Today, the Far West Blog reports that 27 more web sites have been allowed through the previously complete internet block. Wow. A whole 27. That brings the total number of extra-provincial sites accessible to Xinjiang residents to 31, and all of them are inside China.
The Chinese government maintains that the US-based “World Uyghur Congress” instigated the riots from overseas using the internet and SMS. No communications, no riots, the logic goes. And perhaps this is true, if myopic (fascinating debate on this here).
But there is something very wrong about opening up sites one by one like this, despite the fact that state-run Xinhua news agency is playing it up as communications being “restored”. The current Xinjian policy represents a new and extremely troubling flavor of censorship: rather than some sites being blocked, some sites are allowed. This is a white list, as opposed to the usual black list; the default is now “no”. Bearing in mind that personal satellite dishes are illegal in China, this means the government has complete control over the information that people are exposed to. This is just like the pre-internet era in any number of times and places, really, but that doesn’t make it any better.
At least text messaging, including international text messaging, was restored two weeks ago.
According to Far West Blog, here is what you now get from the outside world if you live in Xinjiang:
- 7 News Sites (including China Daily and CCTV)
- 4 Travel Sites (including Ctrip and Air China)
- 3 Business & Finance Sites
- 3 Telecom Sites (all three major Chinese carriers)
- 2 Shopping Sites (including Taobao, China’s version of eBay)
- 2 Computer Service Sites (so you can update your anti-virus)
- 2 Gaming Sites (more flash games…yippee)
- 2 Education Sites (study materials for students and help for teachers)
- 1 Fashion Site
Yes, this also means no IM, no Skype, no email, no nothing outside of the province. “I have had to sit here and endure a frustrating feeling that we are now living in the stone ages,” says Far West Blog writer Josh.
These 31 sites seem ridiculously limited, and these limits (no email!) would severely hamper business in the affluent Eastern provinces. Xinjiang has only 20 million people, so perhaps China can more or less do without it for a while. But what if the national firewall let through only, say, the top 10,000 or 100,000 currently uncensored international sites? How much easier it would be to prevent some pesky overseas message board from cropping up to corrupt Chinese minds! Why, your world-censoring work would practically be done for you, and almost no one would be the wiser.
Let’s hope that this isn’t a precedent.
UPDATE: There are rumours, based on government statements in December, that a national whitelist is planned. Nothing definitive yet.

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