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Print 9 comment(s) - last by kingius.. on Jun 17 at 10:59 AM


China has blocked internet searches after riots and unrest struck its southern province of Guangdong, home to many impoverished migrant workers.  (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

Despite rampant censorship, the hacker collective Anonymous is yet to target the Chinese government as it did governments in the Middle East.
Anonymous remains silent on Chinese censorship

In China the long dreaded "Jasmine Revolution" might be starting to finally materialize.  Outraged and impoverished, migrant workers in Zengcheng, a city in the country's sea-facing southern Guangdong province, have taken to the streets in protest, clashing with police.  The protests and riots began last week when police told two migrant workers to stop selling goods in the street, and then proceeded to knock down one of the migrants who was pregnant.  Video of the incident went viral and soon everyone was outraged.

China has blocked Google searches for the word "Zengcheng".  It has installed similar blocks on the country's most popular microblogs, including Sina and Tencent.  The measures make it difficult for protest movements to materialize, given that the nation already blocks Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube (though government-monitored local variants of these respective services are popular).

Earlier this year China shut down the popular messaging service QQ, local social networks, and microblogs to try to quell ethnic unrest in Inner Mongolia (in China's northern provinces).  The nation also has made it impossible to search for the term "jasmine", aware of the calls for a "Jasmine Revolt".  Any search attempts simply result in the connection to the search servers resetting.

Dealing with China has become a frustrating exercise for American firms.  Google Inc. (GOOG), who maintain a strong search and smart phone presence in China accused the nation of trying to hack the Gmail accounts of dissidents and deny service to Gmail at different times this year.

In 2009, China's eastern-most province, Xinjiang, suffered riots that left 200 dead -- likely at the hands of police.  The Chinese government responded with the extreme measure of cutting off internet for six months to the region.

Surprisingly Anonymous, the international hacker group who was very active in the Middle Eastern revolts, has been silent on the growing China issue.  It is unclear whether Anonymous doesn't feel the Chinese government's censorship warrants or an attack or perhaps that it fears the cyber prowess of the nation.

China's military is a long ways behind the U.S. in technology, but in the online world China appears to be well ahead of the U.S.  The Chinese military maintains a large cyber espionage presence, and the Chinese government also allegedly hires individual hackers to do its dirty work.



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And back to business as usual...
By Iaiken on 6/15/2011 10:28:56 AM , Rating: 5
The real genius of the Chinese body politic is that they recognize that if they don't keep their people impoverished and desperate, western businesses will just go where they can find other impoverished and desperate people to exploit and the good times will roll past them.

In some industries, this is already happening as cost sensitive industries move to Indonesia, Bangladesh, Vietnam, Philippines and other nations. Some of these places rely heavily on debt bonding, but it's almost impossible to figure out who is engaging in these practice because of the very nature of it. You pay workers a large sum (which is actually a pittance to us) up front at interest (usually around 15%) and then lord this debt over them in exchange for labor from the workers and their families. Most of these people have no education and so they have no idea what they are getting into.

One example from Indonesia, workers were being given the equivalent of about $5000 at 15% interest. Most would quickly spend it on improving their home, buying a bike, and food and it would quickly run out. They would be payed around $3 a day or about $90 a month of which $60 would go to the company to pay off the loan. This leaves them with $1 a day on which to live. Obviously this is not enough to live on and virtually everyone would press their spouse or children into work out of necessity.

Over the expected 40 year course of the loan, the company would recoup the original amount in around 6 years and then collect anywhere up to $25,000 in "labour savings" by way of interest. Even if they simply sold the goods for cost, the company could expect a 10% return just from it's exploitation of the workers after attrition was factored in. When you factor in that most of them are looking at 150% profit margins on goods, you realize how absurd this additional 10% really is.

Brave new world indeed...




RE: And back to business as usual...
By kattanna on 6/15/2011 11:20:33 AM , Rating: 4
this has been happening in one form or another since long before britian ruled the seas


RE: And back to business as usual...
By Iaiken on 6/15/2011 11:26:47 AM , Rating: 2
Of course, why do you think we're so damned good at it?


By swizeus on 6/15/2011 1:02:21 PM , Rating: 2
So True. I would gladly give you six


By kingius on 6/17/2011 10:59:30 AM , Rating: 2
This is terrible. Anyone involved in such a practice should be subject to mob justice by the very people they are doing this too. Then we'd see who wishes to run systems as evil as this.


Just preparing i guess.
By RadnorHarkonnen on 6/15/2011 10:25:55 AM , Rating: 4
Maybe they are just planning. A decent structured attack takes time to prepare, plan and deploy. Attacking an isolated server is one thing, massively crippling and infrastructure is another.

BTW, many Chinese people knows what proxy server is. The Great "Firewall" of China is just based on DNS poisoning. Not that hard to bypass.




anonymous has not hacked them yet
By tastyratz on 6/15/2011 11:43:06 AM , Rating: 3
oh Jason, I see what you did there wink wink nudge nudge. Maybe they are reading?

homer simpson:"Blueberry pie I see you there. I am going to do this" ::chomp::" If you get in the way it's your own fault"




Anonymous
By toyotabedzrock on 6/15/2011 1:08:37 PM , Rating: 3
I believe the lack of action is that Anonymous has few if any contacts in China and has no one that can translate.

They do have people in the middle east to translate and pass on information.




By superstition on 6/15/2011 8:34:37 PM , Rating: 2
But, the difference is... no protests.




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