The Chinese government issued a notice ordering the media to find and
delete any reprinted reports regarding the Panama Papers, according to a
report in the
China Digital Times.Media were ordered not to follow up on related content, the report
said. Any websites that contain materials from foreign media attacking
China will be
dealt with severely.
The China Digital Times omitted the name of the issuing body in order to protect the source.
Another notice reportedly instructed a website to withdraw an article
about the Panama Papers and related stories from its home page and move
them to the back end of the site.
Western media and Washington have controlled the interpretation of
document leaks, minimizing information negative to the U.S. and
emphasizing information about non-Western leaders, the state-run
People's Daily
asserted.
The leaks might be disinformation, the publication hinted, adding
that the West would be happy to see such leaks occur if they attack its
opponents.
No mention was made of any Chinese subjects of the Panama Papers.
"It's now increasingly difficult to completely hide the digital trail of
illegal transactions, no matter how rich and powerful you are,"
commented Chenxi Wang, chief strategy officer at
Twistlock.
The Great Firewall was fairly effective in restricting the access of
people in China to the Internet "until application-level messaging apps
such as WeChat and QQ became popular," she told the E-Commerce Times.
"The Great Firewall doesn't work on them."
As more people in China use those apps and others like them to
communicate, "the Great Firewall will become increasingly less effective
unless the government bans the use of such messaging apps," Wang said.
China's Great Firewall "is effective enough with average citizens, but,
as with other censoring efforts, usually fails with the tech-savvy," she
pointed out.
In addition to application-level messaging apps like WeChat,
tech-savvy Chinese are using anonymous communications and VPNs, Wang
said. "Sometimes VPNs don't work at all in China, but you can usually
find one that will get you around the Great Firewall."
Even Fang Binxing, the creator of the Great Firewall, has
gotten in on circumvention:
Earlier this month, he reportedly showed students at Harbin Technical
Institute how to use a VPN called "Tianhe," or Galaxy, to access Google
and other blocked websites.
"There's clearly a willingness to take the risk of getting caught in China," noted Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group. "There are simply too many connections between the West and the East for a strategy like this to work."
Beijing's best strategy would have been to discredit the leaks as
false, he told the E-Commerce Times, "but that needs to be done early,
and that boat, too, has likely already sailed."
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