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China delays internet filter plan | China delays internet filter plan |
(about 2 hours later) | |
China is to delay a controversial plan requiring all new computers sold in the country to be equipped with an internet filtering software, state media says. | |
The filter, called Green Dam Youth Escort, was to have been required from Wednesday, but the industry ministry said computer makers needed more time. | |
Its planned rollout sparked widespread disapproval inside China, legal challenges and criticism from overseas. | |
Officials say it is designed to shield children from pornography and violence. | Officials say it is designed to shield children from pornography and violence. |
However, free speech activists have criticised the software plan as an attempt to tighten the Chinese government's already strict controls on internet usage. | |
A report by China's official Xinhua news agency gave no other details on the decision by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. | |
Virus risks | |
The BBC's Quentin Sommerville, in Beijing, says the reversal is a very rare and embarrassing climbdown for the Chinese government. | |
Chinese internet users already endure one of the most heavily-censored and politically-controlled internets in the world, our correspondent says, and were furious about this additional control. | |
Foreign governments have complained that the new software could break trade rules, and concerns have been raised about its effectiveness and safety. | |
Tests carried out on Green Dam outside China indicated that it left personal computers open to many different security risks, including virus attacks. | |
Our correspondent says that despite the government's strict controls over internet usage in China, the country does have a vibrant internet culture. | |
Some people do manage to get around the controls, he says, and criticism of the Communist Party government is available online, even if political opposition is formally banned. |
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